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  • Fervent (Passionate, Powerful, Purposeful) Prayer

    Being faithful in prayer is going to Jesus first moment by moment. 2Written by Katie Forbess, IRSM Board President

    February is Prayer Month for IRSM and has been for the last eight years. One of the greatest examples in my life of fervent prayer is Iron Rose Sister Ministries itself. Our mission to equip women to grow closer to God and one another more deeply was an answer to the desire of my heart. At a time when I thought that I was crying out to God and He wasn’t listening, He was putting things in motion that I could never imagine.

    When my heart was broken, leaving Bolivia to return to the states, I had many ideas and thoughts. In my original plan about how I wanted to help women grow closer to God and one another, it was for the state of Arkansas. IRSM is international in our reach, and this year, we have added a third language: Portuguese!

    I think one of the amazing gifts of fervent prayer is that it transforms us when we open our hearts and say with purpose and with power—the power of God—what we need and what we want.

    God knew when I walked across the stage at a World Mission Workshop that I wanted to dedicate my life to Him. I wanted to be a missionary in a foreign land. He knew what that meant, and He knew more even than I did why. My spirit was talking to His Spirit. That was a fervent prayer. I didn’t know how God was going to answer that.

    God is listening. He is listening to our fervent prayer, just as when a baby cries and everyone must listen to hear the tone of the cry. Or the child that repeats over and over again, “Mommy, Mommy, Mommy, Mommy, Mommy, Mommy,” until you have to say something. You have to answer. Someone has to answer. In the same way that a teenager does little things to get your attention and if you are paying attention, you totally see them, especially if it’s your nephew or your son. You know! Those are fervent pleas and that’s what we do with God. When we do it transparently, we grow, and we change, and we know that God sees the desires of our hearts.

    This year we are studying Our Story and it’s only making me look back and think more and more about how my prayer life has been changed through praying for IRSM. Everything from the inception and the deciding 501c3 vs for profit to last week deciding the theme for something or a computer program that we need to use because we are growing, and we need to be able to communicate effectively within the organization and outside the organization. There are so many ways that I know that God is hearing our cries.

    I have called myself a glorified cheerleader but maybe I should change that to a glorified fervent prayer warrior because sometimes when I can’t do all the other things that I want to do for Iron Rose Sister Ministries, what I can do is pray.

    And that prayer can be for anything. It can be for a sister I don’t know in another country. It can be for Michelle for many different reasons. It can be for any of the team members, the board members, for a project we are starting, or for a conference we have. The prayers are unlimited, and the importance of those prayers is that they are fervent and that I believe that there is power behind them.

    God wants our passion. Hannah showed so much passion that Eli thought that she was drunk (1 Sam. 1:13). Passionate may be a good word for me since I have been described as “a little extra” in my life. A little extra for people who can't take me the right way. They don’t understand me or think I’m a little much. I have learned how to handle that better, but God wants me to be to be “a little extra.” God can handle it, especially in prayer!

    With Job, the beautiful talk between God and Job when God says, “Well, hey dude, but remember who you are,” God never says, “I don’t want to hear you.” He never says—now He does say be quiet—but He never says, “I don’t want to hear you, I don’t care about what you're saying, I don’t want you to share your thoughts with me.” But He does say, “Hey dude, I want to remind you who I am.” And that is what happens through fervent prayer: you spill out your passion and your thoughts and your feelings and your everything else, and then you remember who you are praying to, and you say, oh, yeah, “He’s God…” And it puts everything in perspective.

    I want to leave you with one last thought: I can only pray fervently to and be passionate about a God that I know and love. That’s another thing that that fervent prayer does. It brings my first love to mind, and it reminds me what is actually important and what is actually going to be powerful and Who will make things happen.

    Finally, when it comes to fervent prayer, Hannah is a beautiful example. I could have talked about my own example of miscarriage, but the thing that I think is most effective is to tell you about how prayer is an integral part of Iron Rose Sister Ministries, Ministerio Hermana Rosa de Hierro and the Portuguese version that I may or may not be able to pronounce. We all want and need fervent prayer. This ministry is not based solely on my fervent prayers. I am one piece of a team of a multitude of people who have prayed and wanted and needed IRSM before it even began and have carried IRSM through their own passion and their own fervent prayers. Thank you for being a part of that! God is listening.

