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Living By the Prayer Jesus Died By: A Prayer of Our Surrender (Ps. 31:5-8)

Henri Nouwen was an internationally known priest, professor and author of more than 40 books on the spiritual life.  He once wrote about how we tend to pray with closed hands.[1]   Nouwen wrote of watching an elderly woman being brought into a psychiatric center. She was wild, swinging at everyone and everything.  And as she lashed out, she gripped a tiny coin in one hand.  Perhaps it was like the coin you hold in your hand.  In spite of all her commotion and the pleading of the hospital staff, the coin remained in her hand.  She would not let go of that coin.  It finally took two people to pry open her clenched fist and take the coin away.  Nowen wrote, “It was as though she would lose her very self along with the coin.”  Nouwen reflected on how this woman and her coin were symbolic of the way many of us approach our life with God.  We pray with tightly clenched fists.  That is, many of us have at least one coin in our hands—one thing we will not or cannot let go of; one relationship, or dream, or hurt, or memory or possession that we are unwilling or unable to surrender in prayer to God.  We pray, Nouwen said, clinging tightly to that coin.  It’s as if we would lose our very self if we lost that coin.Living By the Prayer Jesus Died By: A Prayer of Our Surrender (Ps. 31:5-8)

Living By the Prayer Jesus Died By: A Prayer of God’s Safety (Ps. 31:1-4)

I’m the proud owner of a new above-the-ground pool.  I’m also an obsessed safety-nut in that same pool.  A few weeks ago, Jordan and Jacob had friends over at our grand pool-opening.  And about the only word that came out of my mouth for the first thirty minutes of our inaugural swim was “No”: “No, don’t jump from the top of those stairs.  It’s not safe.”; “No, don’t try to float on that ball near the edge.  It’s not safe.”; “No, don’t try to get all three of you on the big yellow duck.  It’s not safe.”  I found myself suddenly obsessed with safety. Living By the Prayer Jesus Died By: A Prayer of God’s Safety (Ps. 31:1-4)

Reframing the Power for Marriage in the Modern Family (Eph. 5:18-21)

I recently read a story of two men in Sweden who, while drunk, took turns strapping on a vest.  They believed the vest was “knife proof.”  They then began stabbing one another to see if the claim was true.  In Australia, a drunk jumped a tall fence and attempted to ride a large alligator in an enclosure.  The alligator bit the drunk’s leg off.  One forty-two year old man in the U. S., while drunk, walked into his house and took a shower—only it turned out to be someone else’s house.Reframing the Power for Marriage in the Modern Family (Eph. 5:18-21)