The other
day, I ate a meal with one of my friends - a fellow believer. Before
meals, I usually pray over the meal - it's tradition, mind you, and not a
command - but I still feel that the habit is as good one for me to
have. Anyway, our food arrived at the table and I looked up at him to
see if he was ready for one of us to say a prayer. I expected him to do
the same, but he didn't even notice me looking up because he was already
devouring his meal. I cleared my throat and got his attention, but when
he looked up at me, all he said was "what?" I mentioned prayer and I
could see the pieces click together in his head. "Oh! I totally forgot
about that. I don't usually do that in public anyway. It makes some
people uncomfortable."
Hmm...
I
told him I was in the habit of delivering a prayer before I ate and
asked him if he would mind if we prayed before we ate. He replied with
"Sure, I guess." I asked him if he wanted me to pray or if he wanted to
do it and surprisingly, he volunteered. We bowed our heads and he said
"Dear Lord, thank you. Amen." He barely mumbled it, flew through it as
quickly as possible, and then began devouring his food again. I'm not
even exaggerating when I say that I think he grabbed the fork before the
prayer was even over because I opened my eyes and he already had
another bite in his mouth.
Is that really how we see public prayer nowadays?
"I don't usually do that in public. It makes some people uncomfortable."
Then say the quickest prayer possible in order to hurry up and get back to the food.
If
we do that with public prayer, that's essentially what we're saying
about our Christianity. A conversation with someone that has this kind
of attitude would probably go something like this:
"What
has changed in your everyday life since you became a Christian and
decided to start leading the life described in the Bible?"
"Well, I don't usually do that in public. It makes some people uncomfortable."
"What about those times when you have no other choice or someone confronts you with something relating to your Christianity?"
"I
just do the quickest and most indiscreet thing I possibly can to get it
over with so I can get back to doing whatever I was doing."
Now, as I said, I understand that praying about a meal is just a
tradition of mine and that's fine. If you don't practice that same
tradition, then that's perfectly okay. The thing I'm asking about,
however, is your public prayer life. If you don't pray in public, why
don't you?
Now,
if we do pray in public, but we do it for show, then we are just as
wrong as the hypocrites in Matthew 6. Still, there's nothing wrong with
praying in public. Don't be ashamed of your Christianity.
If you just accomplished something great, you're about to undergo a
trial, or you're just wanting to remind God that He matters to you and
that you're thankful for all he's done, don't be afraid to find a place
to pray. Praying silently in your head is just as good as praying out
loud, but just don't be afraid to pray. No matter how you do it, don't
be afraid to show your Christianity in public. We live in a society
where those who are gaining power would love to oppress our Christianity
- we live in a society where praying in a public school could get
someone suspended. The prosecutor would say that that individual might
have possibly offended someone who doesn't have the same religious
conviction. It's time for us to stop letting them silence the Word of
God.
We don't have to yell at anyone, go beat anyone with a Bible, go picket
something, tell people that "you're going to Hell, you know that
right?", or anything else like that - that is offensive and
usually entirely unnecessary. We can, however, pray in public, casually
bring up Jesus in conversations, invite people to church, and have
debates about the validity of our beliefs with people who disagree
without being unnecessarily rude. People who get offended when we do
things like that need to suck it up. Don't be afraid to show the world
who you are - Christianity's enemies definitely aren't afraid to show the world who they are.
If
you don't already do this, next time you eat a meal, pray before the
meal. It'll be good for your relationship with God and it might even
open a door for someone you're eating with that might not have been
opened otherwise. Someone with you might ask you "Why do you pray before
a meal?" and boom - there's your opportunity to share the good news
with them. You'll never know until you try.
With Christian love,
Ethan
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