     

  • God Loves Our Prayers

    Psalm 66 20

  • Got prayer?

  • Hannah: A Devoted Woman of Prayer: 1 Samuel 1:1-2:10

    tuesday03 2022 02 15pngWritten by Tiffany Jacox, volunteer with Iron Rose Sister Ministries in Nebraska

    When I was first approached with the opportunity to share about the beautiful story of Hannah, I was a little intimidated. I wasn’t sure it was something I could relate to well enough that I could adequately tell her story. I imagine God gave a big grin and said let me show you.

    As I thought about this task before me and thought about Hannah, her faith, and her persistence, I stopped, and I prayed. When I finished praying, I grabbed my Bible and I opened it up. My Bible opened right up to 1 Samuel. It lay there as if it were open and smiling with God saying, share My word. Hannah was an amazing woman in the Bible, a woman of amazing faith and strength. Her story is one of torment, pain, waiting, and promise.

    Hannah was married to Elkanah who was also married to Peninnah. Peninnah had children and Hannah had none. Hannah deeply desired children. Elkanah loved Hannah and when he went to make the annual sacrifices he made a double-portion sacrifice for her. Now Peninnah would provoke Hannah and torment her for being childless. This would upset Hannah and she wouldn’t sleep or eat. Her husband, Elkanah, didn’t understand this because he believed that he was good to her and thought that should be enough. Doesn’t this sound like some of us in life sometimes? Men and women? We sure are different, aren’t we?

    Hannah finally got some sleep and ate some food and then rose up and went to the temple. She prayed. She prayed HARD! She prayed and she wept bitterly. She made a vow with the Lord and asked if He gave her a son, she would give him to the Lord all the days of his life and a razor will never come to his head.

    Now she was in intense prayer here. Have you ever been in intense prayer with the Lord? Maybe during a very difficult time in your life or the life of a friend or loved one? Think about when Jesus was praying in the garden and He had sweat on His head like drops of blood in Luke 22:44.

    Hannah was praying hard, and she was crying and talking to God and meanwhile Eli, the priest, was standing at the doorway watching this. She was talking with God and her lips were moving but no sound was coming out. Eli asked her if she was drunk and she responded, “I am not drunk! I am oppressed in spirit and have poured my heart out to the Lord.”

    Hannah showed us her full faith in the Lord and laid down her burdens at His feet in prayer. Eli told her to go in peace and may God grant her petition. Hannah was no longer sad. Our burden is light when we rely on the Lord.

    The Lord remembered Hannah and she conceived a son. She named him Samuel because she asked him from the Lord. Hannah did not make the journey for the annual sacrifice the following year, waiting until the child was weaned because of the promise she made to the Lord. Once the child was weaned, she took him to the temple and gave thanks to the Lord and they worshipped the Lord. She kept her promise, just as God had kept His.

    Hannah endured very difficult times, but she leaned on the Lord and she went to Him in prayer. She relied on God to provide. She was patient. She was remembered and rewarded. I will admit I need to work on my prayer life; it does not look like Hannah’s. How does your life look like Hannah’s? Are you fervent in prayer like Hannah? Has a prayer been answered after a long wait? Or like me, do you realize you need to work on your faithful devotion to prayer?

     

  • How God Answers Prayer

    “Return to sender, address unknown.” Ever feel like that’s what’s stamped on your prayers? You don’t get an answer and wonder if you even directed your prayers to the right person.

    Thankfully, in Christ, we have direct access to the Father and no longer have to go to the temple or tabernacle. There is no priest to offer a sacrifice on our behalf so that God will hear us. Jesus was the perfect sacrifice, once for all.

    So, then, if I trust that I am able to lift my prayers directly to God, why am I not getting an answer?! Or are you?

    Sometimes God answers our prayers in the affirmative and sometimes with a resounding “no.” And he often has us wait on the answer, causing us to doubt his sovereignty (gracious control) and whether his attentive ear understood our request.

    However, there is a way in which God always answers our prayers: with spiritual growth.

    As a general rule, we are not patient people. And, we are quite selfish. We want what we want and when we want it. We may not throw a temper-tantrum like a practiced two-year-old, but we have learned the art of masking our impatient selfishness. We pout, whine, complain, suggest, withdraw, demand… we each have our methods.

    And when God asks us to wait, we pull out all the stops, bargaining with our divine Creator and loving Father, sure that we have a clearer understanding than he does.

