Posted by : ENCUnited
Monday, February 20, 2012
Day 14
If
anyone has ears to hear, let them hear.
Mark 4:23
Praying isn't about talking as much
as it is about listening. Prayer is the
way we tune into the still small voice of the Spirit. Call them holy hunches. Call them God ideas. Call them prayer promptings. When you get into God's presence, you'll
start hearing that inaudible yet unmistakable voice of God.
Last year I spoke at Church of the
Highlands in Birmingham, Alabama for my friend, Chris Hodges. While I was there, I toured their Dream
Center in downtown Birmingham because we are on the verge of launching a Dream
Center in Washington, DC. They have an amazing outreach to pimps and
prostitutes. They mentor kids. They feed the hungry. You name the need and they are meeting it.
One of the women working there is a former
journalist named Lisa. She had a good
job with a good salary, but she quit because she knew God wanted her to work at
the Dream Center. Lisa is one of those
people who exudes joy, exudes life, exudes energy.
During our tour, Lisa talked about their
daily dependence upon God to meet the overwhelming needs in their
community. It’s takes hard work and hard
prayer. Then she told me about one of the miracles she had experienced. One day, as she was circling the Dream Center
in prayer, she felt the Holy Spirit prompting her to take her woolly socks with
her to work. She thought she was losing
her mind. It was one of the strangest
promptings she’d ever had, but she couldn’t shake the impression. So she
grabbed her woolly socks, put them in her purse, and headed downtown. When she got there, a prostitute was
literally passed out on the doorstep.
Lisa opened the door, carried her inside, and just held her on the floor
until she regained consciousness a few minutes later. She was so cold she was shaking. That’s when Lisa asked her: “If you could
have anything, what would it be?”
Without hesitation, the woman immediately said, “Woolly socks.” Lisa about lost it. As she told me the story she started tearing
up. Then I started tearing up. Lisa then told her, “Look what I have.” She pulled out the woolly socks, and the
woman said, “They even match my outfit.”
God
is great not just because nothing is too big for Him. God is great because nothing is too small for
Him. A sparrow doesn’t fall without Him
noticing and caring, so it shouldn’t surprise us that he cares about a woman
who wants woolly socks. God loves
showing his all-encompassing compassion in little ways, and if we would learn
to obey His promptings like Lisa, we’d find ourselves in the middle of miracles
a lot more often.
The reason many of us miss the
miracles is because we aren’t looking and we aren’t listening. The easy part of prayer is talking. It’s much harder listening to the still small
voice of the Holy Spirit. But two-thirds of praying hard is listening and
looking. Then we need to obey those prayer promptings.
Mark
Batterson-Circle Maker