But to lose our sense of wonder is also to lose the motivation for worship.
Imagine a God who loves you so much that He never forgets a single prayer you’ve prayed.
Wow!
TRANSCRIPTION
Thanks! Help! Wow! Here…. We’re talking about four essential prayers.
Sometimes we overthink prayer and make it harder than it needs to be. Sometimes
it’s as simple as saying one heartfelt word. Thanks! Help! Or today’s word:
Wow!
Wow is the prayer of wonder, of amazement, of worship and praise! This is
the prayer our hearts offer when we see God do something amazing, when we get a
glimpse of His great grace and mercy and goodness, or when we see the beauty of
His handiwork in creation. Wow!
Anne Lamott says that this prayer, “Wow, is often offered with a gasp, a
sharp intake of breath, when we can’t think of another way to capture the sight of
shocking beauty or … an unexpected flash of grace. “Wow” means we are not
dulled to wonder.” 1
Not dulled to wonder. Children are not dulled to wonder, but as we get
older, we often lose our sense of wonder. “Oh that,” we say. “Yeah, I’ve seen that
a million times.” We can see a sunset without remark, or a newborn baby and our
only thought is that we’re glad it’s not ours. Dulled to wonder. But to lose our
sense of wonder is also to lose the motivation for worship. Perhaps this is why
Jesus said that we must become like children to enter the Kingdom of heaven. We
must maintain our sense of wonder, of awe and amazement—and worship.
I want to look at four things that make me say “Wow!”
1. Wow! When you see God’s works.
I love being outdoors. I love seeing God’s creation!
This is why I love backpacking! We see God’s creation as few people get to
see it, and you can’t help but stand there and say, “Wow!” This September, 5 of us
spent a week hiking 38 miles through the northwest corner of Yellowstone Park.
(Three pics—take about 4 seconds on each one.) It was one Wow moment after
another. I did have one small problem: my boots gave me a blister, and I hiked the
1 Lamott, Anne. Help, Thanks, Wow (p. 71). Penguin Publishing Group. Kindle Edition.
last 20 miles in some cheap water sandals! That’s also a “Wow!”—but a different
kind. But other than the blister, the hike was one long prayer of Wow!
This is also why I love riding my motorcycle. We go places that are just
stunning! Last summer, we rode through eastern Washington, central Oregon, and
northern California, to the Redwoods, and then up the Oregon Coast and past Mt.
St. Helens and Mt. Rainier on the way home. Wow! The summer before, we rode
through 5 national parks in Utah: Arches, Bryce Canyon, Capitol Reef,
Canyonlands, and Zion! Wow, wow, wow, wow, wow! Being on your motorcycle
seeing these kinds of things is a worship experience. I love the bumper sticker that
says, “I’d rather be on my motorcycle thinking about God than in church thinking
about my motorcycle!” Forgive me! I’m here thinking about God!
I played golf in late October on the Oregon Coast with my lifelong friend,
Kip Jacob. It was almost 70 degrees and sunny and no wind. We kept saying,
“Wow! Wow! Wow!” It was all about the weather, not our golf shots. My golf
shots inspire another kind of Wow: Wow.
Pete Grieg, in his excellent book, How to Pray: A Simple Guide for Normal
People, writes, “No one stares up at the northern lights thinking, Wow, I’m
incredible! We are hardwired to wonder and therefore to worship.” 2
No one stands before the beauty of creation and thinks “Wow, I’m
awesome.” Just the opposite—we feel appropriately small!
Psalm 8 (p. 465)
Lord, our Lord, how majestic is your name in all the earth! You have set
your glory in the heavens…
3 When I consider your heavens, the work of your fingers, the moon and the
stars, which you have set in place, 4 what is mankind that you are mindful of them,
human beings that you care for them?
Have you ever looked up into a night sky and considered the vastness of the
universe, and thought, “What am I?”
ILL: My first experience with this was in