My Prayer Comes Before You

  • Believers can come to God in prayer with confidence, knowing He always hears—even when His presence feels distant. The Psalms show a model of honest, daily prayer, where both joy and struggle are brought before God. These simple rhythms of devotion, especially in the morning, anchor the heart in trust. Prayer isn’t about informing God of our needs—He already knows—but about forming our dependence on Him. Through honest conversation with God, we learn to walk with Him in every season, receiving His grace, strength, and presence for the day ahead.

But I, O Lord, cry to you; in the morning my prayer comes before you.
— Psalm 88:13 (ESV)

A central truth of the Christian life is that we can come to God with our needs, and he will never ignore us. We can have confidence in prayer because God always hears us. Even when we can’t see it, he is listening and responding. Even when we struggle to hear his voice, the distance is not a sign of his absence. We are always called to seek God in prayer. The invitation never changes because prayer is a provision of God’s grace.

Rhythms of Grace

The psalmist sets a pattern of devotion that we can imitate, especially in seasons of weakness: simple rhythms of prayer in the morning. Offer your prayer to God. Let it rise to his ear. Don’t weary in putting your request before him.

Each morning, we come to God with our prayers. “God, I need you to work in my life today.” We tell him the things we are facing, the challenges of yesterday that we can’t overcome, the state of our hearts we are trying to discern, and the hardships of those we love around us.

The practice of prayer becomes particularly important in times of trouble. The psalmist continues in the next verse: “O Lord, why do you cast my soul away? Why do you hide your face from me?” (Psalm 88:14). Verses like these show us that it’s normal to feel like God is far away, and it’s acceptable to feel that reality and talk about it.

Abiding in Christ is not just about highlighting the good things. While it’s a beautiful thing to sense the comforting and peaceful presence of God in prayer, God is also Lord in our tension and struggle. He can meet us in our gratitude and praise as much as he can in our pain.

So when we pray, it’s best to lay it all out before God from the start.

God Already Knows

Maybe the best reason to start with total honesty and vulnerability is that God already knows what we need. God doesn’t need us to inform him of our condition. Jesus taught in Matthew 6:8 (ESV): “Your Father knows what you need before you ask him.”

The purpose of putting our needs before God daily is to remind our hearts to trust in him. Abiding looks like boldly walking through each moment of the day with grace and abundance instead of fear and scarcity.

We can only find freedom through the strength God provides and the solutions he offers. God wants us to come to him in prayer so we can learn to depend on him and set aside all self-provision.

You’re invited by God to come before him today with your prayers, wherever you are at spiritually.

You can set your requests before his throne right now.

The prayer starts simple: “God, I’m here to seek you and to know you. I trust that you are listening as I present my requests. Help me through this day. I want to walk with you in your presence.”


Reflect & Respond

  1. What are you facing today? Where are you at spiritually? Put it all before God in prayer.

  2. Where are you struggling to trust God to come through? Take a moment and set aside your vision for the outcome and see that God is inviting you first to find your rest in his presence.


Nathan Lain

Nathan is a music producer, worship leader, and teacher. He lives in Kankakee, IL, with his wife and two boys. He has a B.M. in Music Composition from Olivet Nazarene University and an M.M. in Music Production from Berklee Online and serves as an adjunct professor of recording arts at Olivet Nazarene University. He is currently pursuing a Ph.D. in Christian Worship from Liberty University.

Nathan’s work as a worship leader has led him to travel around the Midwest over the last decade, performing at churches and events. He now serves as the worship director for Orland Park Christian Reformed Church. He is the president of the non-profit ministry People of Freedom and a self-published writer for Abiding Daily.

https://www.lainmusic.com/about
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