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RESTORE a faithful prayer life as a mom

Since my word for the year is RESTORE, I’m taking each month to focus on godly restoration in different areas of my life. Read last month’s post to see six areas of life to restore! January was all about restoring my personal health! February, my focus is how I can restore a faithful prayer life as a mom.

restore prayer life mom

Just to recap January…

I decided to focus on rest and physical movement in January. I know, these seem diametrically opposed, and some people might be saying “start with the spiritual!” But over the past few years little rest and dwindling exercise meant days I fell asleep praying or reading my Bible, and a foggy brain that couldn’t always focus on God’s message. So. Restoring health seemed like a good place to start!

In January, I read Lysa Terkeurst’s book The Best Yes. I tend to say “yes” a bit heedlessly, in the excitement of the moment. What can I say? I am a doer and love to be involved! When the time comes to DO those things, I find I’ve committed to the work of multiple “Julies,” and I come crashing down (my hubby usually bails me out!). Honestly, my stress levels last year were so obviously trying to remind me that I am not five different people!!

Saying yes to everything isn’t a sustainable practice. And I certainly wasn’t involving God in every aspect of  my life by doing so.

So in January, I took this concept of the “best yes” and tried to only say yes if it was essential and met the goals I’d set. That list looked like:

  • Bible reading – I’m on a new 5-day-a-week plan I’ll write about later!
  • Exercise – I worked out at least 15 out of 31 days! That might be 12 more days than all last year!
  • Earlier bedtimes – dubious success, but more bedtimes BEFORE midnight than after!
  • Homeschooling – I said no to things that were interrupting our school days.
  • Sunday School teaching – we painted our Sunday School room and added some creativity to the curriculum.
  • And… you see, my to-do list is already long and doesn’t even include family get togethers, housework, and day-to-day errands!

Creating a balance of getting rest and exercise was so helpful. I’m glad I said no in January, even though I felt bad we couldn’t make every playdate, or every fellowship. I left January feeling a deep sense of relief and fulfillment. Relief: I could actually say no. Fulfillment: accomplishing some goals even short-term.

On to February: Restoring a faithful prayer life

Being less busy and getting more rest gave me clarity to focus on what God wants for me. One of those things is to restore a faithful prayer life, as a mom praying for my kids. I mean, we all know prayer is important. If not THE most important thing we can do for our kids.

So why does prayer often get pushed down the list? When did prayer become an if-I-have-time task, or minimized to I-can-pray-at-the-stoplights (although that’s not a bad idea).

I decided I don’t want to just pray for my sons between the raindrops, but rain a flood of prayers over my sons.

Instead of just praying between the raindrops, let's rain a flood of prayers over our children!  Share on X

In January 2018, I was invited to write a devotional for The MOB Society’s My Book of Prayer, Spring Edition. I wrote on having the right view of God, which was a wonderful study for me, and I am excited to share the thoughts God gave me! My devotional was included in My Book of Prayer, which is now out of print. But, the lessons learned have helped me develop my prayer life!

restore prayer life mom

How we can restore a faithful prayer life as moms

Write down prayer requests to see God’s answers in a tangible way.

Writing out requests and answers gives us a visual of God’s working in our life. Praying for our kids is a slow process; answers come gradually, or after many years. We prayed for our son’s temper tantrums years ago… eventually they faded away as he grew… it happened so gradually I nearly forgot we’d been praying for that very thing! Now we have other development hurdles we pray for, and I’m going to write down each time God helps our little boys overcome challenges.

Read scriptures about praying.

I love to read the prayers of people in the Bible, as it teaches me so much about how frankly and openly we can approach God in prayer. And, how specifically and meaningfully people prayed.

Use prayer prompts to help us pray more deeply.

Do you ever find you’re just making a laundry list in your prayer? Glossing over the lives of our kids? “God keep my kids safe. Help my kids do right. Help them accept You.” Not bad things. But… kind of generic. We can be stirred to pray for our sons to have compassion, to seek God’s face, to know His will, to serve others…

Get a prayer partner to encourage faithfulness

A prayer partner will pray with us for our children and family. I don’t have this person just yet. So I often use devotionals written by other moms as a sort of “virtual” prayer partner. I imagine I’m having a heart-to-heart conversation with that mom about what the scripture teaches us about mothering our kids!

Do you need a prayer partner in your motherhood?

Maybe you’d like to have a virtual prayer partner like me… well, here’s a portion of the devotional that I wrote for My Book of Prayer:

John 20:29: “Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed.”

Our youngest son came to me in tears one night. “Mommy!” he cried, “I’m afraid God won’t let me into heaven!” When asked why, he explained the disciples said children can’t go to Jesus. Apparently, he’d only heard the first half of the story about Jesus and the little children. I hugged my boy close and gratefully shared the other half of the story, where Jesus welcomes the children to come to Him. (Mark 10:14).

I thought about how often, like the disciples, like my son, I’ve had the wrong view of God. I’ve viewed God as “too busy” for my little troubles. As a “gotcha God” waiting for me to trip up. As demanding, exacting, or aloof. None of these views of God bear out in Scripture! Time and again, God tells of His long-suffering, His desire to draw near, His graciousness and forgiveness.

Jesus corrects the disciples distorted view with loving words and actions, drawing the children close. Just so, God corrects my view of Him by drawing my eye to the stories of His relationships with people in the Bible.

Prayer journals are a wonderful resource to help moms develop a faithful prayer life because it provides all the resources for developing a prayer life I suggested above! It’s part devotional, part journal, with daily and weekly prayer prompts plus space to write and record your prayer life. You’ll be so blessed to use a prayer journal that allows you to look back to see God working!

A Prayer Journal for Grateful Living

Although the My Book of Prayer for Moms is no longer in print, if you’re looking for a prayer journal specifically to restore a sense of gratitude in your life, through prayer, I wrote one just for that purpose! 

A person holding a purple Thanksgiving devotional book

Life gives us many reasons to gripe and complain, feel overwhelmed and downright depressed. But for the Christian, there is good news. We have something to thankful for no matter what the world around us is experiencing!

This absolutely lovely, 20-day prayer journal is intentionally named Everyday Prayers for ThanksLIVING, not thanksgiving. Help your family live with thanks no matter what season of the year it is!

  • It includes 20 days of prayer prompts inspired by my favorite scriptures that teach us about living in gratitude.
  • Reflection questions will deepen your prayer life and allow you to write out your own prayer to remember these days.
  • Extra verses for study will help you connect in more ways to the truths of God’s Word. 

If you’d like a copy of this prayer journal for yourself, you can order it here.

I’m praying for you, moms, as you seek with me to restore and sustain a faithful prayer life.

Please share how you pray for your kids, and what keeps you going in your prayer walk!

restore prayer life mom

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