Public prayer that He hears and answers

public prayer that He hears and answers

The first serious conflict, that really affected me, was between Paul and Barnabas. These two changed the world as God called them to be missionaries to the world. They did amazing things together and their bond was strong and that went quite a few years back when Barnabas became a friend of Paul when he was known as Saul.

Here is what happened —

Some time later Paul said to Barnabas, “Let us go back and visit the believers in every town where we preached the word of the Lord, and let us find out how they are getting along.” Barnabas wanted to take John Mark with them, but Paul did not think it was right to take him, because he had not stayed with them to the end of their mission, but had turned back and left them in Pamphylia. There was a sharp argument, and they separated: Barnabas took Mark and sailed off for Cyprus, while Paul chose Silas and left, commended by the believers to the care of the Lord’s grace. He went through Syria and Cilicia, strengthening the churches. – Acts 15:36-41  GNT

I also struggled with the church’s response to the conflict. It seems that they favoured Paul and that all of a sudden Barnabas was of no concern as he left with his nephew to Cyprus. There was no prayer, no sending off, nothing. When Paul left, he was sent with prayers and blessing. Remember, they knew Barnabas much longer than Paul. I am thankful that Paul, in the midst of the disagreement and contention allowed the church to love him and pray for him.

Their prayer was to follow-up with the churches they had met and their prayer was similar to that of Jeremiah’s —

I will give them the desire to know that I am the Lord. Then they will be my people, and I will be their God, because they will return to me with all their heart. – Jeremiah 24:7  GNT

There is a boldness that blind Bartimaeus teaches me about prayer. He also teaches me to pray God sized prayers that I can believe in by faith knowing that He will hear and answer them.

 They came to Jericho, and as Jesus was leaving with his disciples and a large crowd, a blind beggar named Bartimaeus son of Timaeus was sitting by the road. When he heard that it was Jesus of Nazareth, he began to shout, “Jesus! Son of David! Have mercy on me!”

Many of the people scolded him and told him to be quiet. But he shouted even more loudly, “Son of David, have mercy on me!”

Jesus stopped and said, “Call him.”

So they called the blind man. “Cheer up!” they said. “Get up, he is calling you.”

So he threw off his cloak, jumped up, and came to Jesus.

“What do you want me to do for you?” Jesus asked him.

“Teacher,” the blind man answered, “I want to see again.”

“Go,” Jesus told him, “your faith has made you well.”

At once he was able to see and followed Jesus on the road. – Mark 10:46-52  GNT

I pray that my prayer walk with God will be evident when I pray with others so that my confidence and boldness, even in the midst of contention, will encourage others to know that God does in fact hear and answer prayer.

Prayer is not simply petition, but strenuous petition.  It is not just passive surrender but active pleading with God.  It involves not only submission to the will of God but seeking to change his will.  It consists not merely in reflection on the promises of God but in taking hold of those promises (cf. Isaiah 64:7).  It is often said by those who are attracted to mystical or to philosophical prayer that our petitions change our attitude toward God but that they have no real effect upon God, who is unchangeable and impassible.   My contention is that prayer does effect a change in God’s attitude to us and in his dealings with us. Prayer is reciprocal: it has a definite impact on both parties involved.  That God permits prayer to exert an influence on him is attested throughout the Scriptures (Abraham’s bargaining for Sodom – Genesis 18:22-33;  Nineveh’s repentance after Jonah’s preaching – Jonah 3:10; Moses’ intercession after Israel’s idolatry – Psalm 106:2; the staying of the plague when Phinehas prayed – Psalm 106:30; Amos stopping the judgment of God from falling on Israel – Amos 7:1-6).  In this light we can understand Spurgeon’s contention that “prayer is able to prevail with heaven and bend omnipotence to its desires.”  Prayer in the sense of striving with God in order to alter his ways with his people is utter nonsense to the philosopher… Against the philosophical understanding of prayer Karl Barth insisted that real prayer presupposes a living God who hears and acts – “He is not deaf, he listens; more than that, he acts.  He does not act in the same way whether we pray or not.  Prayer exerts an influence upon God’s action, even upon his existence.  This is what the word ‘answer’ means.”  Christian faith, to be sure, affirms the essential trustworthiness of God’s declared will and purpose for the world; God cannot deny or contradict himself.  Yet Scripture makes clear that God has chosen to work out his purposes in cooperation with his children. His ultimate will is inflexible, but the ways by which he seeks to implement this will are flexible.  He does not change his final purpose, but he does alter his methods for realizing this purpose. He is unchangeable in his holiness and righteousness, but changeable in the giving of his grace.  Prayer, as Fosdick observed, cannot change God’s intention, but it can change God’s action. – Donald Bloesch

 

Prayer for deliverance and salvation

womenflowerspraying

There is a section in Psalm 119 that walks me through some areas of prayer.

Let your constant love comfort me,
    as you have promised me, your servant. – Psalm 119:76  GNT

This is how I am persuaded to pray – knowing that my sin will be pardoned and I will be reconciled to God. It is here that I receive the peace I have been looking for and it is here, in my heart and my conscience, through the power of the Holy Spirit, and based on the promises of God, that I find myself “comforted” even before my troubles are resolved.

May the proud be ashamed for falsely accusing me;
    as for me, I will meditate on your instructions.
May those who honor you come to me—
    all those who know your commands. – Psalm 119:78-79  GNT

It is a prayer and maybe it is a spoken declaration of hope – it is when I breathe not a request necessarily, but a desire of my heart – that is, not a formal request.

Your commandments are all trustworthy;
    people persecute me with lies—help me! – Psalm 119:86  GNT

If God’s commandments are trustworthy, they make God truthful and faithful. Those who go against God are thereby not. If those against God find themselves in this postion, am I not encouraged to pray and hope for deliverance and salvation?

In humility I get down on my knees.

I am the high and holy God, who lives forever. I live in a high and holy place, but I also live with people who are humble and repentant, so that I can restore their confidence and hope. – Isaiah 57:15  GNT

It is a great place to be in prayer because I join my spiritual expression with my physical one and together they reveal the attitude of my heart. I feel that if I really want to know God, there needs to be humility in my heart. That is what I pray. So I look for salvation from my sin, pride, selfishness and the tendencies to exalt myself.

That is why the miracle of praying for my enemies never ceases to amaze me.

But now I tell you: love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you. – Matthew 5:44  GNT

It has to be one of the deepest expressions of love. It is why, very early on in my walk with God that I would seek this above all.

The issue is not just doing nice or helpful things, but it is the ability to see, hear, engage with that person and truly love them for who they are and where they are. I think Jesus expressed this on the cross and I know Stephen echoed His words as he was being stoned and Paul prayed in a similar passion when you think of the Jewish people being his enemies wherever he went.

 I did not see that it is in the process of being worshipped that God communicates His presence to men. It is not of course the only way. But for many people at many times the ‘fair beauty of the Lord’ is revealed chiefly or only while they worship Him together. Even in Judaism the essence of the sacrifice was not really that men gave bulls and goats to God, but that by their so doing God gave Himself to men; in the central act of our own worship of course this is far clearer — there it is manifestly, even physically, God who gives and we who receive. The miserable idea that God should in any sense need, or crave for, our worship like a vain woman wanting compliments, or a vain author presenting his new books to people who never met or heard him, is implicitly answered by the words, ‘If I be hungry I will not tell thee‘ (50:12). Even if such an absurd Deity could be conceived, He would hardly come to us, the lowest of rational creatures, to gratify His appetite. – C.S.Lewis