And all things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye
shall receive.
—Matthew 21:22
Prayer is a two-way
conversation; it is our talking to God, and His talking to us. As a Christian,
you have a heavenly Father who hears and answers prayer. Jesus said, “All things, whatsoever ye shall ask in prayer, believing, ye shall receive.” Every
man or woman whose life has counted for the church and the Kingdom of God has
been a person of prayer. You cannot afford to be too busy to pray. A prayerless
Christian is a powerless Christian. Jesus Christ spent many hours in prayer.
Sometimes He spent the night on a mountaintop in solitary communion with God
the Father. If He felt that He had to pray, how much more do we need to pray!
These are the sharp edges of faith in a transcendent,
all-powerful, personal God. Most of us have a tendency to react with anger or
withdrawal when we feel God has let us down by not giving us things we felt
were legitimate to ask him for. We may feel guilty that our expectations toward
God were too great. We may feel that God has not answered our prayers because
of something lacking in ourselves. We may compare ourselves with others whose
every wish seems to be granted by God, and wonder why He hasn’t come through
for us in the way he does for others. And sometimes we allow this
disappointment in God to fester and eat away at our faith in him until the
years go by and we find ourselves bereft of belief.
G. K. Chesterton surmised that when belief in God becomes difficult, the tendency is to turn away from him—but, in heaven’s name, to what? To the skeptic or the one who has been disappointed in his faith, the obvious answer to Chesterton’s question may be to give up believing that there’s somebody out there, take charge of your own life, and live it out to the best of your own ability.
But Chesterton also wrote, “The real trouble with the world of ours is not that
it is an unreasonable world, nor even that it is a reasonable one. The
commonest kind of trouble is that it is nearly reasonable, but not
quite.”(2) He is right. Only so much about life can be understood by
reason; so much falls far short of any reasonable explanation. Prayer then
becomes the irrepressible cry of the heart at the times we most need it. For
every person who feels that prayer has not “worked” for them and has therefore
abandoned God, there is someone else for whom prayer remains a vital part of
her life, sustaining her even when her prayers have gone unanswered, because
her belief and trust is not only in the power of prayer but in the character
and wisdom of God. God is the focus of such prayer, and that is what sustains
such people and preserves their faith.
Prayer is far more complex than some make it out to be. There is much more
involved than merely asking for something and receiving it. In this, as in
other contexts, we too often succumb to believing that something is what it
never was, even when we know it cannot be as simple as we would like to think
it is.
Prayer for the day
Let me pour
everything out to You, Lord. Thank You for the knowledge that You hear me!
Lee North
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