Your Nightly Prayer

A Season of Silent Hope - Your Nightly Prayer - November 28th

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Your Nightly Prayer

A Season of Silent Hope
Your Nightly Prayer
Amber Ginter

TONIGHT'S SCRIPTURE

“Be still before the LORD and wait patiently for Him." - Psalm 37:7, NIV

SOMETHING TO PONDER

I spent five years in a career I didn't love. Can you relate? Maybe it was cleaning teeth, selling homes, or working as a social worker. For others, maybe it was attending college, working at your local fast food chain, or making less than minimum wage as a student worker. Nevertheless, I think we all know what it feels like to be in one place in life when we really want to be in another. 

For me, that career was teaching. I knew deep down that God was using me, but I also knew that I was created for something more, something different. That constant tension between where I was and where I wanted to be ate at me day after day. Why? Because I hated waiting. I mean, who does, but really, waiting, slow, and patience have often never been in my vocabulary. And I have to wonder: Are they in yours?

In Psalm 37:7, we are told that waiting on the Lord often requires us to be still. Although I've struggled to be still in my daily life, I've come to learn that the best way I hear God is to slow down. To pause. To exchange my plan and timeline for a God who knows better than I do. To cease from striving and be still before someone who is in control. Because, as hard as I work, try, or pray, that person in control isn't me. And I have to be okay with that. 

As fall turns into winter and darkness comes upon our land, we can prepare our hearts for a season that births the beauty of stillness and hope in Christ's arrival. This coming Advent season doesn't just ask us to be still, it asks us to surrender our hopes, dreams, expectations, and timeline, in exchange for something that we know and trust He has that is better. It's learning to be still, yes, absolutely, but it's also being still so that we can wait patiently on Him and His timing. We don't slow down to be in control. We slow down to hear and obey His sovereignty. 

Stillness and quiet seasons can make a lot of people uncomfortable. I know it often has me. My thoughts grow too loud when I'm not busy and multitasking. But the Lord has impressed upon my heart that it's okay to lean into this discomfort as long as I reside in Him. Rest in Him. Pause with Him. Wait on Him. And you have the option to do the same. The most beautiful things in life have come when hope is silent. So we will wait with hopeful expectation. 

YOUR NIGHTLY PRAYER

Dear Jesus,
Resting, waiting, and pausing in this world isn't easy. Silent hope seems to slip by, and we grow fearful. We struggle to keep up and get lost in the noise. But Lord, as we begin to prepare for Advent, we ask you to prepare our hearts. Just as we embraced the stillness and hope of your quiet arrival, let us seek you in that way now. Help us to quiet our hearts, souls, and minds so that we may hear you, listen, and obey. We love, praise, and thank you, Jesus.
Amen. 

THREE THINGS TO MEDITATE UPON

1. Take a few minutes to read Psalm 37:7. Commit to memorizing this verse and share it with someone who needs hope this week. 

2. Find an Advent tradition that works for you and your family. Have fun with it, but carve out slow, still, and intentional time to be together with the Lord. 

3. Do you struggle to be still and wait on the Lord? Talk about this with a friend, and find a spiritual mentor to help keep you accountable.

Reflect on tonight’s prayer and share how God met you there. Join the Your Nightly Prayer discussion on the Crosswalk Forum.

Photo Credit: ©Unsplash/KaLisa Veer

amber ginter headshotAmber Ginter is a teacher-turned-author who loves Jesus, her husband Ben, and granola. Growing up Amber looked for faith and mental health resources and found none. Today, she offers hope for young Christians struggling with mental illness that goes beyond simply reading your Bible and praying more. Because you can love Jesus and still suffer from anxiety. You can download her top faith and mental health resources for free to help navigate books, podcasts, videos, and influencers from a faith lens perspective. Visit her website at amberginter.com.


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