An
85-year-old woman, all alone in a convent, got trapped inside an elevator for 4
nights and 3 days. Fortunately, she had a jar of water, some celery sticks, and
a few cough drops. After she tried unsuccessfully to open the elevator doors
and get a cell phone signal, she decided to turn to God in prayer. “It was
either panic or pray,” she later told CNN. In her distress, she relied on God
and waited till she was rescued.
Asa was
also faced with the options of panic or pray (2 Chron. 14). He was attacked by
an Ethiopian army of a million men. But as he faced this huge fighting force,
instead of relying on military strategy or cowering in dread, he turned to the
Lord in urgent prayer. In a powerful and humble prayer, Asa confessed his total
dependence on Him, asked for help, and appealed to the Lord to protect His own
name: “Help us, O Lord our God, for we rest on You, and in Your name we go
against this multitude” (v.11). The Lord responded to Asa’s prayer, and he won
the victory over the Ethiopian army.
When we
are faced with tight spots, meager resources, a vast army of problems, or
seemingly dead-end solutions, let’s not panic but instead turn to God who
fights for His people and gives them victory.
Prayer is
the bridge between panic and peace. (RBC)