How your devotions get leggy
There may be volumes written that I am unaware of on the topic of the mark of the person of true faith. My experience is that a person of true faith is a person who is always asking God for things. And what things! The more faith, the more expansive and varied and outlandish the requests become. To be sure, thanksgiving expands with request-making. But it is the asking that strikes me.
It stands to reason. As faith grows—as we see how big is God’s heart, how lavish His inheritance, how powerful His arm, and how willing He is to be involved with us in the moments of our days—we join a long line of believers who suddenly realized the same thing. They turn on a dime from being fearful and self-deprecating to being avaricious in a godly way: “Send me!” said Isaiah, who had just a moment before wanted to die. What did John Piper call it—Christian hedonism?
In True Spirituality, Francis Schaeffer wrote:
“And it has been true for many of us that at a certain point, after we have been Christians for a long time, suddenly through the teaching of the Bible—directly or through someone teaching us—we have seen the meaning of the work of Jesus and the blood of Jesus for our present life, and a new door opens for us. . . .”
When your faith grows, you can hardly get through your morning devotions. You stop at every other verse to ask for whatever that verse is talking about. You read Ezekiel 1:12, which is describing the four living creatures, with their four faces and each one with two wings, and the comment: “And each went straight forward. Wherever the spirit would go, they went, without turning as they went.” And you get excited about a new thing to pray for, and you stop and say, “Lord, make me like that. Cause me to be so filled with the Spirit, and so led by the Spirit that wherever the Spirit goes, I will go, without turning as I go, either to the left or the right of your Spirit’s precise leading.
Then you go off on a tangent and ask for more: “Lord, in fact, make me so filled with your Spirit that even my dreams are godly. Teach me things through my dreams, as you have taught men in the past. Do keep speaking to me in the daytime, but why waste the night! That’s eight hours of downtime from your teaching? I won’t have it! I need thee every hour.”
Then you move down to the next verse, verse 13, and you read that the appearance of the four creatures was like “burning coals of fire.” And you have perhaps seen burning coals of fire in your life, so you can visualize it—the way the glow emanates from the inside. And it clicks with you that the fire inside is the Holy Spirit, and that a Christian can glow like that. And your head drops down again as you start in with your next outrageous prayer request—that you would have the appearance of burning coals of fire, so that your children will see Christ in you, sometimes without a word being spoken.
It’s all well and good, but eventually you have to get up and make breakfast for the kids.
To hear commentaries by Andrée Seu, click here.

















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back to top15 Comments to “How your devotions get leggy”
Amen. Amen. Amen
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It’s a wonderful thing to communicate something higher and bigger i.e. vision. Thank you, Andree!
“Where there is no vision, the people perish…” (Pr 29:18)
P.S. This even makes “breakfast for the kids” glow!
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This is just what I was looking for.
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Are devotions that aren’t “leggy” devotions?
I have my bible reading and prayer every morning. When I was working, I did that every night. Not even God wants to talk to me at 5:30 am when I’m in a hurry to get on the Beltway.
But I have a practical mind. My wife says I have an engineer’s mind. Too logical and practical.
My middle granddaughter gave me a Christmas present of The Journals of Jim Elliot.
I just finished reading Leviticus 13. To me, it tells about how to detect a person with leprosy and how to deal with it. “Keep the person out of the camp.”
Jim Elliot said about Lev. 13:
….
1. A rising of the flesh – the primary root of sin, pride.
2. The reexerted willfulness of the old flesh of Adam’s kind.
3. The issue from the flesh – the corruption from the mouth, the evil thoughts proceeding out of the heart.
4. Rising in a burn – rebellion at judgment or justice.
5. Intellectual difficulties – a rising in the head, doubts.
6. Nakedness of a sinner.
7. In the best of our good woven garments of deeds there is impurity.
Jim Elliot and I saw different things in Lev. 13. I’ve heard preachers say there’s a sermon in every chapter in the Bible. Maybe so, but simetimes you have to infer things that aren’t there.
I suspect Andree agrees with Jim.
Some people read Rev. 3:10 and infer that there will be a pre-tribulation rapture. I read Matthew 24:15, 24, 29-30 and infer that Christians will undergo at least part of the tribulation.
I have been a Christian since 1953 and had lots of experiences. I have concluded that we have many mountaintops and valleys. When we look back, the mountains weren’t that high, and the valleys not so low as they seemed.
