
By Nancy J. Nordenson
In a dimly lit hospital room, I stared out
the window into the early morning
darkness and waited for the drips of IV
fluid to begin the contractions that
would birth my lifeless midterm baby. My
sorrow was lonely and deep. I wanted to pray,
but there were no words to voice the thoughts
that swirled in my mind.
When life is hard, prayer is hard. Grief,
illness, depression, and anger invade our lives
and hang on with tenacity, stealing our desire
to pray and our belief in prayer just when we
need them most. Physically and emotionally
weary, we struggle to move from “Dear God”
to “Amen.” Simply getting through the day
becomes our goal, leaving the luxury of
connecting with God for better times.
I find it difficult to meet the expectations
of Scripture regarding prayer. I fail to pray
“with thanksgiving” (Phil. 4:6) when the
situation I’ve prayed about for so long is
only getting worse. How many of us pray
“without ceasing” (1 Thess. 5:17, KJV) when
waves of grief knock us over, pull us down,
and hold us under? When disappointment
and anger over dashed plans and failed
relationships consume our thoughts and our
unquiet hearts, where do we find the
emotional energy to pray?
But God commands that we pray. He didn’t
make prayer optional; He doesn’t hand us a
signed excuse, releasing us from prayer,
when life becomes difficult. God must have
known that the process of thinking thoughts
to an unseen “Something” might seem
inadequate in the face of our own suffering,
that spending time alone in our room, praying
the same thing yet again, might seem better
spent pacing. He must have known each of us
would come to the difficult day when, faced
with the urge or challenge to pray, we would
instead say, “I just can’t,” and go no further.
In obedience to God’s command, prayer
must become what Oswald Chambers called
“an effort of the will.” When life is difficult,
any effort can seem like too much. But if we
explore ways of praying that may be easier
with limited physical and emotional strength,
we more readily may set our wills in the
direction of prayer.
Find A Prayerful Place
Jesus often went to solitary places to pray,
such as the mountaintop, the lake, and the
garden (see Matt.14:23, 26:36-46, Mark 1:35;
and John 6:22-24). We can’t always arrange a
trip to a mountaintop, but we can find
somewhere appealing to pray. Slip into a
church sanctuary, and look at the cross or
stained-glass windows. Spend a quiet hour at
a museum. Create a prayerful place in your
home by lighting a candle or placing your
chair by the window. Or simply go for a walk.
Use Others’ Words
When our prayers need words we can’t
seem to find, we can use someone else’s. The
Bible is filled with prayers. Consider the
petitions of Moses as he struggled to lead
God’s people. Listen to the kings of Israel as
they prayed for help in battle. Borrow the
words of the psalmists as they prayed for
deliverance, protection, and forgiveness. In
the New Testament, meditate on the words of
Jesus and the apostles.
For example, consider the prayer of King
Jehoshaphat. A messenger greeted him with
these words: “A vast army is coming against
you” (2 Chron. 20:2). The future of his
kingdom was in peril; he and his people were
trapped by mighty opponents. The king
listened to this message and then prayed: “We
have no power to face this vast army that is
attacking us. We do not know what to do, but
our eyes are upon you” (v.12). I’ve borrowed
these words of the besieged king when I’ve
felt overpowered by circumstances outside of
my control. His prayer is like a flare shot up
to the God who rescues.
Consider using other written prayers as
well, such as the words from hymns or from a
book of prayers.
Meditate On Jesus’ Life
Jesus had a hard life. Can we find
something in His life that mirrors our own
difficult times? The gospels tell us about the
time He prayed alone at night, so full of
emotion that He sweat drops of blood. We
can read about the betrayal by His friends and
the religious establishment. We can wonder
how He must have suffered over being
misunderstood by His family.
Did He feel sorrow when He was rebuked
rather than praised for performing a miracle?
What was He thinking as He wept over His
friend Lazarus’s grave? How did He find the
strength to put one foot in front of the other
on the way to His own crucifixion? Can we
relate to His cry on the cross, “My God, why
have you forsaken me?” (Matt. 27:46).
Feeling scared and cowardly when I
needed to be calm and brave, I thought about
Jesus entering Jerusalem for the last time
before His death. Even knowing what was
ahead, Jesus walked right into His crisis.
Horribly unfair things were about to happen
to Him. Humiliation and death awaited. If He
could walk into that, then with His strength, I
could walk into the experience I was facing.
As we meditate upon Jesus’ life in this
way, we connect with Him and share our
experience with Him. This, too, is a way of
praying.
Pray A Repeated Phrase
It can also be helpful to pray often using
the same few words. These words can be
prayed aloud, whispered, or said inwardly
while engaged in another activity.
