Dai­ly Reflec­tion
Jan­u­ary 17, 2002

Thursday of the First week in Ordi­nary Time
Lectionary: 308
Mem­ber of Creighton Uni­ver­si­ty Community

LORD, HEAR MY PRAYER

Good grief: the Israelites prayed and not only lost the bat­tle to the Philistines.  They lost the Ark of the Covenant, the “Ark of God.”

The lep­er prays to be healed, “if you will to do so, you can heal me” and Jesus heals him.

What do these two scrip­tures tell us about prayer?  Is it that God only hears some prayers?  Is it that some prayers are more pow­er­ful than others?

No, No.  These scrip­tures tell us to keep pray­ing.  Keep ask­ing God for help.  We are depen­dent on God.  God likes to hear from us.

I remem­ber when my Father, then my Moth­er, were very sick, I was pray­ing for God to take each to heav­en.  Their suf­fer­ing was awful for all of our fam­i­ly.  God even­tu­al­ly answered my prayers, but it took a year for Pops and six years for Mops.  God moves in God’s time, not ours.

Prob­a­bly the answer to the orig­i­nal ques­tion: does God hear our prayers, is Yes.  God hears us.  Per­haps God does not choose to answer as we ask.  Per­haps there is some­thing that we can­not see that is much bet­ter for us or for the per­son for whom we pray.  Per­haps our tim­ing is off.

Per­haps a bet­ter prayer than one so spe­cif­ic, like “Take Mops or Pops to heav­en NOW please”, is “give them what is for their good.  Per­haps pray­ing for the GOOD­NESS of whomev­er or what­ev­er is most important.

Trust that God hears us and will give us an answer sometime…and look for the les­son in the ache of the need we pray to be healed.

Mem­ber of Creighton Uni­ver­si­ty Community

Since its incep­tion in 1997, Online Min­istries has been blessed to have myr­i­ad mem­bers of the Creighton Uni­ver­si­ty com­mu­ni­ty offer their per­son­al reflec­tions on the dai­ly scrip­ture readings.