Friday 5 February 2010

Why Does God Answer Other People's Prayers and Not Mine?!

Here's something I started to learn in my last big gap between jobs. It has since been reinforced, but I think it will be many years before it finally sinks in.

I can't remember how many months I had been without paid work. It could have been three or four. I was starting to feel very anxious every day. I knew it was not right to worry so much, but the daily decisions over what to do to market myself and generate leads were starting to overwhelm me. I was worrying that the money was going to run out in a few months, and then we would have to sell the car, then sell the house, etc.

I was praying specifically at the time for myself, that the Lord would help me to trust completely in Him, that He would enable me not to worry. I prayed that I would just be able to focus on each day's requirements, and that my mind would be settled regarding the future. But the Lord denied me that peace.

In our church we have small groups, called housegroups, where we meet midweek every other week to study the Bible, pray and encourage each other. For some reason normally, even in these groups, I have found people are reticent to share things for prayer about themselves that are close to their heart. They deflect, asking for prayer for their neighbour's son who fell off his bike, or their work colleague whose wife had an affair. Sometimes these concerns are genuine, and it's certainly right to pray for them. But I know, confessing for myself, that sometimes these prayer requests are designed to deflect away from asking for anything for ourselves. I don't know why! Perhaps we don't like people getting to know us too deeply. Perhaps we like people to thing our lives are a bit more together than they really are.

But for a while the housegroup I attend we managed to buck that trend. I won't say that we all completely opened up to each other, but there has certainly been more sharing of more personal and sensitive stuff. During this time, I shared my anxiety about the job situation. I said that most of the time I cover up the fact that I am worried. I am blessed with the ability to appear calm even when I am pretty stressed! And the group prayed for me, amongst others, in the meeting, and continued to pray specifically in their own personal prayer times.

A couple of weeks later I remarked to someone that I had been blessed with a remarkable peace about my work and financial situation. Nothing else had changed. I was still out of work. There were no more prospects. I was still facing financial ruin in a matter of months. But I had been able to put the worries of the future out of mind and focus on the day's requirements each day.

And I traced this peace back to the specific prayers of the members of my housegroup. Praise God for answered prayer!... BUT…

… I had been praying the same for myself for weeks before. Why did God answer the prayers of other people for me positively, but not my own?

Some Christians would mistakenly assume that it has something to do with my faith. Perhaps I didn't pray with faith, but my friends did. I have always marveled that people jump to that conclusion so quickly. It is really quite uncharitable, and not warranted.

The conclusion I came to was that God often is pleased to use the prayers of others for us, rather than our own prayers, for several reasons. Here are two:

First, so that we don't start to think it is our prayers that are effective in getting God's action. If God answered all our own prayers for ourselves, we might start to use prayer as a kind of magic spell, under our control and for our own use. We have to realize that when we pray we are asking the Almighty God to act on our behalf. It is His power that is effective in answered prayer. Another way of putting it is to say that we should not talk about the "power of prayer", but the power of God in graciously acting in response to prayer. Prayer is not powerful. God is. (In fact, isn't it the very weakness of prayer that displays the power of God when He answers!)

Second, so that we are encouraged to bond as a community and care for each other. As we share our burdens, God uses the church community to bring us grace and help. God has arranged things so that, as Christians, we are called into a new community - the church. We relate to God directly, through Christ, as individuals, yes. But God's will is that those individuals knit together to form a new community.

The apostle Peter said, "But you are a chosen people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people belonging to God… Once you were not a people, but now you are the people of God." (1 Peter 1:9-10)

Paul says, "you are no longer foreigners and aliens, but fellow-citizens with God's people and members of God's household." (Eph 2:19) He refers to Christians as a "building [that] is joined together and rises to become a holy temple in the Lord." (Eph 2:21) In Ephesians 4, he speaks of the church as the "body of Christ" (v12), and explains how this works, "speaking the truth in love, we will in all things grow up into him who is the head, that is, Christ. From him the whole body, joined and held together by every supporting ligament, grows and builds itself up in love, as each part does its work." (vv15-16).

God works through the church, not normally through individual Christians. We need each other.

