Paul
N. F. (15 May 2006)
"DOES GOD ALWAYS ANSWER PRAYER?"
Yes, God would always answer prayer,
if that person would have TRUE OBEDIENCE in his or her heart and do
HIS will. This article is repeated for --- I do believe there will
be a few more that will make an honest effort
to do the will of God. HE knows that though we may not come up to the
perfect mark, HE will recognize our
true and sincere effort to obey HIM. HE is loving, kind, understanding
and knows exactly what is in our hearts.
Tozer explains this all in an excellent manner. The information
is vital and should be read over.
DOES GOD ALWAYS ANSWER PRAYER?
By A. W. Tozer
Contrary to popular opinion,
the cultivation of a psychology of uncritical belief is not an unqualified good,
and if carried too far it may be a positive evil. The whole world has
been booby-trapped by the devil, and the deadliest trap of all is the religious
one. Error never looks so innocent as when it is found in the sanctuary.
One field where harmless
looking, but deadly traps appear in great profusion is the field of prayer.
There are more sweet notions about prayer than could be contained in a large
book, all of them wrong and all highly injurious to the souls of men.
I think of one such false
notion that is found often in pleasant places consorting smilingly with other
notions of unquestionable orthodoxy. It is that God always answers prayer.
This error appears among
the saints as a kind of all purpose philosophic therapy to prevent any disappointed
Christian from suffering too great a shock when it becomes evident to him that
his prayer expectations are not being fulfilled. It is explained that
God always answers prayer, either by saying Yes or by saying No, or by substituting
something else for the desired favor.
Now, it would be hard
to invent a neater trick than this to save face for the petitioner whose requests
have been rejected for non obedience. Thus when a prayer is not answered,
he has but to smile brightly and explain, "God said No." It
is all so very comfortable. His wobbly faith is saved from confusion and
his conscience is permitted to lie undisturbed. But I wonder if it is
honest.
To receive an answer
to prayer as the Bible uses the term and as Christians have understood it historically,
two elements must be. present: (1) A clear-cut request made to God for
a specific favor. (2) A clear-cut granting of that favor by God in answer
to the request. There must be no semantic twisting, no changing of labels,
no altering of the map during the journey to help the embarrassed tourist to
find himself.
When we go to God with
a request that He modify the existing situation for us, that is, that He answer
prayer, there are two conditions that we must meet: (1) We must pray in
the will of God and (2) we must be on what old-fashioned Christians often
call "praying ground"; that is. we must be living lives pleasing to
God. It is futile to beg God to act contrary to His revealed purposes.
To pray with confidence the petitioner must be certain that his request falls
within the broad will of God for His people.
The second condition
is also vitally important. God has not placed Himself under obligation
to honor the requests of worldly, carnal or disobedient Christians. He
hears and answers the prayers only of those who walk in His way. "Beloved,
if our heart condemn us not, then have we confidence toward God. And whatsoever
we ask, we receive of him, because we keep his commandments, and do those things
that are pleasing in his sight (1John 3:21, 22)
"If
ye abide in me, and my words abide in you, ye shall ask what ye will, and it
shall be done unto you" (John 15:7)
God wants us to pray
and He wants to answer our prayers, but He makes our use of prayer as a privilege
to commingle with His use of prayer as a discipline. To receive answers to prayer
we must meet God's terms. If we neglect His commandments our petitions will
not be honored. He will alter situations only at the request of obedient
and humble souls.
The God-always-answers-prayer
sophistry leaves the praying man without discipline. By the exercise of
this bit of smooth casuistry, he ignores the necessity to live soberly, righteously
and godly in this present world, and actually takes God's flat refusal to answer
his prayer as the very answer itself. Of course such a man will not grow
in holiness; he will never learn how to wrestle and wait; he will never know
correction; he will not hear the voice of God calling him forward; he will never
arrive at the place where he is morally and spiritually fit to have his prayers
answered. His wrong philosophy has ruined him.
That is why I turn aside
to expose the bit of bad theology upon which his bad philosophy is founded.
The man who accepts it never knows where he stands; he never knows whether or
not he has true faith, for if his request is not granted, he avoids the implication
by the simple dodge of declaring that God switched the whole thing around and
gave him something else. He will not allow himself to shoot at a target,
so he cannot tell how good or how bad a marksman he is.
Of certain persons James
says plainly: "Ye ask, and receive not, because ye ask amiss, that ye
may consume it upon your lusts." From that brief sentence we may learn
that God refuses some requests because they who make them are not morally worthy
to receive the answer. But this means nothing to the one who has been
seduced into the belief that God always answers prayer. When such a man
asks and receives not he passes his hand over the hat and comes up with the
answer in some other form. One thing he clings to with great tenacity:
God never turns anyone away, but invariably grants every request.
The truth is that God always answers the prayer that accords with His will as
revealed in the Scriptures, provided the one who prays is obedient and trustful.
Further than this we dare not go.
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Yours in Christ,
Paul N. F.