There is no magic in the repetition of
these words. Rather, what you’re seeking is
a continual prayer, a constant reminder of
the truth to which you so desperately need to
cling, a focus for unfocused thoughts. The
sudden onsets of panic and grief after the
loss of my baby eased when I repeated
Jesus’ words over and over again: “Peace I
leave with you; my peace I give to you”
(John 14:27).
Remember The Holy Spirit’s Intercession
The advocacy of the Holy Spirit on our
behalf is unceasing. Paul tells us that the Holy
Spirit prays for us when we are weak, when
we don’t even know how to pray or what to
pray for (see Rom. 8:26-27).
Just as a bewildered plaintiff or defendant
– without ability to plead his own case
before a judge and jury – asks an attorney to
speak for him, so we can entrust our cause
to the Holy Spirit and remain silent for a
time. This silence does not imply a lack of
interest in being before God but rather a
choice to be represented by the petitions of
the Holy Spirit.
Assume A Posture Of Prayer
There is a good reason for the traditional
prayer posture of closed hands and eyes: The
less we see and touch, the more we focus on
praying. But when our hearts and minds are
racing, even this traditional prayer posture
can be inadequate to help us focus.
Sometimes, we may need a more intentional
posture, such as kneeling or even lying
prostrate on the floor. With our faces to the
floor, we find ourselves in the company of
others who have cried out to God from this
position: Ezekiel, in despair; Ezra, ashamed
and disgraced; Daniel, terrified; Jesus,
sorrowful and troubled.
Write It Once
Simply thinking about our problems
before praying may emotionally exhaust or
dredge up resentment or anger. When I
described to a friend my struggle to pray
about a difficult situation, she advised me to
write out a prayer that covered all the aspects
of the problem. Then she suggested I read this
prayer whenever I felt the need to pray,
focusing my heart and mind on the words I’d
already written. What a relief it was to have a
plan for prayer, so I wouldn’t need to search
the pain daily, starting from scratch.
Show, Don’t Tell
When Sennacherib sent a letter to King
Hezekiah threatening to destroy Jerusalem,
Hezekiah read it and immediately went to the
temple. He spread the letter out before the
Lord and began to pray (see 2 Kings 19).
Could our prayers be supported by a visual
aid as well? By using images rather than
words, we can bypass the energy needed to
find the words. With one action we can lay
our situation before the God who sees as well
as hears. Spread the stack of bills, the
antidepressant prescription, or the abnormal
biopsy report before Him. Tell God by
showing God.
Pray With Your Tears
Mary wept at Jesus’ feet after the death of
her brother, Lazarus (see John 11:32-33).
Can you recall a time when you cried with
another person? Do you remember the
emotional release and subsequent bonding
with that person after the tears? We can
open our hearts to God and deepen our
relationship with Him by crying in His
presence, offering our tears as prayers.
Express Your Anger
Anger blocks communication. Are you
angry at God over your situation? If so, tell
Him how you feel. Follow Job’s example
of talking to God with honesty and respect.
Talk it out, write it down, and watch for His
answer.
Be Silent
Only the best of friends can sit together
silently with ease. The psalmist reminds us
to “be still, and know that I am God” (Ps.
46:10) and reassures us that “the LORD
Almighty is with us” (v. 11). Allow yourself
to sit silently in the presence of God.
Ask Others To Pray
To release God’s power on the battlefield
below, Moses’ friends helped him hold up
his staff (see Ex. 17:8-13). In the same way,
the prayers of others support us and release
the power of God into the battles of our
lives. If you don’t know of at least one
person who is committed to praying for
you, ask someone.
As I stared out the window in that
hospital room, I had a definite sense of
others praying for me. My loneliness eased
and the struggle to pray relaxed. I didn’t
have to search for the words anymore; I
knew the words of someone else would
bring me before God.
Do You Believe?
At the memorial service we held for our
infant daughter, we read the words spoken
by Jesus to a grieving Martha four days
after the death of her brother. Jesus said to
her: “I am the resurrection and the life....
Do you believe this?” Martha replied, “Yes,
Lord” (John 11:25-27). Jesus then
proceeded to the tomb, twice overcome
with emotion before arriving. Moments
later Lazarus walked out of the tomb,
resurrected.
Despair and belief, sorrow and joy, death
and life, waiting and rescue are the threads
woven together in the fabric of this story.
They are also the fabric of my story and
perhaps yours. As with Martha, our hope
when life gets hard rests in the way we
answer Jesus’ question: “I am the
resurrection and the life. Do you believe
this?” If we can say yes, no matter how we
choose to pray about the difficulties we face,
we know that we leave our prayers in
trustworthy hands.
Nancy J. Nordenson is a lab specialist
for a reference laboratory. Reprinted from
Discipleship Journal, issue 116. Used with
permission.
Also read:
Great Expectations
Face-To-Face Interview: Katherine Porter
Recommend this page to a friend.
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