I've been re-reading portions of Philip Yancey's book on prayer this week as I prepare for a (unexpected) sermon on Psalm 13. Yancey has a gift for listening to the wisdom and insights of other people. Two of those insights he includes in his book include similiar metaphors--and they seem fitting for this week.
On grief: "Evengelicals tend to want to get to the happy ending. Sometimes, there is no happy ending, and we're simply suspended in grief. When I'm with suffering people, I feel like a deep-sea diver accompnaying them into the depths. Come up too fast, and you'll dangerously decompress. We need to stay with the grief for a while, feel it, let it out. maybe we can see things through tears that we can't see dry-eyed." (269).
On prayer: "...God has equipped us to go deep-sea diving and instead we wade in bathtubs. What makes the difference...is how seriously we take prayer. I see prayer as the process of becoming available for what God wants to do on earth through us." (276)
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