Faith Works 8-22-20
Jeff Gill
A prayer for August and education
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  Most merciful and loving God,
O Lord, we come in prayer as we so often do, after having  tried everything else we can think of. So we ask to ease up our frantic  imaginings, to sooth our troubled and contentious souls, and to come to you for  the peace that only you can give.
Almighty One, you have given us life and breath and hope. We  may be creaking a bit as we get up, and wish we were in better shape, and have  trouble imagining what hope would look like right now, but in fact, in truth,  in thankfulness, we know that this is where we are today. We have choices and  opportunities ahead and we would ask your intercession to help us choose wisely  and well.
It is the time of year, Creator God, when the heavens and  the earth show the slowly gathering end of long days and summer heat, even  though there's enough hot days ahead in September, we know; it is during this  change of seasons that so many of us are accustomed to a shift in schedules for  schools. Whether we are in classes ourselves, parents or family of students, or  just citizens waiting behind school buses, we all feel the pressures and  challenges in large ways and small of what we call "back to school."
But it's the question of back to what that has us troubled,  Lord of life, God of our past, present, and future. We see in our worship and  prayer and communion with you a source of familiar patterns and tried and true  traditions, forgetting you are also God of whirlwinds and behemoths, still  small voices after storms and rainbows after floods. We ask that you give us  more of what we're used to, nervously aware that the Bible tells us this only  describes a small part of your divine nature.
From age to age you are the same, O Lord, but your created  order can be melted down, crushed flat or rumpled and shaken up, and so too  with our days. In our span of three-score and ten or even more, we will see  ages and eras that are major changes within our own lives, and there is nothing  even in Ecclesiastes to tell us exactly when there's a time or a season for  what we'd like to see happen next. Whichever comes next is an event which can  fit securely within your supportive hand, and we can have confidence that we  rest in your everlasting arms, yet we still don't know how to cope.
Wise counselors tell us, Gracious God, that when we're in a  state such as this, the best thing we can do is pray for others. So that's what  we're here to do.
For students who are trying to make the most of the  education that is there for them, in school or online: Lord, hear our prayer.  As in any system, the weight is on the one who seeks to learn, to be open and  engaged and listening, so may each learner find those gifts within themselves.
For families who have to support new and different ways than  we're any of us used to, in being part of the education of someone else,  whether our child or grandchild or neighbor kid or wherever: Lord, hear our  prayer. May we all find ways to bless one another as we are so much more aware  now of how any learning is a community process.
For teachers whose frustrations must always be kept off  screen, in the classroom or on video, whose passion for educating and  illuminating brought them into their vocation often without much interest in  technology at all: Lord, hear our prayer. We ask that their wifi signal not  drop, the case counts stay low enough to make classroom engagement possible  even with masks on everyone, and for all the devices to not try to update at  the worst possible time.
For staff and administration who have seen so many changes  coming down from the state and federal authorities to influence how they do  their job, and now have to contend with health department guidelines and  governor press briefings: Lord, hear our prayer. Bless them as they find a way  forward, as they have, and as they will continue to do, because that is their  sincere desire.
And for us all, as we are mindful that prayerful, thankful,  personal engagement is needed to keep all forms of education part of our  community: Lord, hear our prayer. Help us to forgive and forbear and be  fruitful in all that we do that reminds us, as did James's letter, that all  light comes from above. Illumine us, O Lord, as we ask these things.
Amen!
Jeff Gill is a writer, storyteller, and preacher in central  Ohio; he's been praying for education for some time, but now in new ways. Tell  him how you pray for schools and schooling at knapsack77@gmail.com, or follow  @Knapsack on Twitter.
 
 


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