Prayer is communion with God. It is the closest, most
intimate relationship with the Creator you can have.
Prayer is not playing magic games, spinning prayer
wheels, reading off a list, or asking for things to
be done. It is a communion. "Deep calls unto deep,"
the Bible says (Psalm 42:7). In prayer the depths of
your spirit are in communion with the depths of the
Spirit of God. Out of this can come instruction, guidance,
or a burden to pray for certain things.
The apostle Paul said, "For we do not know what
we should pray for as we ought, but the Spirit Himself
makes intercession for us with groanings which cannot
be uttered" (Romans 8:26). There are times when
we can emit only wordless groanings because we don't
know how to pray about a specific situation.
We can learn much from the Lord's Prayer, the model
prayer (see Matthew 6:9-13). The first is that if we
are to structure prayer, we should begin with an acknowledgment
of the One we are talking to -- God, our Father. We
should also include adoration, "Hallowed be Your
name." We are to glorify and worship His name,
His very Being.
Next, we must be concerned about the extension of His
kingdom. We ask that men should come to know Him and
submit to Him. "Your kingdom come. Your will be
done on earth as it is in heaven." Next to the
name and the person of God Himself, the most important
thing in prayer is the extension of God's kingdom.
After that, we ask God for our daily bread -- whatever
we need to carry out His work. It may be money, a car,
food, clothing, a house, or a $20 million budget for
a Christian organization. It may be money to feed the
poor. It may be a lot of things. We ask Him to give
us, day by day, bread that is sufficient for us. That
is the petition part of prayer. The first part of prayer
is praise, the second is intercession for others, and
the third is petition, when we ask for our needs to
be met.
Finally, we seek God's protection that we might not
be led into temptation and that God will keep us from
evil. We ask Him to keep us walking in His way, so that
we might be covered by His power and anointing and not
be susceptible to Satan's influences.
We must remember that prayer is rooted in forgiveness.
"Forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors."
The relationship of God's people to Him comes about
because of continuous forgiveness. If we are going to
see miracles in our lives, we have to be willing to
forgive other people, even as God is willing to forgive
us.
Christians should always be in an attitude of communion
with God. Prayer can take place in every circumstance
(see Psalm 4:4, 5:3, Daniel 6:10, Acts 21:5, I Thessalonians
5:17). In my life, as events pass by, I may find myself
talking to Him, wanting to know something, asking for
advice and counsel, or for favor and blessing. The Christian's
life should be filled with prayer. In addition, we should
set aside specific times, at least once a day, for prayer
and for reading the Bible.
As we read the Bible, we should pray, worship God,
speak to Him about our needs, and listen to His answers.
This should be a time of communication between two spirits
that sets the order of events for each day.