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A Prayer Following Prayer
- 09/25/10
- 6
A prayer to pray after you finish praying—it’s a bit odd, I admit, and yet it makes some sense. At least it makes sense when you read it and pray it on your own. Who hasn’t felt like this when they pray?: “O God of grace, I bewail my cold, listless, heartless prayers; their poverty adds sin to my sin.” Have you ever wanted to pray better? Have you ever realized just how poor you are at praying? Then read and pray this prayer from The Valley of Vision:
O God of grace,
I bewail my cold, listless, heartless prayers;
their poverty adds sin to my sin.
If my hope were in them I should be undone,
But the worth of Jesus perfumes my feeble breathings, and wins their acceptance.
Deepen my contrition of heart,
Confirm my faith in the blood that washes from all sin.
May I walk lovingly with my great Redeemer.
Flood my soul with true repentance that my heart may be broken for sin and unto sin.
Let me be as slow to forgive myself as thou art ready to forgive me.
Gazing on the glories of thy grace may I be cast into the lowest depths of shame.
and walk with downcast head now thou art pacified towards me.
O my great High Priest,
pour down upon me streams of needful grace,
bless me in all my undertakings,
in every thought of my mind,
every word of my lips,
every step of my feet,
every deed of my hands.
Thou didst live to bless,
die to bless,
rise to bless,
ascend to bless,
take thy throne to bless,
and now thou dost reign to bless.
O give sincerity to my desires,
earnestness to my supplications,
fervour to my love.

I am a follower of Jesus Christ, a husband to Aileen and a father to three young children. I worship and serve as a pastor at
Releasing on April 1, The Next
Comments (6)
Wouldn’t it make more sense to pray it before our other prayers? If we truly believe God wants to answer this prayer as well as our others, and doesn’t *just* want us to bewail, then shouldn’t we ask Him to uphold our prayers before we make them?
I’ve never prayed in these words, or included all of the thoughts behind them, but I frequently ask God to help with and overlook the sinfulness and weakness of my prayers before I offer them, acknowledging my feebleness and unworthiness. To do it afterward seems, at least to me, more like a self-abasing “rant” than an actual request for something you want (and need) Him to do about it.
I’m not saying the emotion of such a “rant” isn’t appropriate, just that it shouldn’t stop there — when we ask God to both overlook and overcome our sinful weakness, we should expect Him in His mercy and grace to DO IT, so it seems like it would be most appropriate most of the time to ask Him to do it upfront, rather than just bewailing our lack and asking him to “make up for it” afterward, so to speak.
Don’t know if I’m making any sense, but that’s my reaction.
I have said a similar prayer after prayer (similar in content not in wording). I find myself having ups and downs in my prayer life. And during the “downs” I pray that God will forgive what I feel are more prayers of obligation then prayers from the heart.
www.studyyourbibleonline.com
This is just great. Thanks for sharing it. Very thought provoking.
Pentamom #1 - Good observation (IMHO). Thanks for sharing it.
I don’t think the order of the prayers matters as much as the position of the heart that they express.
Well, FWIW, I’m not saying it “matters” or that doing it afterward is in any way wrong or deficient. I’m just saying that it seems to make *more* sense to do it first, because that way we’re asking God to really hear and affect our prayers so that as we pray, He *is doing* that. Not just, “I am so weak, I blew that, please forgive me and show mercy and make my prayers what they ought to be but are not,” though those thoughts and requests as far as they go are CERTAINLY more than appropriate.
I don’t mean at all to be critical of the post as it stands, just throwing in something I thought might be helpful.