04 Jan Chosen for Prayer
Read: 1 Peter 4:7-11
Last Sunday, Ryan Heard led us to remember our identity in Christ and continue in the faith from Colossians 1:21-23. This Sunday, Pastor Ken will preach the sermon, “Living on the Edge of Eternity,” from 1 Peter 4:7-11, calling us to prayer, love, and service as we live out the last days of this age. As you prepare your heart for our corporate gathering, let these words from Milton Vincent move you to eagerly draw near to the Lord in prayer, as you were chosen for this very purpose.
Heart Preparation
When God chose me in Christ before the foundation of the world, He did not merely choose me to be “holy and blameless”; He chose me also to be “before Him in love.” To be sure, I am always in God’s presence on earth, and in heaven I will be in His presence more fully than ever. But it could also be said that in this life I am especially “before Him in love” when I come “before Him” in prayer and worship.
Therefore, I can infer that prayer is not simply something I am allowed to do as a Christian; prayer is actually one of the great purposes for which God chose to save me. Christ Himself confirms this fact when He makes the following statement to His disciples: “I chose you . . . that whatever you ask of the Father in My name He may give to you.” As a chosen one of God, I was saved to pray; and whenever I come into God’s presence to behold Him, worship Him, or make request of Him, I am arriving at the pinnacle of God’s saving purposes for me.
God is radically committed to my life of prayer. He shed the blood of His Son so that I might be cleansed and rendered fit to stand before Him in love. He also permitted the brutal rending of His Son so that I might now have a way into the Holy Place through the torn flesh of Jesus. “Draw near” He says in Hebrews 4; “draw near” He says in Hebrews 10; “pray without ceasing,” He urges elsewhere. How can I not feel the infinite sincerity of these invitations, especially when considering the painful lengths that God endured so that I might enter His presence in prayer?
Indeed, the gospel itself serves as the sweetest of invitations to pray; and preaching it to myself each day nurtures within me a mighty impulse to come “before [God] in love” and do the praying that I was elected to do.
“Chosen for Prayer,” in A Gospel Primer for Christians, by Milton Vincent
Song List for Sunday
1.“Not to Us,” by Chris Tomlin
2. “Even So Come,” by Chris Tomlin
3. “Come Thou Fount,” by David Crowder Band
4. “O Praise the Name,” Arr. by Shane & Shane
5. “Hosanna,” Arr. by Christy Nockels