
“It was the first year of the reign of Darius the Mede, the son of Ahasuerus, who became king of the Babylonians. During the first year of his reign, I, Daniel, learned from reading the word of the LORD, as revealed to Jeremiah the prophet, that Jerusalem must lie desolate for seventy years.” Daniel 9:1-2 (NLT)
Prayer is one of God’s best gifts in a crisis, not because it helps you manage stress, but because it puts you back in front of the only one who can actually carry what’s too heavy for you.
Daniel modeled that.
When Daniel realized the clock was running out on Israel’s exile, he didn’t just feel hopeful. He also felt the gap: The people weren’t spiritually ready for what God was about to do. That burden drove him to prayer.
But notice where Daniel started. He let God speak to him before he spoke to God.
Daniel “learned from reading the word of the LORD, as revealed to Jeremiah the prophet” (Daniel 9:2 NLT). Before he prayed, Daniel listened. Scripture steadied him, reminded him what God had already said, and gave him the right frame for what came next.
That’s a word pastors need, especially on a Monday.
When pressure is high, it’s easy to treat prayer like a quick download: “God, here’s what’s on fire. Please handle it.” But Daniel’s approach is slower and better. God speaks first. God moves first. God leads first. Then we respond.
So how do you listen to God when problems and stress seem to be all around?
You open the Bible—not to hunt for a verse to share, but to meet with the Lord.
Here’s one simple way to do it today:
Read a short passage (even a few verses).
Sit with it long enough for the noise in your head to settle.
Ask, “Lord, what are you saying to me?”
Then pray one honest response based on what you just read.
Daniel didn’t come to God ready to give a speech. He came ready for a conversation. And he let God set the tone.
The more Scripture shapes you, the more your prayers will stop sounding like panic—and start sounding like trust.