What is the Anchor Prayer? (TAW021) (Anchor Prayer, Part 3)
Jun 17, 2019
Discover how the 'Anchor Prayer' serves as a spiritual lifeline, much like rock climbing anchors! The discussion dives into the art of abiding in Christ, emphasizing that spiritual resilience requires strong mental habits. Learn about the power of memorized prayer in shaping our thoughts and deepening our connection with faith. Plus, explore how our minds can wander with worry and how we can redirect that energy toward meaningful prayer. It's a journey of cultivating a closer relationship with God in the midst of life's challenges!
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insights INSIGHT
Abiding is Mental Habits
Abiding means where our minds naturally rest, reflecting practiced mental habits.
We all abide in some way, whether in worry, control, or other patterns, making abiding a universal experience.
insights INSIGHT
Mental Habits Shape Our Lives
Our thoughts today practice the thoughts of tomorrow, shaping our character and actions.
Mental habits formed over years profoundly influence our spiritual and personal lives.
insights INSIGHT
Renewing Minds with Spirit
Paul encourages renewing our minds, which involves building new mental habits aligned with Christ.
Changing these habits takes cooperation with the Spirit, not just willpower.
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Our church building roof has rock climbing anchors installed on it. It’s a very steep and high roof. Doing maintenance and repair work up there is risky. Those anchor points allow people working on the roof to anchor themselves so they can go about their work and not fall off.
In this series, I’m sharing with you a prayer that has become a similar kind of anchor to me in my life. Along the way, we’re touching on how our brains work, how “abiding in Christ” is a habit we can build, and how memorized prayer helps shape our thinking. Plus I’ll introduce you to the words of this prayer that means so much to me.
Show Notes
Show notes will not be a transcript. At least not now. You’ll find a few key bullet points, any scriptures references, as well as any other books or resources referenced.
Recap from the series so far:
On Abiding:
Jesus taught us that our primary task of faith is to abide or remain. See John 15.
Abiding or remaining are not theological abstractions, but a lived experience we can practice.
Abiding is about where our minds come to rest.
For example, worry is a kind of “abiding.” When we get preoccupied with worry or “future-tripping” we are letting our minds abide in that place. This is a kind of prayer or meditation on imagined worst-case scenarios.
On renewing our minds:
Paul, in Romans 12:2, tells us that we are to cooperate with God in the process of having our minds (and thus, thoughts) renewed.
This is, at least partly, about our mental habits. We have life-long mental habits that don’t lead toward abiding in Christ. But we can also develop new habits!
On Prayer:
Extemporaneous (or spontaneous and informal) prayer is great at taking our concerns to God, but it doesn’t do much to form us or shape our thoughts.
Liturgical Prayer, often drawn from scripture, or from truth found in scripture, can help shape our thoughts. Memorized liturgical prayer is ideal for this.
The Anchor Prayer:
I rest in faith, trusting Father. I walk by faith, following Jesus. I hear in faith, obeying Spirit. In You, I remain.
A tip-of-the-iceberg prayer, that brings to mind important truth about our identity before God.
“It reminds me of the Father’s sovereignty and grace for me, and that my posture toward the world is to be rest. I’m not in charge. I’m not God. It reminds me of my identity as a follower of Christ, that my life is to be made up of steps, actions, choices, that follow after Jesus and his way—and that I do this by faith, not because I’m certain. It reminds me that I am not alone, that God is with me through the indwelling Spirit, and that if I pay attention that Guidance is available to me. It reminds me that God is ultimately relationship, Father, Son & Spirit, honoring and loving one another in a never-ending dance of creation and that I am invited into that relationship. It reminds me that my primary work is not to strive, but to remain.”
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