DOES GOD ANSWER
PRAYER?
By Grant Phillips
Why is it that God seems to
answer some people’s
prayers, but not
others? A close
cousin to this
question is another
which asks, “why
me?” These two
questions are
closely related, but
yet require two
different comments.
Therefore, I will
address one at a
time.
WHY IS IT THAT GOD SEEMS TO
ANSWER SOME PEOPLE’S
PRAYERS, BUT NOT
OTHERS?
This question needs to be
brought down to a
more personal level.
So let us ask
instead, “Why won’t
you answer my
prayers God?”
“Ask,
and it shall be
given you; seek, and
ye shall find;
knock, and it shall
be opened unto you:”
(Matthew 7:7)
“Again I say unto
you, That if two of
you shall agree on
earth as touching
any thing that they
shall
ask, it shall be done for them
of my Father which
is in heaven.” (Matthew 18:19)
“And all things,
whatsoever ye shall
ask in prayer,
believing, ye shall
receive.” (Matthew 21:22)
“And I say unto you,
Ask, and it shall be given you;
seek, and ye shall
find; knock, and it
shall be opened unto
you.”
(Luke 11:9)
“But I know, that
even now, whatsoever
thou wilt
ask of
God, God will give
it thee.”
(John 11:22)
The five verses above seem to
state very clearly
that if we ask
anything of God, He
will provide it. So
how can it be that
our prayers
sometimes seem to go
unanswered? Let us
look at the next
three verses to see
if we can get any
closer to the
answer.
“And whatsoever ye
shall
ask in my name, that
will I do, that the
Father may be
glorified in the
Son. If ye shall
ask any thing in my name, I will do it.”
(John 14:13-14)
“And in that day ye
shall
ask me nothing.
Verily, verily, I
say unto you,
Whatsoever ye shall
ask
the Father in my
name, he will give
it you.” (John 16:23)
“Hitherto have ye
asked nothing in my
name:
ask, and ye shall
receive, that your
joy may be full.” (John 16:24)
The keys in these three verses
are
“ask in my name”,
“that the Father may be glorified in the Son”, and
“that your joy may
be full”. Our
prayers should be
parallel to God the
Father’s desire, and
He be glorified in
the Son. Our prayers
are often physically
directed instead of
spiritually
directed. That isn’t
to say that God is
not interested in
our physical needs,
but our needs must
coincide with His
will. God says in
Isaiah 55:8-9,
“For my thoughts are not
your
thoughts, neither are
your
ways my ways, saith
the LORD.
For as the
heavens are higher
than the earth, so
are my ways higher
than
your ways, and my
thoughts
than
your thoughts.” I went through an
intense period in my
own life where I
wrestled with this.
For several years, I
could not understand
why nothing seemed
to go the way I
thought it should.
Why did He seem to
linger in giving me
the answers I
wanted? I “claimed” these verses, but nothing happened. He
then began drawing
me to the following
verse:
“I know both how
to
be
abased, and I know
how
to
abound: every where
and in all things I
am instructed both
to
be full and to
be
hungry, both
to abound and
to suffer need.” (Philippians 4:12) I slowly realized He
wanted me to trust
Him in every
situation, and
provide for me the
answers I
needed. I
say with all honesty
that the latter
years of my life
have been the best.
My joy is full.
I learned that life isn’t all
about me and my
wants. It is about
His Son, Jesus
Christ. When I got
my eyes off me and
on Jesus, then He
was ready to show me
what an awesome God
He is. Does that
mean that all my
problems are solved?
No, but many have
been. Does that mean
I’ll not have any
more problems? Of
course not.
Everyone has
problems. I do, and
I will have more to
come, but the
difference is my
attitude. If you
would pause your
reading of this
article at this
point and read 2
Corinthians 12:7-10,
I believe the
Apostle Paul
explains it much
better than I.
Let’s take a look at four more
verses.
“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)
“If any of you lack
wisdom, let him
ask of God, that
giveth to all men
liberally, and
upbraideth not; and
it shall be given
him. But let him
ask in faith, nothing wavering. For he
that wavereth is
like a wave of the
sea driven with the
wind and tossed.”
(James 1:5-6)
“Ye
ask, and receive not, because ye
ask amiss, that ye may consume it upon your lusts.”
(James 4:3)
“And whatsoever we
ask, we receive of him, because
we keep his
commandments, and do
those things that
are pleasing in his
sight.”
(1 John 3:22)
I see nine points in these
verses that we need
to consider before
we can expect an
answer to our
prayers, as
Christians.
1.
We must abide in Him.
2.
His Words must abide in us.
3.
We need to ask for wisdom.
4.
We must exercise the faith He has given us.
5.
We must not waver.
6.
We must not ask amiss.
7.
We must not ask on behalf of our own lusts.
8.
We must keep His commandments.
9.
We must do those things that are pleasing in His
sight.
Couple these points with what
I have already said,
and then let us look
at one last verse.
