This is about Asher who gives me wristbands which I gave to the kids in Vietnam! This is from April 7, 2013.
Asher
led us in prayer this morning but that really does not tell the story.
In all my years of church services and worshiping, it was unlike any
prayer in my remembrance. You see, Asher prayed in his native Hebrew
language this Sunday in leading our congregation. Born and raised in
Israel and a Christian for only two years, it was his first time in
front of the church but not in front of our Father God. It was also the
first time I've witnessed a prayer being introduced by the minister.
David Yasko, our preacher for the English speaking part of our
congregation, explained that he and Asher met for several hours on
Thursday in preparation for his prayer. As English is his second
language and he wanted his words to be perfectly accurate, they decided
Asher would pray in Hebrew and the English translation would be on the
screen behind him. David reminded us that Jesus admonished us to watch and pray so
it would be acceptable to keep our eyes open as Asher spoke to Jehovah
for all of us. And when Asher voiced his AMEN, I fought the overwhelming
urge to applaud. Not because of the beauty of the words or
the elegance of Asher, both of which were present, but because of a joy I
felt in hearing God addressed in a language that our Savior Jesus
Christ understood.
This
may all seem silly to you but the fact that Hebrew is a Biblical
language and I heard Asher pray using that tongue to me is simply
amazing. I've had little direct contact with Jewish culture so there was
a sense of awe for me. Compounding my reaction might have been that
less than two weeks ago, I was part of a re-enactment of a
Passover Seder hosted at our school by the family of one of our Jewish
students. But I am also so touched by the careful nature in which Asher
approached his obligation to all of us as he talked with our God. (And
in reference to his English abilities, I would not have guessed Asher is
not a native speaker.) The majority of my public prayers/lessons which
are not at school are translated into Chinese during eleven months of
the year and into Vietnamese during July. Sadly, I'm not nearly as
cautious with what I say or how I say it as Asher was this morning. My
classes have recently studied Jesus' parable of The Two Men At Prayer.
We discussed how the Pharisee basically prayed about himself while never
asking for anything or confessing anything, both components of what we
refer to as The Lord's Prayer. On the other hand, the despised tax
collector simply prayed, God, have mercy on me, a sinner.
Jesus concludes with the shocking statement that the tax collector was
right before the Lord, not the noted religious leader. The words we use,
and the heart from which they flow, matter according to Jesus. And as
Asher returned to his pew, my mind drifted to the middle verse of one of
my favorite hymns:
Sweet hour of prayer! sweet hour of prayer
The joy I feel, the bliss I share
Of those whose anxious spirits burn
With strong desires for thy return!
With such I hasten to the place
Where God my Savior shows His face,
And gladly take my station there,
And wait for thee, sweet hour of prayer!
It was a
sweet hour of prayer for me this morning ..... and singing and
listening and communing and fellow-shipping. Asher set the tone for me,
for us. For the first time in my life, I wished that I could speak
Hebrew and understand without relying on a screen and projected words. I
would guess the Lord will settle for improvement in my prayer life in
the one language I already know. One step at a time.
Applicable quote of the day: