We take prayer requests at my church. This is always somewhat terrifying. On the eve of the Iraq War, a disabled vet asked for prayers for "good mental hygiene for our nation's leaders." Once, someone used this opportunity to ask why we never sing any of the old favorites anymore. A few weeks ago, a recent graduate of our local high school asked for prayers for the old trees on the school's campus that had been felled to make way for a parking lot. The principal of the school also attends my church. I saw him in the back, red-faced because he'd been put on the spot, but grinning. I think he liked it that I too was on the spot.
It can be something of a high wire act forming a petition that takes seriously the petitioner's concern and is something that everyone can assent to.
It's always a high wire act when my older son makes prayer requests. He's asked for prayers for his pumpkin, which, alas, molded and collapsed in upon itself just a couple of weeks shy of the County Fair. Last week he asked for prayers for his pond.
Let me explain. For a couple of years now he's been fascinated with those rubberized ponds that you can install in your back yard and put goldfish, cattails, or whatever in.
For his birthday, my in-laws bought him a kit, and even assembled it for us in our back yard. Our son did a lot of supervising, but as it was August, he did work up a pretty good sweat out there.
To everyone's great shock and grief, no sooner was the pond up and running than we discovered a disaster one Sunday morning. The water was gone, and the plastic liner had collapsed in on itself.
Our theory is that the water went astray from the waterfall we'd created; the pump pumped all the water out, and the weight of the surrounding soil pushed the liner in.
So our older son asked for prayers for his pond. Can't really remember what I did with that one.
But Hey, when God closes one door, he opens another! Forced to dig out the liner, we decided to relocate the pond to a shadier area in the yard. Less algae growth.
My in-laws returned on Friday to dig out a hole in the front yard, under a dogwood and pine tree. A dainty little azalea branch, like an extended hand, reaches out over it. We added water, plugged in the fountain, added the goldfish (who miraculously survived the first pond disaster), and I'd have to say, we're all pretty pleased with the results!
It's a mystery why God spared the pond but not the pumpkin, but we'll take what we can get!
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