“Thou hast proved mine heart; thou hast visited [me] in the night; thou hast tried me, [and] shalt find nothing; I am purposed [that] my mouth shall not transgress.” (Ps 17:3 AV)
I don’t think David is speaking of perfection here. Surely, as a depraved and sinful man, there was still sin in his heart. I am sure he had to confess and forsake, seeking God’s forgiveness before his prayer could continue. David is not claiming sinlessness. Rather, I think what David is claiming is sincerity, truth, and purity in his prayer. He is not claiming the purity of the substance of his heart. This proving and visiting are what I am most interested in. Finding nothing is also important. What I see here is honesty in prayer. This statement is a great illustration of the give and take that happens in genuine prayer. Sometimes we approach prayer as a one-sided conversation. We see it as a project or task. We have our list. We have our sins to confess. We have many things on our minds that have to be brought to the throne of God. And that might be the case. However, prayer is not one-sided. I think if we stopped and paused long enough to listen to the Spirit’s input, our prayer life might just blossom into something far more intimate.
Who hasn’t had times of vulnerability with a parent or other mentor? A time when patience and concern were the key elements in the conversation. A time when there was give and take. A time when honesty and openness were the character of the words you used. A time like this requires trust. When the heart is laid open, there has to be a trust that the one to whom it is opened will not take advantage of your vulnerability. I remember a few conversations with a baseball coach, a scoutmaster, and a schoolteacher. One of my most memorable ones was with my high school photography teacher. My dad had a darkroom, so I was very familiar with the process. It made photography class rather easy. The teacher asked me to be the student who took the lead in managing the classroom. It was my job to clean the room and set up the darkroom. It also had the privilege of working with equipment that other students were not. There were several afternoons I spent in the darkroom and with my teacher learning new skills or talking about life. It was my senior year, and I had just moved from my hometown. I lived there all my life, and my senior year was a very lonely one. This teacher and I spent many hours talking about life. He was an elderly man and was retiring after my senior year. You could say that I was his last class pet. There were things I could tell him that I could never tell my father. But he never used that information to manipulate or misguide me. He spent those hours listening and asking questions. If it weren’t for the give and take of those darkroom sessions, I may not have made it my senior year. In some way, he may have contributed to my finding Jesus and saving my life.
Prayer with God is not a rote exercise of naming off things we think we need. Prayer with God is not merely speaking so we can be heard. It is a conversation between two beings. It is a two-way conversation. To our detriment, we often speak of the word of God as the voice of God by which He speaks. That certainly is absolutely true. But His word is not the only way by which He communicates. The Bible tells us that the Spirit of God bears witness with our spirit that we are the children of God. How does He do that? Only through the written word? The psalmist says that God knows there is no sin in his prayer. How does David know that God knows that? How does this searching happen? The Spirit must bear witness with our spirit. This means there is communication that goes on. Not an audible voice. It is not something someone else hears with us. Rather, it is the opening of the heart and conscience to divine input. It is the thinking and meditating on what the divine voice would tell us. I have to say, when the Spirit does this, often there are chuckles that ebb forth. Sometimes in the process of prayer, I have words, but I know the words are not accurate or truthful. So, I stop and ask the Spirit to frame them better. Prayer is not one-sided. It is a dual conversation between two beings. Our prayer lives would be vastly different if exercised our prayer lives in just that way.