Prayer
This article is based on my experience, so there's no need to agree or disagree. I'm pretty sure we all have our own unique way of looking at something as personal as prayer.
Prayer doesn’t change the nature of God—it changes the nature of the one who prays. It’s not about trying to bend the universe to our will or convincing a higher power to act in our favor. It’s about the transformation that happens within us when we open ourselves up in prayer.
When we pray, we step into a space of vulnerability. We’re honest about our fears, hopes, pain, and longing. At that moment, we’re not trying to control or fix anything. We’re simply showing up as we are, laying it all out there. And in that act of showing up, something profound begins to shift.
Prayer invites us to let go of the need to figure everything out.
It acknowledges that we don’t have all the answers and don’t need to. In prayer, we create room for grace, humility, and acceptance. It’s in that space that we become more grounded, more open, and more connected to something bigger than ourselves.
The real power of prayer isn’t in changing the external circumstances of our lives but in changing how we relate to those circumstances.
Prayer helps us move from fear to trust, from anxiety to peace, from anger to compassion. It softens our hearts, clarifies our intentions, and shifts our perspective. We become more aligned with our values, more attuned to our purpose, and more capable of living with courage.
In that way, prayer is less about changing God and more about changing us.
It’s about the quiet work that happens in our hearts as we make space for surrender, faith, and the deep knowing that we are never alone.
Prayer helps us show up differently in our own lives—with more resilience, grace, and love.
And that’s where the real transformation happens.
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Randy Hyden
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Prayer
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