Trust

03Apr
 
 
A chaplain in World War II wrote in HIS magazine and article entitled “Some Pray and Die.”
 
Is there such a thing as getting the “breaks” in prayer? What about the fellows who pray regularly, but get killed regularly? I wish people would stop writing about the soldiers who pray and have their prayers answered by not getting killed. Why do all the other soldiers seem to get the wrong answer?
 
What I want to know is this: what sort of an extra special, super-powered prayer is needed to make everything turn out the way you want it? That sounds facetious, almost irreverent, but I’m serious. I really want to know. I’m an army chaplain, and I could use some special prayers with my men—and heaven knows, we need them badly at times. Because the fact is there are always more men who pray to come back than there are men who get back. Quite a lot more! What is the deciding factor?
 
The thing for all of us to remember is this: someone else does the answering. What you have in mind may not be what God has in mind. If you ask something, you must be willing to take what he gives. That is why I am a bit depressed by the writing of those who try to get other people to pray by telling them that you get what you want. People must learn to want what they get. When I talk to soldiers about prayer, I try to tell them that they must be adults. God expects us to be men. Only children demand a happy ending to every story. How old must we be before we begin to realize that every prayer can’t get us everything we want unless the thing we want is right for us to have?
 
Who gets the breaks in prayers? Nobody! There is no such thing. We get what God in his infinite love and foreknowledge sees fit to give. That’s not always the same as getting what we want. But it ought to be”.
 
Prayer is about aligning with God’s will. The closer we are to what God wants, the more our prayers are answered. This message is uncomfortable in the shadow of a pandemic. I could only give positive, but we don’t live in an only positive world. I hope that we will dig to the bedrock and build our lives on a lasting foundation.
 
 

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Posted by Ron Lawler

I accepted Jesus Christ as my Lord and Savior when I was a teen. A friend had invited me to attend church to help out in a Sunday School attendance drive. At the end of the worship service I asked the Pastor how I could know for sure I would go to Heaven. He had someone show me from the Scriptures how to receive Christ and from that day to this, I have had an assurance of Christ as my Savior and Heaven as my eternal home.

Within a few weeks I sensed a building desire to enter into full time ministry. My church observed me and confirmed the call. Upon graduation from High School, I enrolled in Bible College and I have been in ministry ever since. I was ordained to the ministry by my home church in Texas in 1974. It has been my privilege to be Pastor of Preaching and Teaching at Family Bible since 2005.

Cheryl and I were married in 1973. God has blessed us with two children, Rachel and David, and four grandsons.

Favorite part of ministry? - Researching and discussing questions about the Bible.

Favorite verse? - "Therefore, my dear brothers, stand firm.  Let nothing move you.  Always give yourselves fully to the work of the Lord, because you know that your labor in the Lord is not in vain." 1 Corinthians 15:58

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