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prayer ...
I know prayer is important.and I understand I should pray, but . . .

To be honest. It can seem that our motivation for prayer is results-oriented,
simply to get answers. Prayer can feel like a grocery list: "Our Father, who art
in heaven . . . Gimme, gimme, gimme!"

This should not be the reason to pray.

So I began to study how and why Jesus prayed, and discovered five very
motivating reasons to pray. Christ ... It is relationship.

Certainly Christ has standards, but we don't become Christians because we
receive standards. We become Christians because we receive Christ, who
loves us, died for us, lives in us daily.

What I need, then, is to build my love relationship with Him. I have to learn to
allow Him to embrace me, to care for me, to point out my needs to me (and
how He fills them). I need to listen to Him, and I desperately need to talk to Him.

In Ephesians 3:14-19, Paul prays, "that you may be able to comprehend . . .
what is the breadth and length and height and depth and to know the love of
Christ which surpasses knowledge . . ." "Know" in this passage is the same
word used for the intimate closeness of a husband and wife in sexual
embrace. Paul is praying that you and I will experience that kind of love with
Christ - not sexual, but intimate, deep, close, unfettered. It is so deep that Paul
later says it "surpasses knowledge."

One place we can experience this is in prayer. When we "get down and get
honest" before God, we are on His turf in a unique way. Seldom do we get
closer to Him than in prayer. When we pray, we can pray to experience this
love, to be bathed in it, to learn how to give it back, to learn how to let it seep
into the dry cracks and crevices of our lives.

I think that the chief reason for the gift of prayer is that we learn to receive,
experience, and return His love in genuine relationship. Prayer is one place
when God can get at us (and we think prayer is for getting at Him!) and speak
to and minister to us. That is why David prays in Psalms 18:1, “I love you, O
Lord, my strength.”