    And while we wait, what do we begin to learn?

    ·     Our divine Creator really does know what’s best for his creation.

    ·     Our heavenly Father loves us more than we can begin to comprehend.

    ·     Our sovereign God is in control and has an eternal perspective.

    ·     Our gracious Savior longs to bless us and even to save us from ourselves.

    God may not answer your prayers when you want or how you want, but God always answers our prayers with spiritual growth, if we let him.

    You don’t have the wrong address because your think your prayers aren’t being heard. You are experiencing an opportunity to increase your faith, just like the persistent widow (Luke 18).

  • How Jesus Taught Me to Pray

    Written by Katie Forbess, President of the Board of Directors of Iron Rose Sister Ministries, with the collaboration of Jubilee Forbess, her daughterKatie and Jubilee

    I finally made it to my closet. I have wanted for years to create a place of prayer there. I have always felt the need, but it never happened until I was invited to spend 29 days in quiet prayer, for Advent 2022. I realized that shutting everything else out is so important because it makes you focus on the presence of God. By repeating, “reveal yourself to me,” I was strengthened in remembering that prayer is where you are alone, but with the Creator God. So, through growing up in the church and trusting God through many trying times, I have found the following lessons and am eager to share them. I wrote pages and pages of anecdotes narrating this story, but, like prayer, this doesn’t need to be so complicated. 

    The only way you can truly learn to pray is by doing it. Jesus told the disciples,

    “When you pray,say: "`Father, hallowed be your name, your kingdom come. Give us each day our daily bread. Forgive us our sins, for we also forgive everyone who sins against us. And lead us not into temptation”(Luke 11:2-4)

    Why? They were Jewish men who already prayed. They just needed a little tweaking, because… The Messiah was among them. They needed a little perspective. They needed a reminder of what they should ask for, what they should not ask for, and how forgiving others was the key to being forgiven. Prayer is a command. 

    My prayer life is what it is because of all the prayers and sermons and songs and books that have come before today. I reflected upon a short story, “Eleven,” that speaks of being all the ages and realized that my prayer life is all the teachings, plus the decision to engage daily. The Scripture. The songs. The answered prayers of 45 years. These were my teachers and my foundation, the pure material that has come through in life’s many trials. Prayer is like breathing. 

    Jeff lost his wallet. We prayed as we left to run errands. He found it while we were gone. Prayer is simple. 

    God is faithful when we take one step towards Him. I also believe that the verse in 2 Corinthians 12:10, “When I am weak, then I am strong,” is now etched on my heart. When we returned to the United States from Bolivia, I cried every Sunday during the singing. With emotions and transformation that I can’t explain well in words—works of the Spirit, I am sure—I poured out my soul to God in prayer. I chose not to wipe the tears away. Prayer is hard

    There was a time when I was driving every day after work to take college classes in Greeley, Colorado. On my way there, I was listening to rock music and reading the NY Times. It was a time that would end in a miscarriage, but before that, I realized that I needed to use my time differently and started to listen to purely KLOVE (Christian radio). The same thing seemed to happen in November of 2022. Things were so hard and I needed to be in constant prayer. Fire refines us and shows us who we really are. Sometimes it only warms me, other times it lights the way. Sometimes it burns me, and other times it sweats the impurities out of me. Prayer, then, is like fire


    I had to pray for the enemy. Keep quiet and let God fight for us. I had to reach out and contact the prayer warriors and ask them to pray for something I simply couldn’t talk about. I had to give thanks, because there was no doubt that the hand of God was in even this terrible situation. I had to trust that God would shut the mouths of lions and He seemed to surround me with lambs. Prayer is a gift. 

    Looking through your life and the lessons that Jesus has taught you about prayer, which ones surprise you the most during a time of crisis?

  • I AM Hears Our Prayer Echoes from the Past

    Praying to the I AM web homeEach year, I select a different theme for my personal Bible study and for my prayers. 2013 was Human AND Holy, which inspired the book by the same title. Transformation characterized my life and the ministry’s in 2014. In 2015, I prayed for God’s provision: financial and workers. Wisdom focused my prayers for 2016 and for 2017, we concentrated on listening. During 2018, the emphasis of our prayers was on growth as we experienced growing pains and reflected on what God says about growth through Scripture.

