by jimwalton » Tue Dec 23, 2014 8:34 pm
> when it comes to circumstances, is there a good reason to ask for prayers?
Yeah, there are good reasons, but the answers or non-answers shouldn't shake our faith. God never promises to answer prayers about our circumstances, and we have learned that most of the time he doesn't. But sometimes he does, and so we pray. We're never given the criteria by which he decides. But as you've said, prayer isn't largely about asking for stuff and having God give it or not give it. That makes God into either Santa Claus or the evil, withholding Santa (mwuha-ha-ha-ha-ha!). Prayer is primarily a way for us to commune with God, as you say, to relate to God, to talk to him, share our lives, happy things, concerns, daily activities, meditate on the Bible, and to take time to be quiet and think about what God has shared with us in the Bible. Asking for things is only actually a small part of what prayer is about. God intends prayer to be successful and rewarding, but if all you do is ask for stuff, you're going to be one confused and frustrated puppy, because you don't grasp what prayer is mostly all about. As you've said, prayer is really about a relationship with God rather than as a means of having God intercede on your behalf to make circumstances meet your desires. People get so frustrated that God doesn't do what they ask, ergo, he doesn't exist. It's just misunderstandings.
> If god has a plan and is all knowing, does it make a difference to the outcome if no one prays vs one person praying vs thousands of people praying? If something bad happens, can it ever be attributed to not enough people praying?
God has a plan for salvation, but humans aren't determined. There isn't a singular plan of how life is going to work out. God invites us to pray, and the Bible is pretty clear that God's actions are fluid depending on what people decide and what they pray. God invites us to pray with the idea that he is listening and changes can be made. Read Jeremiah 18.1-12 for an example.
> And when Paul says we should pray about everything, does he mean that we ought to have that mindful thought and reflective wisdom about everything we do, or does he mean that we ought to pray that the Packers get a field goal?
Yeah, the "Packers" kind of prayer is what lots of people seem to think, and it's just...so...WEIRD! Seriously, where do people get ideas like that? It is, as you say, more the former. God want us to pray. He invites us to ask, he wants us to feel free to ask, and he likes it when we ask. Prayer is not just having mindful thought and reflective wisdom, but it's actually communicating with God. Phil. 4.6 says to feel free to ask for anything, and 1 Thessalonians 5.17 says we should "pray continually." Obviously that doesn't mean kneeling by your bedside all day every day and doing nothing else. It means our minds should always be referencing God, and that have a habit of thinking about him all the time, communicating with him, having the whole attitude of heart that looks for his work in our lives, sees God's meaning in life, grateful to God for life's daily blessings, and thinking about God through the day, even while we're at the Packers game.
Last bumped by Anonymous on Tue Dec 23, 2014 8:34 pm.