A Prayer for Our Nation Today
By Congressman Randy Forbes
December 14, 2015
Senators used to go into the chamber early just to hear Peter Marshall
pray. He was a Senate chaplain, serving for a few short years in the
late 1940s as our nation recovered from World War II. Peter Marshall was
known for his profound wisdom. In fact, it is said that one day
Chaplain Marshall opened the Senate in prayer at a time when two
Senators were deep in an argument. They heard his prayer and later came
to apologize – both to each other and to him.
But it wasn’t just
eloquence that left an impression. Peter Marshall’s prayers had life
behind them. He hit right at the very heart of what was troubling our
nation and he spoke grace and wisdom over them. I have a book of prayers
by Peter Marshall, and I’ve often found myself referring to them and
reflecting on them throughout my time in Congress.
There is one
prayer in particular that has always stuck with me. It hangs in a large
frame on the wall in my office serving as a daily compass – a way of
re-centering after hard decisions and conversations, and in the midst of
our heavy news cycle. The prayer says this:
Our Father in
Heaven, save us from the conceit which refuses to believe that God knows
more about government than we do, and deliver us from the stubbornness
that will not seek God's help.
Today we claim Thy promise: "If
any man lack wisdom, let him ask of God, who giveth to all men liberally
and it shall be given him." Thou knowest, Lord, how much we need it.
Make us willing to ask for it and eager to have it.
In Jesus' name we pray. Amen.
I don’t think it’s any coincidence that Chaplain Peter Marshall
addressed conceit and wisdom in the same breath. Conceit is the chief
enemy of wisdom. Conceit digs its feet in the ground, focusing on
personal power over principles; wisdom, however, is birthed out of
humility. In fact, it is nearly impossible to have conceit and also have
true wisdom.
I hear often from people who say they have lost
heart and trust in government today, especially as we face considerable
challenges. Uncertainty hangs in the air. Lack of trust creates room for
fear – something I sense increasingly in our nation today.
What I
think these individuals mean when they talk about losing heart and
trust in government is that they are aching for wisdom from America’s
leaders. They desire leaders who are outwardly focused rather than
leaders who are focused on themselves. They need leaders, from both
sides of the aisle, who let integrity eclipse image.
But wisdom
isn't just chosen. It cannot be placed in talking points or written on a
teleprompter or made up in a press release. Wisdom is earned. It's
built over years of actively setting pride aside. It's formed through
years of listening – quieting our own voice and leaning on the voices of
others and that of a greater power as a thoughtful guide. It’s the
daily decision to set our own stubborn ways aside – those natural
tendencies that say that we are the only ones who know best.
True
wisdom requires deep humility. It also requires an able heart. “Make
us willing to ask for it and eager to have it,” Peter Marshall prayed.
Humility and wisdom are bipartisan principles, and they only come when
we are willing to ask for it and eager to earn it.
Our nation
desperately needs humility and wisdom right now as we navigate the sea
of challenges and opportunities in front of us. My impression is this: I
believe we need Peter Marshall’s prayer now more than ever. And so I
will continue to pray those words with fervency, for my own life and for
those alongside of whom I serve.
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