    One of the unique characteristics of growth and blessings of prayer is to look back. We can see answered prayers from the past. We remember how far we have come. We repeat prayers that continue to shape our perspective. And we reflect on God’s faithfulness at every turn.

    Preparing for I AM, our emphasis in 2019 helps us keep our eyes and our prayers focused on the I AM, to whom we pray.

    The prayers throughout my life become the stepping stones for the direction God now carries me. And many of the prayers from my past echo in my current murmurings.

    • When my humanity threatens to overshadow my holy calling, I look to Christ’s example and pray, “Not my will but Yours be done.” Praying to I AM Father.
    • Transformation seems elusive, yet I look to the discontented caterpillar, later struggling to exit the chrysalis for inspiration as a beautiful butterfly. And I thank God for His creation as an example of transformation. Praying to I AM Creator.
    • We continue to pray for God’s provision: financial and workers, remembering the promises in Scripture that “His faithfulness continues throughout all generations” (Ps. 100:5, 119:90). Praying to I AM Provider.
    • Even the wisest man to walk this earth continued to seek counsel with His Father through prayer. Praying to I AM All-Knowing.
    • And so, we listen for God’s wisdom as He leads us in times of growth. Praying to I AM your God.

    What are your personal prayers for this year? Or what are prayers you have focused on in the past that you are now revisiting? Which name of I AM are you praying to?

    Thank you for joining us in prayer this month! And don’t forget to sign up for a 15-minute time slot to pray for IRSM on Monday, February 25!

    #IronRoseSister #prayingtoIAM #plus1 #IRSM #prayer

  • I know you're down there

    KadeshAs I reflect this year on “listening,” especially in the context of prayer (this month´s theme), I am reminded of a story from a few years ago.
    It was a day in which the list in preparation for my upcoming trip was long: lessons to review, phone calls to make, emails to respond to, etc. Living in the basement, I was able to do most things from the bottom floor, but I had to go upstairs to eat my lunch, run errands, etc.
    Each time I went upstairs, Kadesh, my nephew, greeted me and came running over to be held, played with, or, at the very least, to find out what I was doing and join with me in whatever the task at hand. Bonus is when I took him downstairs with me and he got to play around in the basement for a bit.

  • I Won't Stop Asking

    persistent widowNo one likes a nag. Or a pest. But God invites us to continually knock on His door in prayer.
    The persistent widow in Luke 18:1-8 reminds me of this truth—because of her faith, and because she took her requests to the one who had the power to do something about it.
    Today, as we lift up our continued prayer for God’s provision: financial and workers, I will remember the persistent widow and never tire of asking for what I trust God will provide. I ask in faith, and I take my requests to the One who has the power to do something about it.
    Thank you, Lord, for always listening.

  • In the Breach

    in the breachWritten by Débora Rodrigo de Racancoj
    I know that feeling. I have experienced it many times. God, who knows my situation, who observes me from his Holy throne, sees all this injustices occurring on earth, His earth, which He created with His voice. Why does not He do anything? He has the solution in His hand. A simple word from Him is enough for the injustice that is destroying the people around me to cease; for the battle in which I have been buried all this time to end... Why, Lord?

  • Intercessory Prayer

    intercessory prayerWritten by Wendy Neill
    Do you struggle with how to pray for those who don’t know Christ? I have a younger brother who walked away from Jesus as a teenager. I have been praying for him for 30 years, sometimes in tears, sometimes with my face on the ground. To be perfectly honest with you, I get weary. I believe the Bible teaches that we all have free will, so what’s the point in praying for him? He has chosen to reject God. Can God make him accept his free gift of grace?

    During one such time of weariness, I found myself in a Harding Lectureship class titled “Praying for Lost Loved Ones.” The speaker reminded us that God desires for all to be saved (2 Pet. 3:9), and that Jesus came to seek and save the lost (Luke 19:10; John 3:16-17). He also recommended a book that I later read called Intercessory Prayer by Dutch Sheets. I didn’t agree with everything in the book, but it inspired me to intercede, to mediate, and to pursue reconciliation through prayer.

