During a morning walk with my father, I experienced a unique moment of prayer with eyes wide open. My dad maintains a daily routine of walking after studying the Scriptures, and whenever I visit my parents, I enjoy joining him. As our walk neared its end and I prepared to return to California, I asked if we could pray together as we moved. My father gladly agreed.
As we began to pray, I was suddenly jolted when my dad bumped me into a snowbank at the edge of the road. Falling almost in slow motion, I instinctively looked back, expecting to see a vehicle he was saving me from. To my surprise, the road was completely empty.
I hit the snowbank with a gentle thud and looked up to realize what had actually occurred. He wasn’t shielding me from a renegade car on the icy pavement. Instead, upon hearing the words “Let’s pray,” my father had entered an automatic prayer mode. He reflexively closed his eyes while walking, causing him to veer into me and accidentally knock me off the path.
We both laughed as he helped me up and brushed the snow off me. My dad and I ended up having a rich conversation about how, though it is appropriate to close our eyes in some situations, there are also many occasions when we are wise to keep our eyes wide open while we pray.
The next morning, I received this email from my father:
“Dear Sherry, I thought about you this morning while I was walking. I prayed with my eyes open. I even prayed out loud. I learned from you that if I pray with my eyes open, my time with God is limitless.”
He got it! When we learn to pray with our eyes wide open, our prayer life expands, heaven touches earth, and God’s power is unleashed.
My journey of prayer began long before that winter day walk with my dad. I grew up in a godly home with parents who taught me about Jesus and how to talk with him. At five years old I entered a life-transforming relationship with Jesus. I had heard about him. I had prayed to him. But on a quiet Sunday, late in the afternoon, I laid on the sofa in our living room and personally met the Savior.
I know, I was just a little girl, but I assure you that he entered my life and has never left. Decades later his presence is sweeter and his power more profound. Since that day I have grown to love and hunger for his Word.
The Bible whispers and, at times, shouts the truth of heaven when I read it. Sometimes the words of Scripture lift my spirit and inspire me. They resonate with and penetrate my soul. At other times the teaching of the Bible confuses me and weighs heavy on my heart. One such passage that troubled me for years and caused me to struggle is a seemingly simple two-word exhortation: “Pray continually” (1 Thess. 5:17). I wanted to obey God’s call and follow his teaching … but how? How was I to pray without ceasing? How could I stay aware of God every moment and communicate my love with every breath? How could anyone measure up to this spiritual expectation?
As a young girl and later as a mom of three boys, I continued to feel the weight and pressure of this command. I could not do it. The very idea of praying at all times, in all situations, every moment of every day, felt oppressive.
Then, after years of struggling with this passage, the Holy Spirit breathed a simple truth of understanding into my soul that changed everything. When the veil was lifted and I understood the real meaning of this passage, joy descended and prayers flowed with new freedom and passion. Here is what God taught me: It is not that we have to pray continually; it is that we get to pray continually!
This is not a simple matter of semantics. It is a spiritual reality, a paradigm shift of heavenly proportions. When we begin to shift from requirement to privilege, from something we have to do to something we get to do, it changes everything, and I hope it is just as transformational for you. It is not that you and I have to pray every moment of every day. God will not be disappointed with you if you don’t pray all the time. The amazing truth is that the Maker of heaven and earth invites us to commune with him at all times and in all places. When we are ready to communicate with the God of eternity, his eyes, ears and arms are always wide open. His desire is that we would experience more of his presence and power in the everyday moments of our lives.
Prayer, in its simplest form, is about relationship. It is about being in the presence of the God who made us and loves us. When we learn to pray with our eyes wide open, we remember we are not alone. We sense more deeply and intimately that God is with us in our pain, depression, sadness and fear. He is also present at the heights of ecstasy, joy and delight. From the valleys to the mountaintops, God is near, his door is open, he is present. With our eyes open, we literally see the world around us. We notice beauty, struggle, injustice and kindness. We begin to see God at work in the big and small things of life. And this moves us to prayer.
When we live with an awareness of God’s glorious presence in each situation and every moment of our day, prayer becomes natural and organic, not something processed and artificial. We talk with God as we would a friend, someone who is walking with us through the journey of life.
My journey of praying anytime and anywhere has done more than grow my prayer life. It has also transformed my understanding of God, deepened my intimacy with my Savior, grown my heart for the lost, and changed the flow and texture of each day. I see the needs of the broken in new ways. I feel my heart aligning with the passion of Jesus for those who have not accepted him as their Lord and Savior. With eyes wide open I have prayed with and for people who are spiritually wayward. It has not only drawn me closer to my Lord, but it has propelled me to look beyond myself and join him on his mission.
My prayer is that you will discover the power of praying with eyes open and eyes closed. We can pray all the time, any place, because God invites us to communicate with him and he is always near. As close as … well … as close as a prayer.
For more from Sherry Harney and other forward-focused church leaders, join us at the Amplify Conference on October 17th and 18th at Wheaton College in Wheaton, Illinois. Don’t wait. Register here today!