Sometimes, when I pray, my mind wanders. But, in the wandering, God isn’t left out of the conversation. I don’t worry about it as much as I used to.
BTW, when I read Ezekiel 1, I see God preparing Ezekiel for his call to a stubborn people, by a faithful and powerful God.
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If you were being led by the Holy Spirit of God you would be led to confess that Jesus Christ is Lord. As your grow in the word and the Spirit works in your life you do ask more and more radical things. “Lord have mercy on me a sinner.” “Jesus cover me with your mercy.” “How often Lord I have misdirected Your Spirit to my own whims and failed to confess Jesus as Lord. Lord how easily my heart grows cold and faint forgive me. Cover me in Christ righteousness because mine is filthy like a menstrual rag.
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“Eye has not seen, ear has not heard, neither has it entered the heart of man what God has prepared”…not just in eternity, but NOW, for those who love Him.
God longs to fix His children breakfast, lunch, dinner, and lavish treats in between. But many times I have much more important things to do… like watch the news.
Thanks again Andree!!!
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I like this lady more every day.
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I am grateful that Andree makes me think of new things!
I pray for the hunger, thirst, glowing and burning, the close walk and participation with Him, and then go about the day knowing that I can’t make any of those things happen. He will glorify Himself through me without my permission and, most times, without my knowledge.
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Andree, I so much appreciate your writing. It always inspires me to be lifted up and thinking about God and His word. In what you wrote today I was totally with your thought process until I read about the “burning coals of fire” in the last paragraph and with that my brain jumped over to Isaiah 6:6-7, “Then one of the seraphim flew to me, having in his hand a live coal which he had taken with the tongs from the altar. And he touched my mouth with it, and said: ‘Behold, this has touched your lips; your iniquity is taken away, and your sin is purged.’” Scripture is just so pregnant with meaning. The Holy Spirit carries each of us on our individual pathways to what the word means to our lives. Isaiah would have glowed after the coal touched his lips. Thanks
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Ah yes, the mind wanders during devotionals. God understands. I just keep at it and he sees the desires of my heart.
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The deeper we grow, the more we want to know. That every day longing, every moment rapture is the devotion I long for. But I have to start somewhere, in that first simple moment of “here I am God, Just as I am.”
David
Red Letter Believers, “Salt and Light”
http://www.redletterbelievers.com
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To those who are “greedy” for God,remember that God works through our suffering, through our crosses and not always through moments of rapturous devotionals. “In faithfulness, You afflicted me.” Ps. 119
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I had a dream last night that has bothered me. I’ve had many in the past that have made me wonder WHY I would have a dream like that. It never occurred to me to ask God to speak to me in my dreams! That is my prayer today – thank you for your words, Andree. I desire to filled with the Spirit day AND night!!
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Another inspiring post, Andree.
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A man was walking along a California beach and was in deep prayer to the Lord. He said, ‘Lord, you have promised me the desires of my heart. That’s what I am asking you for right now. Please give me a confirmation that you will grant my wish.’
Suddenly the sky clouded up over his head and the Lord in a booming voice spoke to him. ‘I have searched your heart and determined it to be pure. The last time I issued a blank wish request it was to Solomon. He didn’t disappoint me with his request for wisdom. I think I can trust that you won’t disappoint me either. Because you have been faithful to me in all ways, I will grant you one wish you ask for.’The man sat and thought about it for a while and said, ‘I’ve
always wanted to go to Hawaii, but I’m deadly afraid of flying and I get very sea sick on boats. Could you build a bridge to Hawaii, so I can drive over there to visit whenever I want?’
The Lord laughed and said, ‘That’s incredibly difficult! Think of the logistics of that! How would the supports ever reach the bottom of the Pacific? Think of how much concrete…how much steel!!! Your request is very materialistic, a little disappointing. I could do it, but it’s hard for me to justify your craving for worldly things. Take a little more time and think of another wish, a wish you think would honor and glorify Me as well.’
The man thought about it for a long while and tried to think of a really good wish. Finally, he said, ‘Here’s the deal, Lord. I’ve been married and divorced four times. My wives always said that I didn’t care and that I’m insensitive. So I wish that I could understand women…I want to know how they feel inside and what they’re thinking when they give me the silent treatment. I want to know why they’re crying…I want to know what they really mean when they say ‘nothing’…I want to know how to make them truly happy…That’s the wish that I want, Lord.’
After a few minutes, God said, ‘You want two lanes or four on that bridge?’
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