  • Intercessory Prayer - The Ultimate Love Language

    Written by Katie Forbess, President of Iron Rose Sister Ministries Board of Directors in Arkansas 2023 Katie Forbess

    Many people have taken personality tests that identify their “love language." The five major languages are physical touch, gift giving, quality time, words of affirmation, and acts of service. There are many online resources for people who want to learn more about themselves and how they show love to those around them, whether it is their spouse, their parents, or even strangers they meet from day to day. This is an interesting and helpful way to explore your relationships and how to improve them, while still getting your own needs met. What is cool about intercessory prayer is that it incorporates all of the love languages in the most universal love language of all: Prayer!It’s praying for others and letting God take care of them in ways that you can’t because you are human.

    Once you realize that you can let God handle things not only in your own life but in your relationships as well, intercessory prayer can be an empathetic response to other people’s trials as well as celebrations. One of the main purposes of identifying your love language is to create harmony and unity in your relationships. This is also the purpose of intercessory prayer. Unity was one of Christ’s main purposes in coming to earth: living and dying and resurrecting so that God the Father, the Son, the Holy Spirit, and those who are in Christ can be one. The key to that unity is love. Love is the glue that holds the intercessory prayer together, as shown in Jesus’ prayer in John 17:23 NIV. “I in them and you in me—so that they may be brought to complete unity. Then the world will know that you sent me and have loved them even as you have loved me.”

    And He continues to pray for this unifying love in verse 26, “I have made you known to them, and will continue to make you known in order that the love you have for me may be in them and that I myself may be in them.”

    It is also a way of protecting people, and there are many examples of this in the Bible. In this context, we see how Jesus is praying to protect, praying first for Himself and then His disciples. Then He prays for those in the future who will believe. This is because He is the Bridge and the High Priest between His disciples and God. Therefore, intercessory prayer is a way to unify and protect your loved ones.

    An important aspect is that when you pray this way—on behalf of others—you are glorifying Jesus and the Holy Father. This purpose is outlined in verses 1b-3 of John 17.

    Father, the hour has come. Glorify your Son, that your Son may glorify you. For you granted him authority over all people that he might give eternal life to all those you have given him. Now this is eternal life: that they know you, the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom you have sent.

    Intercessory prayer is a way to connect with someone and show them that although you can’t take care of things for them, you know Who can. When you place your hands on someone or hold hands with them to pray, that is physical touch. When you give them the time that it takes for you to pray for them, you not only spend quality time with them but also with God. Jesus knew it was very important to spend time in prayer, especially when He was in His worst situations. He also took the time to explain to His disciples what was going to happen, even if they didn’t yet realize the weight of it. Intercessory prayer is a blessing, which is a form of gift giving. And this kind of prayer is an act of service and definitely words of affirmation because you are looking to the One who will tell you only truths when there are so many lies that others would like you and those close to you to believe.

    All in all, when you have a relationship with another, intercessory prayer is a vital and beneficial part of that relationship that will help you grow closer to each other and to God.

    How can you focus more on glory, protection and unity in your intercessory prayers?

  • John 17 Pattern

    Jesus PrayerOver the next two days, we will follow two different examples of Jesus’ prayers as patterns we can also follow in our prayers: today, from John 17 and tomorrow, from Matthew 6.
    Before going to the cross, John records a lengthy prayer in which Jesus prays for himself, for his disciples and for all believers. Read John 17 and then, following that model, make a list of things to pray over in the same three categories today:
    Prayers for yourself:

    Prayers for the local body of believers (your local church, women´s ministry, or your IRSM group):

    Prayers for all believers worldwide:

    Just as we follow Christ’s pattern from John 17 today, it has been a joy and a blessing to know that all this month, we have joined in prayer for many of the same things as one voice on behalf of Iron Rose Sister Ministries! Please continue to lift us up in your daily prayers.

  • Join us! 24 days of prayer leading up to 24 hours of prayer

     

    Starting February 1, we invite you to participate with us in "24 days of prayer leading up to 24 hours of prayer," culminating in a Prayer-a-thon, February 24th.

    There is a Prayer Guide available for download with suggested topics and Scriptures for each of the 24 days as we pray over all God is doing in and through Iron Rose Sister Ministries.

    You can also sign up for a 15-minute slot to pray during the Prayer-a-thon.

