One of my very favorite things to do is pray for someone I don’t know, right on the spot. It’s challenging and gives me the feeling that no matter what else happens during the day, I have done something good for one person. You might think praying for someone without being asked is awkward, and it can be, but I’ve never had anyone say no to my offer.
The first person I ever prayed for off the cuff was a plumber named Ron who arrived at 6:30 in my art room to flush out a paint and glue-encrusted sink. My principal had already raked me over the coals about the clog, and given me a lecture about classroom management, the corporation’s mission, and the price of beans in China. At the end of that diatribe, her rigid hand came up from behind her desk to reveal what had already been pulled from the pipes, a large gooey bundle of pencils, over which she added, “Next time this happens, you’ll pay.”
When I returned to the art room, I was nervous about how the repairs were going, but busied myself preparing the room for a day of teaching middle school. While making small talk with Ron about ornery middle schoolers who pour Elmer’s glue down a pipe, Ron quietly opened up about his impending divorce. He continued to fill in the details of his life, and I saw a man broken by the loss of a wife and family, and the hopelessness of a life clogged up like the sink he was repairing. We had something in common and I was urged to pray for him. What would be his reaction I thought? I bowed my head, leaned into some awkward words, and tried to express the love that God promises. I knew it was there, but I didn’t know if Ron would put down his wrenches and pray or use one of them on me.
When I finished and looked up, a somewhat bewildered Ron thanked me and immediately went back to work. I was way too busy to think about my prayer, and too afraid to ask him more about his desperation. His plumbing called, my students were needy, his tools were clanking, and my hands were busy. But… God heard that prayer and came roaring into Ron’s heart like a freight train that day.
I could say that there are a lot of sinks out there that need attention. I could say that there’s a lot of gunk stunk in those sinks that water’s having a tough time moving through. What Ron and I didn’t know was the powerful way God would take a simple prayer and use it to rebuild him from the ground up, rid him of his vacant pipe dreams and hopelessness and fill him with good news and a new purpose.
Clogged sink? Yep, a year later I did it again, and Ron the Plumber had to be called back in to fix the sink. Ron looked like a new man though, and this time we were wading into the problem together. His life wasn’t perfect, but he had gotten through his divorce, had his kids living with him, and was wielding those plumbing tools like a medieval boss. His plumbing fixtures were allowing new life to flow. He was re-tooled, re-synced, re-glued and renewed. And then, after telling me about his year, he offered to pray for _me_ that day.
And man did I need it. The principal called me in later to show me the glob that had been pulled out of the sink again, but now I saw the gunk my students had shoved down those pipes, not as a mess but an opportunity. Without that clog, I would never have met Ron. And as my principal tossed the mixture of glue and broken paint brushes into the trash, I reached down and pulled them out, and later used that clump as the final touch in a work of my art, shown in the blog, called Jonathon’s Lunch Tray. It was a blessing all around.
If you run across a Ron in your life, even if he’s not a plumber, try this simple prayer:
Dear Heavenly Father, thank you for this beautiful day you’ve given us. Thank you that you have a plan for our life. I want to take a moment and lift up Ron who I just met and ask that you cover him in your love today. Let your presence be known in his life, as he serves others. Thank you for putting us together to pray, and help our day be fruitful all day long. In Jesus name we pray, AMEN!