4.25- Phone Zone
4.25-
Phone
Zone I
Thessalonians 5:16-24 Bill Crowder
One of the benefits of cell phones is that
we now have virtually unlimited access to others. As a result, many people talk
on the phone or text even while driving – sometimes resulting in terrible car
crashes. To avoid such disasters, many areas of the world have made distracted
driving illegal. In the United States, highway signs are popping up to remind
drivers of special cell phone zones where they can pull off the road to safely
talk and text to their heart’s delight.
While it is a good idea to restrict mobile
phone communication for drivers, there is another kind of communication that
has no restrictions: prayer. God invites us to call on Him whether we are
coming, going or sitting still. In the New Testament, Paul’s words advise each person
who wants to communicate with God in “pray continually” (I Thessalonians 5:17).
Paul brackets this divine open-door policy by encouraging us to “rejoice always”
(verse 16) and to “give thanks in all circumstances” (verse 18). God calls us
to joy and thanksgiving-expressions of faith in God through Christ anchored in
continual prayer.
God is available for our quick cry or for a
lengthy conversation. He welcomes us into a relationship with Him, a constant
and endless sharing of our joys and gratitude, needs, questions, and concerns
(Hebrews 4:15-16). We are always in the prayer zone.
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