    ... as you help us by your prayers. Then many will give thanks on our behalf for the gracious favor granted us in answer to the prayers of many. ~ II Corinthians 1:11

  • Lord, Teach Us to Pray

    Lord teach us to prayWritten by Debora Rodrigo de Racancoj

    Many of us have followed Christ for years. We attend church regularly. And many of us may not miss any of the weekly meetings offered at our church. We read the Bible regularly, more or less. In fact, many of our Bibles are worn out from using them. They may be full of marks and highlights. We may even be able to recite some of its passages by memory. And in many of our lives, it is easy to find moments dedicated to God in one way or another. But one of the activities in which we, today's Christian women, most commonly fail is in prayer. That moment alone with God is set aside during the little time the daily chores leave us. It may happen that, like many of us, prayer is your pending assignment.

  • Matthew 6 Pattern

    Matt 6 Jesus PrayerIn this exercise, we will follow the pattern of the Lord’s Prayer in Matthew 6:9-13, using the New English Translation. Make the Lord’s Prayer your own by following the examples in italics below each portion of the prayer.

    “So pray this way:


    Our Father in heaven, may your name be honored,”
    Claim three names or attributes of God by speaking them aloud

    “may your kingdom come,”
    Cry out to God for His church to grow and his Son to return


    “may your will be done on earth as it is in heaven.”
    Mention a specific situation in which you long for God’s will to be done, above your own will


    “Give us today our daily bread,”
    Thank God for His provision and ask Him to help you trust Him to meet ALL your needs according to his glorious riches in Christ Jesus (Phil. 4:19)


    “and forgive us our debts, as we ourselves have forgiven our debtors.”
    Example: “God, you forgive us time and time again. Thank you for your example of forgiveness and please help me forgive __________. Help me see forgiveness as freedom for me and trust in you, not a condoning of any wrongdoing.”


    “And do not lead us into temptation, but deliver us from the evil one.”
    Example: “Lord, I’m so tempted to _________, even when I recognize it as Satan’s trap. Please help me remember that your way is best and replace the temptation to do something wrong with a desire and longing to do something right.”

  • Meet Erica Peck

    [caption id="" align="alignnone" width="500.0"]Erica Peck with husband, Ezequias, and sons, Israel and Michael Erica Peck with husband, Ezequias, and sons, Israel and Michael[/caption]

    Meet Erica Peck, the newest addition to the Iron Rose Sister Ministries team!

    IRSM has grown and God is providing new opportunities for expansion as we equip more women to connect to God and one another more deeply across the Americas. In order to help make those things happen, the Board approved, at our last meeting, our move forward on faith to hire a part-time bilingual assistant for IRSM.

    I am so excited to partner with another woman passionate about what God is doing here in the U.S. and across Latin America.

    In addition to secretarial type tasks, Erica will be specifically serving as a volunteer coordinator for women getting involved the various aspects of IRSM and also a point of contact for the distribution of books into Latin America. We would love for you to get involved as well!

    One of my primary prayers for 2015 has been for God’s provision—financial and workers—for IRSM. What a blessing to see this specific answer to prayer before the end of the year!

    Our Board of Directors has been a huge support and blessing, and I am honored to serve alongside each of them. Thank you Katie Forbess, Cynthia Cedeño, Linda Murphy, Daniel Mata, Ron Hanegan, and former member, Kimberly Edwards.

    Please join me in this time of rejoicingand prayerfully consider helping IRSM continue to grow to meet the spiritual needs of women and women’s ministries across the Americas.

    Your donations are what have made this possible and we hope to continue to count on your support and the support of others in the future. Spread the word!

    Tax-deductible contributions can be made through our website or by mailing a check to 1 Susan Dr. Searcy, AR  72143 

    Thank you!

  • Monday Morning Prayers

    got prayerEvery Monday morning I have a friend who faithfully texts me, asking what she can pray for that week. I am not the only one blessed by this practice. She sends a similar text or email to a group of individuals serving in full-time ministry across the country, and across the world.
    Some Monday mornings, I look forward to her text; ready with a short but sweet item we can lift up to the Father together. Other Monday mornings, her text awakens me and it takes a moment for my brain to kick into gear and process my thoughts and prayers. However, there are other Monday mornings in which her text frustrates me.

  • My Communication with the Father

    Written by Michelle J. Goff, Founder and Director of Iron Rose Sister MinistriesMichelle Goff 320

    Daily, for about seven years, before, during, and after high school, I faithfully wrote in a prayer journal. I noted which chapters I read from the Old Testament, New Testament, and Proverbs. Since writing is one of the ways in which I process the world, it seemed appropriate that I would spend an allotted time each evening discussing my day with God, my thoughts, my fears, and my questions, in written form.

