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Archive for October, 2009

Praying in Color 10–Scripture Thoughts

Friday, October 30th, 2009

1Corinthians 12 is a favorite Scripture passage of mine. In it Paul talks about the spiritual gifts. “There are diversities of gifts, but the same Spirit. There are differences of ministries, but the same Lord. And there are diversities of activities, but it is the same God who works all in all. But the manifestation of the Spirit is given to each one for the profit of all.” (1Corinthians 12:4-7 NKJV)

Paul goes on to describe the variety of gifts–preaching, teaching, healing, tongues, prophecy, interpretation, administration…those gifts which help our relationship with God and build up the kingdom of God.

One day I was sitting in church and heard the familiar reading from 2Corinthians 12: “But he said to me, ‘My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.’ Therefore I will boast all the more gladly about my weaknesses, so that Christ’s power may rest on me.” (2Corinthians12:9  NIV)

It struck me that 1Corinthians 12 and 2Corinthians 12 are like bookends. In 1Corinthians 12 God uses our gifts and our strengths. In 2Corinthians 12, God uses our weaknesses. I guess God can use whatever we have or don’t have for the building up of the kingdom and for drawing us closer to Him.

I call praying in color my 2Corinthians 12 prayer form, because it came to me through my weaknesses and through all of the things I can’t do. I can’t draw, focus, sit still, pay attention,or find words for my prayers. But now I have a way to pray that accommodates all of those weaknesses. I am very grateful. Thanks be to God!

2-corinthians-12

Drawing: Sybil MacBeth–from Examples page of www.prayingincolor.com

Praying in Color 9–On the Computer

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

Create a prayer using a drawing application on the computer. I tried it on a lark one day and to my surprise it felt prayerful.  My attention was on Jesus and the people I was praying for.

Use your prayer drawing as a screensaver.  Send it via e-mail to friends and ask for their prayers.  Post it on Facebook.

computer-drawing

Drawing: Sybil MacBeth

Praying in Color 8–Examples

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

Here are some examples of praying in color prayers:

1)  Use colored pencils.  Add words      2) Prayers can be very simple.
next to the names. Use a passage of        This is a prayer for one person with
Scripture to connect your prayers.             just triangles, arcs, and dots.

vine-october-28-2009cindy-triangles-2

3) Pray using a pen only.  This prayer        4) Use a calendar or template
is on a napkin.                                             for drawing. Pray for a person,                                                                                                           place, or issue each day.

napkin-eyleen-12calendar-kids-edition

Drawings: Sybil MacBeth
Calendar from Praying in Color: Kids’ Edition

Praying in Color 7–Getting Started

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009

If you want to try praying in color, here are a few things you might need. Keep it simple. This isn’t an art project; it’s a prayer time. (Though I confess, I like nice markers.) There are no hard and fast rules about this. Use whatever writing and drawing implements work for you. Here are some suggestions.

  1. Paper–computer paper, sketch pad, journal, envelope, paper napkin….
  2. Black pen–I like a roller ball; it’s smoother than a ballpoint.
  3. Colored markers or pencils–Here’s where I can go crazy with suggestions. Crayola Super Tips are terrific, inexpensive, and available in lots of the usual-suspect big-box stores. They come in packets of 10, 20, 24, and 50 in a wide variety of interesting colors. Copic, Pantone, and Prismacolor markers are my favorites, but these are art-store varieties, expensive, and permanent. In a pinch, borrow colored markers or pencils from the nearest kid.

If you’re new to the blog this week, see Praying in Color 3, Praying in Color 4, and Praying in Color 6 to read about the process.  Then sit down, take a deep breath, pick up your pen, draw a shape, and begin to pray. If you are as drawing-phobic as I have been, here are some suggestions for shapes and doodles you can use.  May God’s Peace be with you.

doodling-shapes

doodling-details

Tomorrow: Praying in Color 8–Examples

Drawings: Sybil MacBeth

Praying in Color 6–Start with God

Monday, October 26th, 2009

When I first started praying by doodling it was completely unconscious.  As I continue to do it, new ideas merge.  Now I begin with a “God” doodle.  I draw a shape and write one of the many names we use in prayer–God, Holy Spirit, Jesus, Heavenly Father, Redeemer, Almighty One, Creator, Lord….I’ll spend several minutes asking God to be in the midst of my prayer time.  I’ll often start with words, but when the words run out, I’ll continue to draw and sit quietly with God.

Then I add the names and doodles for people on my prayer list.  Seeing “God” in the midst of all the names reminds me of the One in whom I put my trust and to whom I entrust my friends and loved ones.
“The LORD is my strength and my shield; my heart trusted in him, and I am helped:”  (Psalms 28:7,  KJV)

prayer-drawing-october-26-2009

Drawing: Sybil MacBeth