How to pray using a Psalm
Given that we are looking at some of the Psalms on a Sunday evening, here's a helpful article from Justin Taylor on the Gospel Coalition website:
HOW TO PRAY A PSALM
Justin taylor
September 29, 2016
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You read the first verse—“The Lord is my shepherd”—and you pray
something like this:
Lord, I thank you
that you are my shepherd. You’re a good shepherd. You have shepherded me all my
life. And, great Shepherd, please shepherd my family today: guard them from the
ways of the world; guide them into the ways of God. Lead them not into temptation;
deliver them from evil. O great Shepherd, I pray for my children; cause them to
be your sheep. May they love you as their shepherd, as I do. And, Lord, please
shepherd me in the decision that’s before me about my future. Do I make that
move, that change, or not? I also pray for our under-shepherds at the church.
Please shepherd them as they shepherd us.
And you continue praying anything else that comes to mind as you
consider the words, “The Lord is my shepherd.” Then when nothing else comes to
mind, you go to the next line: “I shall not want.” And perhaps you pray:
Lord, I thank you
that I’ve never really been in want. I haven’t missed too many meals. All that
I am and all that I have has come from you. But I know it pleases you that I
bring my desires to you, so would you provide the finances that we need for
those bills, for school, for that car?
Maybe you know someone who is in want, and you pray for God’s provision
for him or her. Or you remember some of our persecuted brothers and sisters
around the world, and you pray for their concerns.
After you’ve finished, you look at the next verse: “He makes me lie down
in green pastures” (v. 2a). And, frankly, when you read the words “lie down,”
maybe what comes to mind is simply, “Lord, I would be grateful if you would
make it possible for me to lie down and take a nap today.”2
Possibly the term “green pastures” makes you think of the feeding of
God’s flock in the green pastures of his Word, and it prompts you to pray for a
Bible teaching ministry you lead, or for a teacher or pastor who feeds you with
the Word of God. When was the last time you did that? Maybe you have never done
that, but praying through this psalm caused you to do so.
Next you read, “He leads me beside still waters” (v. 2b). And maybe you begin
to plead,
Yes, Lord, do lead
me in that decision I have to make about my future. I want to do what you want,
O Lord, but I don’t know what that is. Please lead me into your will in this
matter. And lead me beside still waters in this. Please quiet the anxious
waters in my soul about this situation. Let me experience your peace. May the
turbulence in my heart be stilled by trust in you and your sovereignty over all
things and over all people.
Following that, you read these words from verse 3, “He restores my
soul.” That prompts you to pray along the lines of:
My Shepherd, I come
to you so spiritually dry today. Please restore my soul; restore to me the joy
of your salvation. And I pray you will restore the soul of that person from
work/school/down the street with whom I’m hoping to share the gospel. Please
restore his soul from darkness to light, from death to life.
You can continue praying in this way until either (1) you run out of
time, or (2) you run out of psalm. And if you run out of psalm before you run
out of time, you simply turn the page and go to another psalm. By so doing, you
never run out of anything to say, and, best of all, you never again say the
same old things about the same old things.
So basically what
you are doing is taking words that originated in the heart and mind of God and
circulating them through your heart and mind back to God. By this means his
words become the wings of your prayers.
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