"Commit your way to the Lord; trust in him and he will do this: He will make your righteousness shine like the dawn, the justice of your cause like the noonday sun." Ps. 37:5-6)
It is a flight from the alone to the Another.
And there we lose our aloneness; we become merge in Him. We cannot tell where our thoughts end and His thoughts begin, where our acts end and His acts begin. For we are merged.
Notice, I did not say "submerged." We are not swamped by God. We retain our sense of identity and we are never so much ourselves as when we are most His.
Taken from E. Stanley Jones; The Way
One way to measure whether we are really growing strong in spirit is by considering own experience in prayer. The stronger we become in spirit, the sweeter our experience will be in prayer. Prayer IN the spirit allows us to be regularly filled with an outpouring of grace and supplication that is deeply moving and powerfully refreshing. Praying in the spirit is a life giving fellowship of God's presence.
Is this how it is with us? When we "read" or "hear" about prayer, what is our response? Is there a sweet memory of our last fellowship with our Heavenly Father, or is there a tinge of guilt we must subconsciously suppress because we sense no real drawing to prayer? Is prayer a highlight of our day? Can we sing sweet hour of prayer as a song that describes our own prayer life? Those who are led by the Spirit live in the fellowship of prayer IN the Spirit; the stronger they become in spirit, the sweeter their savor in prayer becomes and the greater their own filling with the peace of Christ.
Merely sensing the need to pray, or simply being aware that we ought to pray, is no real sign of spiritual strength. When prayer becomes so sweet that we must steal away and commune with our Father - this is a sign of true spiritual life of Christ being formed in us. ~A.M.
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