Presumably, if Isaac died, he couldn’t become an ancestor of anyone, and yet Abraham didn’t argue with God. Perhaps he trusted that all things are possible with God; perhaps he knew that God could resurrect Isaac if He desired, or perhaps he thought that Isaac’s death might be necessary to the formation of that new people. Somehow, Abraham didn’t demand to understand God’s logic, but accepted that God is a mystery who loves us. Abraham didn’t ask questions, he just obeyed the Lord. He loved God and he trusted God, and he knew the truth: that Isaac belonged to God. Isaac was God’s child and God would take care of him.When my daughter was in liver failure, I watched her health deteriorate, I saw her turn yellow and then I saw her stop eating and sometimes labor to breathe, and I could not do anything for her. Any illusion I had that I was in charge of her life was shattered: I had no power to save her. Even the wonderful doctors to whom I was entrusting her could not give me any guarantees. They didn’t know. They would do their best, and yet, they just didn’t know how it would turn out.Suddenly, I understood Abraham. I could see him in my mind’s eye, lifting up his son and offering him on that altar. I offered my daughter up in the same way. I didn’t ask to understand why God had allowed us to be in this situation, but I prayed for her and offered her to God, to the only One with the power to help. I knew that God could pour down His grace and carry all of us through this, regardless of how it turned out medically.Abraham’s offering was not selfish, not the kind of parent’s prayer that demands its own way, demanding that God give us healthy, happy, faithful children because we want them. Abraham’s action acknowledges his own weakness and unworthiness, not even asking to understand God’s ways, but simply entrusting the child to its heavenly Father.Christ taught us to pray, Thy will be done, on earth as it is heaven, and when someone is sick, we all know that “Thy will be done” can mean a person’s death as easily as his life, but we still pray it, because we know that God has our best interest at heart, that He will make things happen as they are meant to happen. So we began to pray something special for our daughter: Lord, give her what she needs. Lord, protect her and love her, and let this unfold as You will.We are weak and imperfect, but God is the perfect parent. Our love is limited, but His love is without end.Ultimately, I found the best prayer possible for my child. I simply called out, “Lord, your child needs you! Come, Lord, take care of Your child.” I recognized that this baby was His baby, and that He loved her even more than I did, and so my prayers became a simple call to point out to him that His baby needed Him.We can pray for our children by humbly taking ourselves out of the picture and trusting children to God, simply calling to Him as to their true Father. “Come, Lord, Your child needs You.” and of course, sometimes, it’s really urgent and I’m sort of spiritually hollering, “Come right now, Lord! Quick! Your sweet child needs You!”