Let me start with a question.
Is there any part of your life that wouldn't be better with more of God in it?
Your finances? Your marriage? Your work? Your kids? Your future?
I can't think of one. Can you?
One of the main ways we get more of God in our life is through prayer. Prayer is opening the door to Jesus. Letting Him into our anger. Letting Him into our guilt. Letting Him into our anxiety. Letting Him into the rooms we've been keeping locked.
And Daniel is a great model of what prayer can look like.
We already know that Daniel prayed. Daniel 6 told us he got down on his knees three times a day, windows open toward Jerusalem, even when the lions' den was waiting for him. He had been doing that for 70 years.
But have you ever wondered what Daniel actually prayed about?
What does a man whose prayer life is that deep sound like?
Daniel 9 lets us listen in. And what we hear is one of the most powerful prayers in the entire Bible.
The Setup
Daniel is around 85 years old. Babylon has just fallen to the Medo-Persian Empire. And Daniel is reading his Bible.
Specifically, he's reading Jeremiah. And he notices something. Jeremiah had said the exile would last 70 years. Daniel does the math. The 70 years are almost up.
That single moment of Bible reading is what triggers the prayer.
Which means before Daniel ever opens his mouth, two things have already happened.
First, Daniel reads Scripture.
Prayer doesn't start with talking to God. Prayer starts with listening to God. And how does God talk to us? Through his Book.
Don't miss this principle. God's promise is not a substitute for our praying. God's promise is the fuel for our praying.
When you find a promise of God in this Book, that's not a signal to coast. That's a signal to kneel.
Daniel's prayer life was loaded because his Bible life was loaded.
Second, Daniel turns.
Verse 3 says, "So I turned to the Lord God and pleaded with Him in prayer and petition, in fasting, and in sackcloth and ashes."
When my kids were little, I remember a time I was watching a football game on TV, and one of them wanted my attention so they grabbed my face, turned it toward them, and said, "Dad. Look at me."
Attention is love. Attention is the highest gift you give anybody. More than gifts. More than chocolate. More than money.
And here's the wild thing. You can do that with God. You can turn to Him.
Hebrews 11:6 says, "He rewards those who earnestly seek Him."
Would you like God to bless your marriage? Seek Him. Your finances? Seek Him. Your kids? Seek Him.
Wherever you seek God, God shows up. Wherever you don't, God says, "Okay. Have it your way."
Here's where most of us live. We don't ask God before we buy it. We don't ask God before we date someone. We don't ask God before we take the job. Then it falls apart and we say, "God, where are you?"
And God says, "I was right here. You didn't turn."
The Prayer Itself: Adore, Align, Ask
Now Daniel finally opens his mouth. And the prayer itself has three movements.
Adore
Verse 4: "Lord, the great and awesome God, who keeps his covenant of love with those who love him and keep his commandments..."
Look where Daniel starts. Not with his request. Not with his problem. Not with his shopping list. With God's character.
You are great. You are awesome. You keep your promises. You love faithfully.
Most of our prayer lives are basically Amazon orders. "Hey God, here's my list. Two-day shipping please."
But strong prayer starts with worship. Strong prayer says God first, requests second.
And here's why it matters. How you start prayer shapes everything else. If I start with my problem, my problem grows. If I start with my God, my God grows. And suddenly my problem looks the right size.
Thanksgiving is not a holiday. It's an attitude. Live with the attitude of gratitude.
Align
Verse 4 is adoration. One verse. Verses 5 through 15 are realignment. Eleven verses.
Daniel spent more time getting right with God than he did asking God for anything. Let that sink in.
Most of us spend 90% of our prayer time asking and maybe 10% getting honest about ourselves, if we get honest at all.
And here's why this part is called Align, not just Confess. Daniel isn't just feeling it. He's getting back in step with God. Confession is admitting it. Alignment is correcting course. Daniel is doing both.
Watch the word he uses in verse 5: "We have sinned and done wrong."
Not "they." Not "those guys." Not "the wicked generation that got us into this mess." We.
Daniel is as righteous as a man gets in the Old Testament. He doesn't point a finger. He puts himself in the problem.
Most of us pray like prosecutors. "God, here's what they did wrong. Here's what's wrong with the country. Here's what's wrong with my spouse."
Daniel prays like a defendant pleading guilty.
God doesn't listen to prideful complaining. But God leans into humble alignment.
Ask
Now, finally, Daniel makes his ask. And listen to what he leans on.
Verse 18: "We do not make requests of you because we are righteous, but because of your great mercy."
This is the most important sentence in the whole prayer.
Sometimes we think God will answer our prayer because of our résumé. "God, I've been good this week. I came to church. I haven't yelled at anyone in three days. Now, about my list..."
That's not how God answers prayer.
God doesn't answer your prayer based on your record. God answers your prayer based on His character.
Daniel, 85 years old, blameless before kings, a man God Himself called "greatly loved," comes to God and says, "Look, we don't deserve a thing. I'm not coming on my résumé. I'm coming on Your mercy."
If Daniel had to lean on mercy, you and I are leaning on mercy.
Your prayers don't get answered because you earned it. Your prayers get answered because Jesus earned it, and you came in His name.
What Happens Next
Watch what God does. Daniel is still praying. Mid-sentence. And God dispatches Gabriel.
Not just any angel. Gabriel. The Christmas angel. The one God sends for the biggest announcements in human history. The one who later shows up to Mary and Zechariah.
Gabriel shows up to Daniel mid-prayer and says the line of the whole chapter: "As soon as you began to pray, an answer was given."
Not when Daniel finished. Not when Daniel got it perfect. Not when Daniel deserved it. As soon as he began.
When God's people pray God's way, heaven moves faster than you think.
So What Now?
A lot of people think prayer is what you do when there's nothing else you can do. "Well, all I can do now is pray."
Friend, prayer is not the last resort. Prayer is the first choice.
Prayer is doing something. Prayer is one of the ways we do faith. Prayer is the activity that says, "I believe God is real. I believe God is listening. I believe God can act. I believe God will act."
So the next time you pray, ask three questions:
Did I start with Him?
Did I own my stuff?
Did I lean on His mercy?
That's how Daniel prayed. And the secret of standing strong is kneeling often.




