| |
7 Minutes with God
How to Plan a Daily
Quiet Time.
by Robert D. Foster
It was in 1882 on the campus of Cambridge University that the world was first
given the slogan:
Remember the morning watch.
Students like Hooper and Thornton found their days "loaded" with
studies, lectures, games and bull sessions. Enthusiasm and activity were the
order of the day. These dedicated men soon discovered a flaw in their spiritual
armor—a small crack which if not soon closed, would bring disaster.
They sought an answer and came up with a
scheme they called the morning watch, a plan to spend the first minutes
of a new day alone with God, praying and reading the Bible.
The morning watch sealed the crack. It enshrined a truth so often obscured by
the pressure of ceaseless activity that it needs daily rediscovery: To know God,
it is necessary to spend consistent time with Him.
The idea caught fire. 'A remarkable period
of religious blessing' followed, and culminated in the departure of the
Cambridge Seven, a band of prominent athletes and men of wealth and education,
for missionary service. They gave up everything to go out to China for Christ.
But these men found that getting out of bed
in time for the morning watch was as difficult as it was vital. Thornton was
determined to turn indolence into discipline. He invented an automatic,
foolproof cure for laziness. It was a contraption set up by his bed: The
vibration of an alarm clock set fishing tackle in motion, and the sheets,
clipped to the line, moved swiftly into the air off the sleeper's body.
Thornton wanted to get up to meet his God!
The intimacy of communion with Christ must
be recaptured in the morning quiet time. Call it what you want-the quiet time,
personal devotions, the morning watch, or individual worship-these holy minutes
at the start of each day explain the inner secret of Christianity. It's the
golden thread that ties every great man of God together—from Moses to David
Livingstone, the prophet Amos to Billy Graham—rich and poor, businessmen and
military personnel. Every man who ever became somebody for God has this at the
core of his priorities: time alone with God!
David says in Psalm 57:7, My heart is
fixed, O God, my heart is fixed. A fixed and established heart produces
stability in life. Few men in the Christian community have this heart and life.
One of the missing links has been a workable plan on how to begin and maintain a
morning watch.
I want to suggest that in order to get under
way, you start with seven minutes. Perhaps you could call it a daily "Seven
Up." Five minutes may be too short, and ten minutes for some is a little
too long at first.
Are you willing to take seven minutes every
morning? Not five mornings out of seven, not six days out of seven—but seven
days out of seven! Ask God to help you: "Lord, I want to meet You the first
thing in the morning for at least seven minutes. Tomorrow when the alarm clock
goes off at 6:15 a.m., I have an appointment with You."
Your prayer might be, Morning by morning,
O Lord, You hear my voice; morning by morning I lay my requests before You and
wait in expectation (Psalm 5:3).
How do you spend these seven minutes? After
getting out of bed and taking care of your personal needs, you will want to find
a quiet place and there with your Bible enjoy the solitude of seven minutes with
God.
Invest the first 30 seconds preparing
your heart. Thank Him for the good night of sleep and the opportunities of
this new day. "Lord, cleanse my heart so You can speak to me through the
Scriptures. Open my heart. Fill my heart. Make my mind alert, my soul active,
and my heart responsive. Lord, surround me with Your presence during this time.
Amen."
Now take four minutes to read the Bible.
Your greatest need is to hear some word from God. Allow the Word to strike fire
in your heart. Meet the Author!
One of the Gospels is a good place to begin
reading. Start with the Book of Mark. Read consecutively, verse after verse,
chapter after chapter. Don't race, but avoid stopping to do a Bible study on
some word, thought, or theological problem which presents itself. Read for the
pure joy of reading and allowing God to speak—perhaps just 20 verses, or maybe
a complete chapter. When you have finished Mark, start the Gospel of John. Soon
you'll want to go ahead and read the entire New Testament. After God has spoken
through His Book, then speak to Him—in prayer.
You now have two and a half minutes
left for fellowship with Him in four areas of prayer that you can remember by
the word ACTS.
A—Adoration.
This is the purest kind of prayer because it's all for God—there's
nothing in it for you. You don't barge into the presence of royalty. You begin
with the proper salutation. So worship Him. Tell the Lord that you love Him.
Reflect on His greatness, His power, His majesty, and sovereignty!
C—Confession
follows. Having seen Him you now want to be sure every sin
is cleansed and forsaken. Confession comes from a root word meaning "to
agree together with." Apply this to prayer. It means to agree with God.
Something happened yesterday you called a slight exaggeration— God calls it a
lie! You call it strong language—God calls it swearing. You call it telling
the truth about somebody in the church—God calls it gossip. If I regard
iniquity in my heart, the Lord will not hear me? (Psalm 66:18).
T—Thanksgiving. Express
your gratitude to God. Think of several specific things to thank Him for: your
family, your business, your church and ministry responsibilities—even thank
Him for hardships. In everything give thanks: for this is the will of God in
Christ Jesus concerning you (I Thessalonians 5:18).
S—Supplication. This
means to "ask for, earnestly and humbly." This is the part of your
prayer life where you make your petitions known to Him. Ask for others, then for
yourself. Why not include other people around the world, such as missionaries,
students studying abroad, friends in distant places, and above all the people of
many lands who have yet to hear about Jesus Christ.
Let's put these seven minutes together:
1/2 |
Prayer for guidance (Psalm
143:8) |
4 |
Reading the Bible (Psalm
119:18) |
2-1/2 |
Prayer
· Adoration (1 Chronicles
29:11)
· Confession (1 John 1:9)
· Thanksgiving (Ephesians
5:20)
· Supplication (Matthew 7:7)
|
This is simply a guide. Very soon you will discover that it is impossible to
spend only seven minutes with the Lord. An amazing thing happens—seven minutes
become 20, and it's not long before you're spending 30 precious minutes with
Him. Do not become devoted to the habit, but to the Savior.
Do it not because other men are doing it—not as a spiritless duty every
morning, nor merely as an end in itself, but because God has granted the
priceless privilege of fellowship with Himself. Covenant with Him now to guard,
nourish, and maintain your morning watch of seven minutes.
|