There is something beautiful about the simplicity of kids. I remember after planting our first garden our little girls woke up early in the morning to run outside and see if anything had grown. After all, we had just put seeds in the ground 20 hours prior! Their eager expectation is instructive.

In the 5th Psalm we read of a believer exercising highly developed prayer reflexes. He is crying out to God. His heart is overcome with weightiness. It is the type of thing that is first on his mind as he awakens in the morning (Ps. 5.1-2). The concern, burden, anxiety, and desperation of the soul continue to bubble up within him.

What does he do? He does what is natural for the child of God. He opens the cap of his highly carbonated soul. His reflex is to pray (Ps. 5.3). He cries out to God.

But he does something else. In verse 3 we read that he also watches. This can be translated “spy” or “look out” or “keep watch.” It is the same word used in Prov. 15.3, “The eyes of the Lord are in every place, keeping watch on the evil and the good.” The point is simple: the believer is to feel their burden, carry their burden to God, and then watch for God to work. In other words, don’t just pray about it….but look for God to work!

Much like a eager and expectant child who has dropped a seed into the ground, the believer is to look through the eyes of faith knowing that God is for them, loves them, hears them, and works all things together for their good (Rom. 8.28; 1 Pet. 5.6-8). The same heart of faith that comes to God in prayer patiently waits and watches for God to answer his prayer.

I know that I do not do this when I am doubting God’s closeness, care, power, intimacy, favor, and compassion. All of these sinful, faithless doubts were answered at the cross however. The cross of Christ is God’s declaration of his love, his pledge of closeness, his promise of intimacy, and his demonstration of compassion. As Paul rightly reasoned and concluded:

He who did not spare his own Son but gave him up for us all, how will he not also with him graciously give us all things? (Rom. 8.32)

May we have those childlike reflexes that so characterize the children of God. Let us pray, wait, and watch.

Originally posted at The Gospel Coalition.

How does God's Word impact our prayers?

God invites His children to talk with Him, yet our prayers often become repetitive and stale. How do we have a real conversation with God? How do we come to know Him so that we may pray for His will as our own?

In the Bible, God speaks to us as His children and gives us words for prayer—to praise Him, confess our sins, and request His help in our lives.

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