This post is part of my 29 Days of Giving Campaign. You can see the rest of the posts in this series here.
This is going to be short and sweet today, as chasing a couple of candy-crazed children around the neighborhood tonight has me about wiped out.
Today I Gave: The gift of prayer. I always have my own little list of prayer requests going through my mind during the time of silent prayer in church. Today I made it a point to write down my prayers requests and put them in the collection plate. They are handed over to a prayer committee at church where a team from the church prays over them during the week. I thought about all the people and things that have entered my mind this week, requests big and small. I usually only submit a written prayer if I have something really big on my mind, but why should it be limited to big things? Part of my inspiration was this article I read recently in Real Simple, "Inside the God Box." It was a small box where the author's mother would write simple prayer requests to God. Some were big, some were small, but they all meant something to somebody. I like that idea, that all of our concerns are important to God.
Today I Received: Joy, pure joy. Is there anything better than watching your kids giddy with excitement? Elena's face lit up like the 4th of July when we let her trick-or-treat with a friend and his dad (Eli was holding her back with his pokey pace. And from biting it at least 4 times and dumping his entire candy bucket.). Eli was just so thrilled at the prospect of candy around ever corner. It's so simple right now to make them happy, and that makes me happy.
Eternal Lizdom says
The best gift we can give anyone is prayer. I’m a “prayer warrior” for my church and I take it seriously. I also tweet on Sunday mornings and ask if anyone has prayer requests out in the twittosphere. I’ve been meaning to start carrying a little notebook so I can actually journal prayer requests.
Our associate pastor did a children’s sermon recently on all prayers being important to God- she used bubbles as an example. Had a little bubble machine that made big and little bubbles. All the bubbles are fun and pop and can be chased- no one bubble is more important than another. Same for prayers!
Angie Six says
I love that analogy, Liz!