A Roundabout Route

This week when our prayer group of 5 ladies met to pray, Abigail began our time with an effective visual. She opened her iPad and showed us a picture (via Google Map Maker) of the route she would soon be driving between two Colorado destinations: Aspen and Crested Butte.

MapAlthough Abigail assured us the distance between the two towns was less than 10 miles (just long enough to make a nice hike), the quickest way to drive there was to travel in a roundabout way on mountain roads for more than 200 miles to the tune of 5 hours.

“Isn’t this the perfect picture of prayer?” she said, putting her finger on point A. “Here’s the request, and immediately God starts down the road to his answer, which is over here,” she said, pointing to B. If we were God, we’d rush the answer across the quick 10 mile route rather than taking the convoluted circuitous way. So why doesn’t he do that?

So often we pray as if we’re a waitress writing down the ask for a short-order cook, but God sees the process differently. On Tuesday mornings we have over 200 requests to pray over in 2 hours. This means we have to move quickly, which is why we’ve grouped the needs according to topic/subject. (God’s Wish List)

The only reason such a volume of needs doesn’t overwhelm us is our belief that God himself is in the room with us. All we have to do is enter his presence and lay out the requests. Then, much to our delight (and relief), he takes over from there.

But that’s the thing. He doesn’t take someone with problem A and put him/her on a rapid transit line to connect speedily with solution B. He could say, “Let’s see…. I’ll find the right surgeon for that one, put this other couple in front of a good marriage counselor, and arrange the perfect job interview for that other one. Check. Check. Check.”

But that just isn’t him. He’d rather take his time… and ours. That’s because he’s not only concerned about those being prayed for but also the ones doing the praying. All have needs, and when God maps out his choice of a route from request to answer, he’s intending to work wonders all along the way.

DetourGoogle Maps has an interesting caveat at the bottom of its directions page: “You may find that construction projects, traffic, weather, or other events may cause conditions to differ from the map results, and you should plan your route accordingly. You must obey all signs or notices regarding your route.”

What a great summary of how God works, dotting the route from request to answer with unexpected delays. The longer the delays, though, the grander the answers. And maybe that’s the reason we ladies continue to travel the route to our Tuesday morning prayer meetings…. so we don’t miss a single one of those grand answers!

“Pray without ceasing.” (1 Thessalonians 5:17)

6 thoughts on “A Roundabout Route

  1. Wow…nailed again! Just yesterday, in reading the great faith of the centurion, I was convicted/challenged to pray for a pressing family need, and realized I really don’t believe that Jesus will “just say the word” and my loved one will be “healed”. I know he could do it….but realized the “instant” cure might short circuit the deeper need He’s working on. And of course, conveniently forgot that I am one of the deeper needs He’s working on! And that is a long, long trail, a-winding!

  2. Wow…nailed again! Just yesterday in reading of the centurion’s great faith, was convicted/challenged in praying for an urgent family need, that I don’t really believe Jesus will “just say the word” and he will be “healed.” The instant cure might actually short circuit the deeper need He’s working on. And conveniently forgot, of course, that I am one of the deeper needs He’s working on. And that is a long, long trail a-winding!

  3. AMEN TO THE REPLIES ABOVE, you nailed it again.
    Thanks, Margaret for a great reminder.
    God Bless You!

  4. I drove that route from Aspen to Crested Butte this past summer and it is gorgeous! Well worth the drive. It’s one of my favorite places. (We honeymooned in Aspen.) Just another reason God takes us the long way around because we’d miss the beauty of His creation and we need more time to seek Him along the way and spend time focusing on Him.

  5. My friend and I are preparing verses and cards to begin this system. I know we will find our rhythm but just wondering how your group does it. Do you pull one verse for each request or sometimes several? I love that you spend your time praying and reading scripture, not talking of the details. But wondering if you have a “group list” or each brings their own list. Amazing to cover 200 prayer requests in one morning. Thanks! Kelli