March 4, 2026
“This is the confidence we have in approaching God: that if we ask anything according to His will, He hears us”
“You cannot estimate prayer power. Prayer is as vast as God because He is behind it. Prayer is as mighty as God because He has committed Himself to answer it” (Leonard Ravenhill)
If Lent is about growing closer to God, as we suggested yesterday, then prayer has to be one of the core practices that gets us there. But let’s be honest, building a steady, meaningful prayer life isn’t always easy. Even when we want to pray, many of us find it hard to stay consistent or even know where to start.
Matthew 6:8 tells us that God already knows what we need before we ask. So why pray at all? Because prayer isn’t just about asking for things, it’s about relationship. It’s an ongoing conversation with God that invites Him into every part of our lives. And yes, prayer can feel vulnerable, because it asks us to trust God’s goodness and to surrender to what He knows is best. At its heart, prayer is simply our heart lining up with God’s heart.
Prayer shows up in our words, our thoughts, and even our actions. Whether we’re praying out of need, gratitude, sorrow, repentance, or hope, Scripture reminds us that God hears us: “If we ask anything according to His will, He hears us” (1 John 5:14).
Over time, I’ve realized that a “strong prayer life” isn’t some finish line we cross. It’s more like a lifelong adventure, an ongoing discovery of who God is and how He loves us. That means we’re always learning, always growing, always being shaped. Even the apostles were students of prayer, and out of their hunger to learn, Jesus gave them the beautiful prayer we call the Lord’s Prayer, the “Our Father”:
Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name.
As you continue to walk through this Lenten season and reflect on Jesus’ journey to the cross, open up that conversation with God. Start fresh, start small, or start again—but step into the adventure of prayer.
Questions to sit with:
What holds you back from praying in a deeper, more personal way?
What barriers or hesitations show up when you try to pray?
Invite God into those places. Ask Him to gently break down whatever walls are there.


