The Prayer Imperative
Devote yourselves to prayer, keeping alert in it with an attitude of thanksgiving. Colossians 4:2 NASB
Devote – Yes, it’s fine for Paul to say this. After all, he is a saint. But for you and me? No, devotion to prayer is just too much, especially when it includes “keeping alert.” I don’t know about you, but it’s all I can do to stay awake! The NASB choice of “devote” for the Greek verb proskartereo leaves me feeling as if I can never measure up. Yes, I know prayer is at the heart of my relationship with God. I know that prayer is essential to the Hebraic idea of being human. But “devote” just seems too high a standard for me. I have never spent an entire day in prayer. I have rarely spent even an entire hour. How can I hope to be devoted to something that seems to tax my ability to concentrate?
Maybe I need to know a bit more about Paul’s choice of verb. The root of proskartereo is kartereo which actually doesn’t mean the super-emotional, hyper-commitment we might associate with “devote.” Kartereo actually has two meanings, “to be strong” and “to endure steadfastly.” It is the LXX Greek equivalent of the Hebrew barak (to bless), found in the most unusual of passages, Job 2:9. Apparently, kartereo is akin to crying out. Yes, I can do that. I can cry out before the Lord, even if my crying out is intensely brief. I can exclaim both my trust in Him and my need for rescue. I can shout His praises and yell about my circumstances. If that’s what Paul had in mind, I can do it.
What about the second meaning—“to endure steadfastly.” That idea is found in 2 Maccabees 7:17. It’s related to martyrdom. It means to persevere to the very end. Can I do that? Well, probably. At this point I am convinced that I would not give up my pursuit of YHVH even if it meant death. I’m not keen to find out, of course, especially if it involves torture. But I don’t think I will ever give up this path. So I guess I meet the second requirement of kartereo as well. I intend to persevere. I plan to never let go.
There’s just one problem. Kartereo is only found in the apostolic writings in one place—and it isn’t here (it’s in Hebrews 11:27). What we find here is proskartereo, the combination of our root with the pros, a word that strengthens the meaning and adds the idea of going toward something. So apparently crying out and enduring isn’t quite enough. I must strain in the crying out and press toward the enduring. But is that “devotion”? I’m not sure our country music kind of devotion is really appropriate here. After all, proskartereo is found in Yeshua’s comment about being constantly ready (Mark 3:9) and in the description of the disciples’ persistence in prayer (Acts 1:14) but not in the great story of Mary’s devotion (Luke 10:42). I rather believe that Paul has Hannah in mind. The prayer of intensity and tenacity is the prayer of proskartereo. And that I can do. Thankfully. Others may question my devotion, but the Lord knows my intensity.
Topical Index: prayer, proskartereo, devotion, Colossians 4:2
Didn’t A. Heschel say ” while marching in Selma my legs were praying”… Or something close to this..how about washing diapers, hanging clothes on the line, driving an elderly parent, thanking the mail carrier aren’t all these and more….Thanks Skip for exploring this heavy word that was put upon us all…we don’t have to move to the monastery….I can continue being human…
Heschel: “I’m praying with my feet.”
Skip, thank you for sharing this morning. I too struggle with prayer “taxing my ability to concentrate”; and like you, have come to the same conclusion. Where else can I go? My life would be nothing without Him who is my life. I also realize that the enemy of our souls hates to see a praying community of believers. His power over us is broken with prayer.
When we feel the least inclined to commune with Yahshua, let us pray the most. By so doing we shall break the enemy’s snare, the clouds of darkness will disappear, and we shall realize the sweet presence of our Saviour. Our prayers are the key in the hand of faith to unlock heaven’s storehouse, where are treasured the boundless resources of Omnipotence.
“What if I had not believed to see the goodness of YAH in the land of the living! Wait on YAH, be strong, and let Him strengthen your heart! Wait, I say, on YAH!
Thanks…I’m praying with my feet!
This is the kindest and the most thoughtful blog I have ever read. I love that about this ecommunity. Thank You!
I have been leaning into the notion of ‘praying without ceasing’ for a long season now. On the surface it made no sense, but the substance compels me. I have jokingly said that I will not say ‘amen’ any more; I don’t want the prayer to end; He never leaves me, why should I leave or cease the conversation?
I want to have an ongoing, never ceasing conversation with Holy Spirt (John 16); I want to know what He thinks (Ro 8:26,27); I want to know what Jesus (Yeshua, if you prefer) feels and thinks (Heb 7:25) about things and I want to join them in intercession for others and thanksgiving to Abba.
I want what He wants and all I have to do is ask and stay in the ‘place of hearing’. That’s where the noise starts, that’s where 1,000 other thoughts clamor for my attention; That’s where my spriritual a.d.d. needs to be reprogrammed. My mind is easily distracted; The single most effective and life giving practice regarding prayer for me is to pray the scriptures. WoW! For example: I borrowed the words in Col 1:9 this morning as I prayed for a colleague: …..’that you would be filled with the knowledge of His will in all wisdom and spiritual understanding.’ I can’t really improve on that; yet I can give it a specific context and connect it to a person and give expression to it right here; right now. That changes everything; That I can do. That makes my heart feel more alive.
As usual, this stuff preaches easier than it lives!
…..Rejoice always; pray without ceasing; in everything give thanks; for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus. Do not quench the Spirit; do not despise prophetic utterances. But examine everything carefully; hold fast to that which is good; abstain from every form of evil. 1Thes5
….”Were not our hearts burning within us while He was speaking to us on the road, while He was explaining the Scriptures to us?”