Living by Prayer
O God of the Open Ear, Teach me to live by prayer as well as by providence, for myself, soul, body, children, family, church; Give me a heart frameable to thy will; so might I live in prayer, and honor thee, being kept from evil, known and unknown.
Help me to see the sin that accompanies all I do, and the good I can distil from everything. Let me know that the work of prayer is to bring my will to thine, and that without this it is folly to pray; When I try to bring thy will to mine it is to command Christ, to be above him, and wiser than he: this is my sin and pride, I can only succeed when I pray according to thy precept and promise, and to be done with as it pleases thee, according to thy sovereign will.
When thou commandest me to pray for pardon, peace, brokenness, it is because thou wilt give me the thing promised, for thy glory, as well as for my good. Help me not only to desire small things but with holy boldness to desire great things for thy people, for myself, that they and I might live to show thy glory.
Teach me that it is wisdom for me to pray for all I have, out of love, willingly, not of necessity; that I may come to thee at any time, to lay open my needs acceptably to thee;
That my great sin lies in my not keeping the savor of thy ways; that the remembrance of this truth is one way to the sense of thy presence; that there is no wrath like the wrath of being governed by my own lusts for my own ends.
—Valley of Vision
There is something so rich in the prayers of the Puritans contained in the Valley of Vision—In agreeing with God, that prayer is effectual in bringing our will in line with His and that trying to bend His will to ours is folly. In heeding Jesus’ instruction to “seek first the Kingdom of God and his righteousness, and all these things will be added to you” (Matt. 6:33), we attain the greatest of God’s gifts and blessings, intimacy with Him. This is the deepest longing of our soul to be fulfilled, a restored and right relationship with our God. Pray fervently in agreement with this Puritan prayer, that you might savor the goodness of God’s grace in fullness! —DH
—David Hoskins, Founder & Care Guide, Sanctuary Clinics