    Most of the time, if I specifically addressed God by name, I would simply say, “Dear God.” I later learned to call on Him as the Great Physician, Comforter, Prince of Peace, Yahweh, Savior, etc. However, during those earlier years of prayer, if I had to pick one primary title that came to mind when I would address God, it was one of Heavenly Father.

    “Heavenly” because I saw Him as other-worldly. He was seated up on His throne and would listen to us, inserting an occasional intervention on behalf of a truly worthy request. I would thank Him for His wisdom through the Proverbs and lament the many who did not heed His wisdom.

    “Father” was because I emphasized a greater distinction between our Father in Heaven, His Son, Jesus, who came to earth to die on the cross to save us from our sins, and in whose name we pray. Finally, the Holy Spirit was the third title and one to whom I never prayed.

    I now thank the Holy Spirit for interpreting my groans (Rom. 8:26) and ask Him to be my Guide, Comforter, and Reminder of Truth (John 14, 16). He is a seal guaranteeing my inheritance!

    I have learned to thank Jesus for modeling obedience, for His selfless and sacrificial love, and for choosing what the world would deem unworthy followers to be His initial disciples. He is my Redeemer who ever lives and intercedes for me!

    As I continued to address the Father in prayer, the meaning behind that title has evolved. My

    relationship and communication with the Father have grown along with my intimacy with Him.

    After returning to live in the U.S. after my years in Venezuela, I suffered extreme reverse culture shock. It was not a term that was commonly used at that time, nor was it a phenomenon I was warned about.

    Walking through the aisles of the grocery store, I was overwhelmed by the hundreds of choices. I had come from a time and place in which you planned your menu based on whatever you found on the shelf that week, or what you had waited in a long line to obtain.

    Navigating new relationships in a culture that felt long-forgotten, I had to explain why I knew nothing of TV shows, movies, commercials, or other “small talk” connection points. I counted down the days to my first visit back to Venezuela and the opportunity to introduce others to the reasons I might’ve been louder or culturally awkward.

    A month or two after that return visit to Venezuela, life took another turn and my responsibilities doubled. Still disoriented and uncertain, I clearly remember an opportunity that was granted me to step away for a couple of days. That intentional time of prayer, reflection, Bible reading, and rest was desperately needed.

    The most memorable moment from those days was when I pictured myself curled up on God’s lap, crying out my pain to Him. He was a welcoming Father who held my right hand, gently stroking my hair, as He comforted me. I was warmed by His embrace and drawn into a deeper level of trust. He could handle my grief. He could reorient my cross-cultural awkwardness. He could shoulder the weight of my added responsibilities. He would remain faithful and present. Always.

    Beautifully, I knew that I could crawl back up into His lap at any time, which I did.

    As my Father who loved me deeply, I could go to Him unencumbered by my hesitancy. As my Father who delighted in me, I could bound into His lap to prattle on about my greatest joys. As my Father who called me His daughter, I could hear Him whisper my name as the One who has always known me.

    After that first time of picturing myself sitting in God’s lap and sloppily blubbering my heart’s deepest hurts, He truly became my Father.

    If you have not been able to communicate with our Father to that level of intimacy, I invite you to start with simply entering His throne room and accepting His invitation to that depth of relationship with Him. It all starts with communication. You don’t have to know what to say. God knows your heart and doesn’t need you to speak a word.

  • My Prayer for Listening

    Can you hear me nowEach year, I choose a focus for my personal prayers and those that I lift up on behalf of the ministry. Last year, I asked for God’s wisdom; the year before, provision—financial and workers—for IRSM. What a blessing to see His answer to those requests, for which we are extremely grateful. In our thanksgiving, we continue to lift up similar petitions for wisdom and provision. (And thank you for being part of these answered prayers!)
    This year, my emphasis in prayer and in study is Listening. As someone who stays quite busy, whose thoughts are always whirling with a multi-tasked variety of ideas, dates, commitments, and people, it is hard to stop and listen—to be fully present in the moment and listen. Listening to God, to others, and to the world.

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Iron Rose Sister Ministries (IRSM) is a registered 501(c)3 public charity. All donations are tax-deductible.

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Headquarters in
Searcy, AR, U.S.A.

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