I have to say that I have never neglected going to church for any significant period of my life, although there have been times when I have contributed more in terms of service and ministry. But this experience made me realize that I had never really appreciated how much I need the church. Sometimes we Christians spend much of our time complaining about our local church, looking down on our brothers and sisters, criticizing the pastor, getting fed up with the musicians, and so on. But we need each other. God has ordained it so that we cannot grow without each other.

There is much more that can be said on this. However, I will simply refer you to a chapter in Tim Chester's book, You Can Change, that I found helpful on these points about the place of the church in our growth as Christians.

From learning these things, I have made a couple of practical changes that I thought I would share with you. First, I now try to make sure that I pray for others more than I pray for myself. And I tend to ask people more what I can pray for them. Second, I see writing these blog posts as more important, because in them I can, with God's blessing, help to build up the church. So I will continue blogging my reflections as much as I can, with the prayer that each post will do just that, for the glory and praise of our great God and Saviour, Jesus Christ.

3 comments:

  1. I am still stumped on this whole answered prayer thing. I am a genuine and honest person, who helps others unselfishly. I recently me a person who had prayers similar to mine, but at the same time this person turn out to be a deceiver, not completely honest and manipulative, but their prayers were answered. How is that? Not only I have asked GOD to take away any desires related to my prayer so I can be over and done with, but he hasn't. If it is not for me then he should take it away correct? Why allow someone to suffer? I'm tired and my faith is running low. Can you shed some light on this?

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    1. I know your need is from 10/29/13. IF things have not changed for you, please consider my message. Sometimes God is answering your prayers by not answering it the way you want it. HE knows best about what we need. He knows the outcome of your desires that are many times less than what you really needed or wanted. If you have food, clothing, a bed, family and friends who love you and who you love, you are truly blessed. When you pray, ask God that your prayer be fulfilled at HIS will, not yours alone.

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  2. Thank you for taking the time to comment.

    I do not know why God answers some prayers and not others. But we have to trust that He has good reasons.

    Sometimes the evil get what they wish for in order to bring judgment on them (see Numbers 11, for example, where the Israelites get all the meat they could wish for after complaining against God, and it makes them vomit).

    On the other hand, perhaps it's worth pointing out that when we come before God we are ALL sinners, and praying in Jesus' name is acknowledging that we can only speak with God because Christ died and took away our sins. So perhaps the person you met was a deceiver, but you are also a sinner. The point is not that you are sinner, but that if we are cleansed with the blood of Christ then God does not look upon our sin when we pray. He hears and forgives.

    Or perhaps you should look at what you are praying for. James said (James 4:3), 'You ask and do not receive, because you ask wrongly, to spend it on your passions.' Are you asking God for things for yourself, for your own pleasure. I read Jesus' words this morning, 'Whoever loves his life loses it, and whoever hates his life in this world will keep it for eternal life.' (John 12:25)

    God's perspective on our lives and what is good for us is often so different to ours. I have suffered cancer and unemployment, and yet I can acknowledge that God had this all planned for my good (Romans 8:28).

    Why allow someone to suffer? Why are your prayers not answered? Why do you have desires for things God refuses to give you? Why did I suffer with cancer twice over inside 3 years? Why was I allowed to be unemployed and plunge my family into debt? I don't know. But God does. And if we are in Christ it is for our good.

    There is much more on this blog about all that. I've reflected on it a lot. So please stick around and read other posts. 'Reflections on Hardship 6.2' was a popular one.

    My final thought is to remember that in Christ God is your Father. 'Which one of you, if his son asks him for bread, will give him a stone? Or if he asks for a fish, will give him a serpent? If you then, who are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father who is in heaven give good things to those who ask him!' (Matthew 7:9-11)

    Sometimes fathers have to do things for their children that are for their good, but they hurt... anything from leaving them at school with a bunch of strangers on their first day to taking them to hospital to have a painful operation. Similarly sometimes fathers have to refuse the requests of children, even good and proper requests, for a time, to encourage patience or to protect them from being spoilt or for any number of other reasons. But the child trusts that dad knows best.

    And that trust is the biggest thing that we are called to. Dad knows best. 'Truly I tell you, anyone who will not receive the kingdom of God like a little child will never enter it.' (Mark 10:15)

    I hope that helps somehow.

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