This post is sponsored and contributed by Crystal Lake Christian Church, a Patch Brand Partner.

Community Corner

A Prayer of Faith in Time of Distress

When this world wounds us we should not isolate ourselves from God; instead, we should run to Him as He is a loving and capable Father.

(Crystal Lake Christian Church)

This is a paid post contributed by a Patch Community Partner. The views expressed in this post are the author's own, and the information presented has not been verified by Patch.


Psalm 6 was written when David was physically exhausted, emotionally crushed, spiritually desperate—yet the psalm ends with defiant rejection of his circumstances and a bold confidence in the Lord.

That is the heartbeat of today’s message and the heartbeat of our faith in the name of our Lord, Jesus Christ.

Often times when an animal is wounded it isolates itself because it knows it is vulnerable.As for us, when wounded we isolate ourselves, from other people (which may be appropriate) and, often from God.Instead, we are to approach God, be vulnerable with Him and let Him heal our hearts.

This is what David does.

Verses 1-3, “O Lord, do not rebuke me in Your anger, nor chasten me in Your hot displeasure. 2 Have mercy on me, O Lord, for I am weak; O Lord, heal me, for my bones are troubled. 3 My soul also is greatly troubled; but You, O Lord—how long?”

Takeaway

  • Although we may sound like a broken record to ourselves we never sound like a broken record to God.He is not offended by honest prayers He embraces them as He simply wants us to come to Him as an injured child as would a loving and able parent.

Here’s a question worth asking:have you noticed that when God feels far away so does our hope regarding our circumstances?

Verses 4-7 reads, “Return, O Lord, deliver me! Oh, save me for Your mercies’ sake! 5 For in death there is no remembrance of You; In the grave who will give You thanks? 6 I am weary with my groaning; All night I make my bed swim; I drench my couch with my tears. 7 My eye wastes away because of grief; It grows old because of all my enemies.”

Takeaway

  • Our hope is rooted in God’s character, not our condition and His mercy is our lifeline. Therefore, our tears are not a sign of weak faith—they are the evidence of a living and deeply dependent faith that acknowledges that we are designed to stand in our strength but to rest in His.

Finally, verses 8-10 read, “Depart from me, all you workers of iniquity; for the Lord has heard the voice of my weeping. 9 The Lord has heard my supplication; the Lord will receive my prayer. 10 Let all my enemies be ashamed and greatly troubled; let them turn back and be ashamed suddenly.”

In these final verses nothing has changed about David’s circumstances but what has changed is the orientation of David’s life.Instead, David rested in what he knew about God and that His faithfulness knows no bounds.

Takeaway

  • Faith declares what God will do well in advance of a changing landscape and that while things may not change with regards to our specific needs or situation; the victory belongs to the Lord.
  • We are called to praise God in the name of Jesus Christ not because our situations are changing but are called to praise Him in the valley of our circumstances because we know that He will meet us there and not abandon.

Our weeping and our mourning are not the end of the story and it isn’t the end of the line; let us focus our attention on Christ and praise God in the name of Jesus for it is through Him that the victory has already been won.


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This post is sponsored and contributed by Crystal Lake Christian Church, a Patch Brand Partner.