Monday, December 21, 2015
10 Prayers for the New Year
From Rabbi Moffic
1. Looking Backward and
Forward: The name January comes from the Roman god "Janus." He
had two faces so he could look forward and backward at the same time. Eternal
God, help us to know this truth. We can look back, and in so doing, we can
help create the way forward. The past need not hold us back. It can lead us
ahead.
2. Unwrap the Gift: Eternal
God, You gave us the greatest gift: the gift of life. In the coming year, help
us use it wisely. May we grow in generosity, kindness and forgiveness, hope,
faith and love. Amen.
3. Beginnings are blessings: Eternal
God, bless this new beginning with an extra spirit of your strength, so that we
may turn our days into blessings of Your name. Amen.
4. Possibilities: To
begin again is not a dream. It is an everlasting possibility. God, help us to
grab hold of it and make it real in the coming year. Amen
5. The Book of Life: A
new year is a new page in the book of our lives. May we write with color, wisdom
and humility. And may your grace fall upon it consistently and unceasingly.
Amen
6. Waiting for Us: The
good we missed last year waits for us still. Eternal God, give us the eyes to
see it, the ears to hear and the heart to find it. Amen
7. Strength: God, we do
not ask for a life of ease and comfort. We simply ask to be uncomplaining and
unafraid. May you give us that strength for the New Year.
8. The Possibility for
Change: The Hebrew word for "year" also means
"change." Change is a possibility for each us. May we embrace that
possibility for change within ourselves, change within our families, change
within our communities, and change within our world.
9. Change is inevitable: Growth
is not. It depends on our will, our hopes, our dreams. And it rests on Your
Grace. Give us an extra portion of it, so that we may fill the New Year with
your Presence. Amen
10. Presence: The
greatest gift we can give to others and You can give to us, Oh God, is
Presence. May we be present for others during the coming year, and may You
bless us with Your presence at every moment. Amen.
Saturday, December 19, 2015
Elbow Room for God
Many years ago Oswald Chambers said to a group of
students in a college chapel service: “We have to learn to make room for God --
to give God “elbow room.” Yes, we calculate and estimate, and say that this and
that will happen, and we forget to make room for God to come as he chooses.
Expect him to come, but do not expect him only in a certain way. At any moment
he may break in. Always be in a state of expectancy, and leave room for God to
come as he likes.
How would you change
your prayer if you gave God “elbow room?”
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