Bootstrap
Octavius Winslow

Lamentations 3:41

Lamentations 3:41
Octavius Winslow August, 2 2016 3 min read
709 Articles 90 Sermons 35 Books
0 Comments
August, 2 2016
Octavius Winslow
Octavius Winslow 3 min read
709 articles 90 sermons 35 books
What does the Bible say about prayer?

The Bible teaches that prayer is essential for expressing one's dependence on God and fostering spiritual health.

Prayer, as noted in Lamentations 3:41, is fundamentally an act of lifting one's heart to God, indicating a deep need for communion and fellowship. It is the spiritual pulse of a believer, revealing their inner health and relationship with God. If prayer is lively and fervent, it denotes a growing faith, while a decline in the spirit of prayer shows a wandering heart and a decaying love for God. Genuine prayer is not merely a routine or a set of eloquent words, but rather a sincere expression of one's heart toward God, reflecting true communion and reliance upon Him.

Lamentations 3:41

How do we know the spirit of prayer is important?

The spirit of prayer is crucial as it represents true communion with God, beyond just the act of praying.

The spirit of prayer is of utmost importance because it infuses our prayers with meaning and true emotion, allowing us to engage genuinely with God. The form of prayer can remain while the spirit may be absent, leading to a dead practice. Lamentations 3:41 emphasizes lifting our hearts to God, which illustrates that the essence of prayer resides in the posture of our hearts. When prayer is lifeless, it reflects a deeper issue within the soul; thus, maintaining the spirit of prayer should be our priority, as it represents a living relationship with God.

Lamentations 3:41

Why is examining our prayers important for Christians?

Examining our prayers ensures they are genuine expressions of our heart and not mere routines.

Christians are called to examine their prayers to discern whether they stem from a true connection with God or if they have devolved into mere formality. The practice of prayer should not be a ritualistic habit devoid of heartfelt engagement. By closely observing our prayer life, we can identify unrepentant sin, distractions, and worldly influences that may hinder our interaction with God. Lamentations 3:41 encourages believers to lift their hearts genuinely to God, indicating that effective prayer requires authenticity and honesty in our approach to communion with Him.

Lamentations 3:41

“Let us lift up our heart with our hands unto God in the heavens.”

— Lamentations 3:41

Prayer is the spiritual pulse of the renewed soul; its beat indicates the healthy or unhealthy state of the believer. Just as the physician would decide upon the health of the body from the action of the pulse, so would we decide upon the spiritual health of the soul before God, by the estimation in which prayer is held by the believer. If the soul is in a spiritually healthy, growing state, prayer will be vigorous, lively, spiritual, and constant; if, on the contrary, the heart is wandering, and love waxes cold, and faith is decaying, the spirit and the habit of prayer will immediately betray it.

The spirit of prayer may decline in the believer, and he may not at once be sensible of it. The form and the habit of prayer may for a while continue—but the spirit of prayer has evaporated, and all is coldness and dullness—the very torpor and frigidity of death! But of what real worth is the habit of prayer, apart from the spirit of prayer? Just what this planet would be without the sun, or the body without the living, animating, breathing soul—what but a cold, lifeless form? Yes, and a believer may be beguiled into this lamentable state, and not a suspicion of its existence be awakened; he may observe his accustomed habit, and use his empty form, and not suspect that all is cold and breathless as death itself. Oh, it is not the rigidly-observed form that God looks at; nor is it great volubility, and eloquent fluency, and rich sentiment, and splendid imagery, and rounded periods, that God regards: far from this; a man may not be able to give expression to his deep emotion in prayer, his thoughts may find no vehicle of utterance, language may entirely fail him; and yet the spirit of prayer may glow in his breast—and this—the true language of prayer—finds its way to the ear and to the heart of God. Reader, look well to the state of your soul; examine your prayers; see that you have not substituted the cold form for the glowing spirit—the mere body for the soul. Real prayer is the breathing of God's own Spirit in the heart: have you this? It is communion and fellowship with God: know you what this is? It is brokenness, contrition, confession, and that often springing from an overwhelming sense of His goodness and His love shed abroad in the heart: is this your experience? Again, we repeat it, look well to your prayers; test them, not by the natural or acquired gift which you may possess—this is nothing with God; but test them by the real communion you have with God—the returns they make to your soul.

There should be the searching out and the removal of that which hinders prayer. Many things weaken true prayer: unsubdued sin—unrepented sin—unpardoned sin (we mean the secret sense of it upon the conscience)—worldly-mindedness—light and trifling conversation, vain disputations—much and frequent communion either with unconverted individuals, or cold and formal professors—all these combined, or any single one, will, if suffered to prevail, unfit the mind for converse with God, and cause a decay of the spirit of prayer in the soul. Regard that as injurious which touches the devotional frame of your mind, which abridges the hour of prayer, and removes the fine edge of its holy enjoyment.

From Evening Thoughts by Octavius Winslow.
Octavius Winslow
Topics:
Devotionals

Comments

0 / 2000 characters
Comments are moderated before appearing.

Be the first to comment!

Joshua

Joshua

Shall we play a game? Ask me about articles, sermons, or theology from our library. I can also help you navigate the site.