Rediscovering Prayer

by Addison Bevere

July 14, 2024

Separator Words with God by Addison Bevere
How Prayer Can Heal Our Past

Let me remember my song in the night;
Let me meditate in my heart.”
Then my spirit made a diligent search.

—Psalm 77:6

First, I want to express gratitude for your prayers and kind messages. My father-in-law is in hospice care, so we’re still praying for the miraculous. God’s already done a profound work in his life, and we know our Father is faithful to finish what He begins. Through it all, He’s been gracious to us, and we’ve experienced God’s goodness at every turn.

If you listened to the message I shared a couple of weeks ago, you heard me talk a bit about why God invites us to remember (or re-member) through prayer. In case you missed it, I touched on how our memories are made of members, pieces and fragments of our lives. Our imperfect memories profoundly shape us, so God invites us to surrender them to Him, allowing the Spirit to grant us the ability to see, experience, or understand things we missed or misunderstood before.

To re-member is to trust that Christ can indeed unite all things in Himself, including the messy, missing, or traumatic parts of our stories. Jesus told us that in this world we would have trouble, but He also said that we could take heart because He has overcome it all. In Him, every bit of our pain, every moment of disorientation, can become sacred scars.

Response

This week, I want to challenge you to bring remembrance into your prayers. Slowly read Psalm 77 and set aside time for God to guide you through the truth of your past. The Spirit will lead you through those memories of pain—strongholds of disappointment and failure—and dismember their power over you, transforming them into songs of deliverance. God longs to integrate the broken pieces of our lives, but we must let go of our need to control, to explain, to rationalize.


Your way was through the sea,

    your path through the great waters;

    yet your footprints were unseen. 

    (Psalm 77:19)

Closing Thoughts

I know I’m asking you to do scary and sacrificial work. But I promise the Spirit will meet you in those tender places. He is gracious, patient, faithful, and He longs for us to know as we are known. 

When it comes to prayer, our capacity to hear God now is tied to our courage to re-member what happened then.

Re-membering with you,

Addison

P.S. If you’re new to this community or don’t have the Words with God: Trading Boring Empty Prayer for Real Connection yet, just click here to get your copy. (It’s available via bookeBook, and audiobook . . . and in Spanish!)

P.P.S. If you’d like to also receive these prayer guides via text, click here.

Separator Words with God by Addison Bevere

Sunday Entries

On most Sundays, I share a short prayer guide, offering words and practices that will help you see, hear, and experience more of God in your daily life. I’d love for you to join us.

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The Entries

Sin does its best work in the dark. It fractures, separates, distorts, dealing in deception and delusion. Sin is powerful but it doesn’t stand a chance against the light. When brought into the light, its holes are exposed, and those holes become portals, if you will, for us to receive God’s redemptive holiness, a wholeness only made possible by grace. Within the light, even sin must bow its knee, surrendering to God’s plans to redeem, restore, and transform.

Continue Reading →

Have you ever noticed that thanksgiving has a buoyancy to it? When you’re around people who practice costly gratitude, life feels lighter, even when it’s heavy.

Continue Reading →

There is hope, though. According to the proverb, while anxiety might weigh us down, just a single good word can reverse its effects, offering us courage in exchange for despair.

Continue Reading →

06.11.23

“I’ve been thinking a lot about circles lately. So much of life is defined by circles—our days, week, months, and years form circles for us to move in and through. We’re constantly reminded that the end of a thing has a way of taking us back to a beginning. It would seem the cosmos announces the Circle as God’s shape of choice…”

Addison Bevere is the COO of Messenger International, a ministry founded by John and Lisa Bevere in 1990 that exists to develop uncompromising followers of Christ who transform our world. Messenger is dedicated to providing people with access to life-transforming messages regardless of their location, language, or financial position.

Addison Bevere

Husband, father, author, poet, speaker & follower of Christ

Addison Bevere

Husband, father, author, poet, speaker & follower of Christ

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