Posted in
Listening prayer by Seth Barnes on 10/10/2006
Here's another excerpt from my book,
The Art of Listening Prayer:
The Bible
says, "For God so loved the world" (John. 3:16), but you need to see for
yourself that God cares; that he cares about you. You need the experience of listening for and
hearing his voice for yourself.
The good
news is that he is eager to talk with you.
Scripture says, "Anyone who comes to him must believe that he exists and
that he rewards those who earnestly seek him" (Heb. 11:6). Sometimes we just
need a tool to help us focus. Because
our minds are cluttered, noisy places where the Lord's voice is easily
obscured, we need help. A tool that many
have found helpful is a journal.
Writing
down our prayers helps in two ways:
- It helps us to focus.
- It creates a record to compare
with experience.
By
journaling our prayers and our impressions of God's answers, we fine-tune our
spiritual ears to better hear him.
Writing our impression of the Lord's response creates in us an
expectancy that he will respond. In
effect, we stir up the very faith without which it is impossible to please
him. Regularly "tuning in to" the Lord's
voice builds the habit patterns of submission and expectancy that are necessary
for the exercise of spiritual gifts.
(For example, you may sense the Lord wanting to use you to encourage someone
but, unless you look for the specific opportunity to use your gift of
exhortation, nothing happens).
Anyone who
believes the Bible is God's inerrant word will agree that it is the Holy
Spirit's job to convict us of sin (John. 16:8).
For example, let's imagine that you say something mean about your friend
Rachel. Subsequently, you hear the Holy
Spirit whisper in your mind, "You shouldn't have said that about Rachel. You should apologize." You then have the opportunity to dismiss this
thought by saying, "No, that's too much trouble." Or you may respond in obedience. This kind of limited dialogue is normal. It happens every day in the lives of most
Christians. To bring focus to your
dialogue by journaling is an age-old Christian discipline. To note in your journal, "I hear the Holy Spirit
saying: 'You should apologize to Rachel,'" is hardly a heretical activity. The Holy Spirit's job is to convict us of
sin; that conviction typically comes to us as a thought: "You shouldn't have
done that."
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