In Luke 22:42 Jesus
is just hours from
the cross. He is
praying to the
Father, just as you
and I would do. This
is what He says,
“…Father, if thou be
willing, remove this
cup from me:
nevertheless not
my
will, but thine, be done.” (Luke 22:42)
Jesus was 100% man and 100%
God. As the second
Adam, He was
perfection in the
flesh. The cross
that was looming
ahead had to be
excruciatingly
frightening, but
even more
frightening and
repulsive was having
your and my sins
laid upon His
absolute holiness.
If there were any
way to avoid this
hellish trauma, He
would have loved to
do so, and He could
have if He chose.
But what did He say
at the end of the
verse … “not
my will, but thine,
be done”?
Since we are not God, as Jesus
is, we do not have
the understanding
that He does. He has
given us the answer
though in His own
prayer to the Father
…
“not my will, but
thine, be done”.
God has His own
reasons for allowing
some things to
happen and often not
changing the course
of those events. We
just need to trust
Him. That may sound
too simple, but it
makes all the sense
in the world when
you understand it.
The bottom line is …
go to Him as a child
to a loving parent
and just trust Him
to do what is best
for you, and accept
His decision. You
will not be
disappointed.
WHY ME?
It is sad when tragedy strikes
anyone, whether
small or great. The
question, “why me?”
has probably been
asked thousands upon
thousands of times
over the centuries.
How many times have
each of us heard
someone ask that
mournful question?
Maybe we too have
asked, “why me?” I
could bring to
remembrance the line
about the man who
felt sorry for
himself because he
had no shoes until
he met a man who had
no feet. Would that
make us feel any
better? Perhaps it
would, but maybe
not. I suppose it
might depend on the
person and the
problem. We all can
look around us and
see those who
suffer, and there
are many ways to
suffer. We can
understand that
there is always
someone worse off
than we are, but
nothing sharpens the
painful awareness of
suffering like
having it come to us
personally. If a
dear friend is told
by their doctor that
they have terminal
cancer, we agonize
for them and pray
with them, but what
if the same message
comes to us? Would
not the reality of
it be even sharper
in our minds? Why
me?
Jesus said that every man is
appointed to die and
after that the
judgment. God’s Word
has made it clear
that sin has made a
perfect world
imperfect. From the
moment we are born,
we begin to die.
Everything around us
is in the same boat;
trees, plants,
animals, buildings,
machinery, etcetera.
Many things happen in our
lives due to natural
causes. They are
just part of living.
Sometimes they
happen because of
decisions we have
made. God may allow
suffering to help us
draw closer to Him.
He may use suffering
to wake us up from
our lethargy.
Suffering may even
be used for
discipline.
The real problem though is
sin, the sin
introduced to us by
Satan’s temptation
of Adam and Eve in
the Garden of Eden,
and their succumbing
to it. Due to our
disobedience of God
in the Garden of
Eden we all now
suffer.
It is hard for our minds to
understand the
suffering that God
endured in His
redeeming act to
bring mankind back
to Him. The Father
suffered mightily
while watching His
Son pay the price of
our sins upon the
cross and having to
turn His back upon
Him. The Son
suffered in ways we
cannot imagine when
carrying out His
Father’s plan of
redemption. The Holy
Spirit suffered as
He watched the Son
carry out the
redemption plan,
preparing the way
for the Holy
Spirit’s work in the
Church. Having said
this, we must
understand and
believe that God did
not create this
mess, and He does
not cause the
problems in our
lives. Our problems
come upon us due to
our sinful state
(original sin).
There is something else we
must consider. If I
am suffering,
perhaps for no fault
of my own, am I
better than everyone
else? Can I continue
to say, “why me”,
when I am no better
than the next
person? Do not take
what I am going to
say next as
flippant, but maybe
I should say, “why
not”. Would I rather
wish my calamity off
on someone else? I
don’t like suffering
any more than the
next person, but God
can teach us, as He
did the Apostle
Paul,
“I know both
how
to
be abased, and I know
how
to
abound: every where
and in all things I
am instructed both
to
be full and to
be
hungry, both
to abound and
to suffer need.” (Philippians 4:12)
One very important verse for a
child of God to
remember is Romans
8:28 which says,
“And we know that
all things work
together for good to
them that love God,
to them who are the
called according to
his purpose.
When trials and
tribulations come
upon us, we should
actually take it as
an opportunity to
allow God to work
through us in
bringing praise to
the name of Jesus
Christ.
There is a third question that
comes to mind, and
that is found in
Psalms 73, along
with the answer. The
question is, “why do
the wicked prosper”?
Take a moment and
read what the
psalmist had to say
about this.
These three questions, (1) Why
won’t God answer my
prayers?, (2) Why
did this happen to
me?, and (3) Why
does it seem that
the wicked prosper”,
are all legitimate
questions. God is
not going to be mad
at you for asking
them, and there
isn’t always going
to be a pat answer,
at least in our
minds. The key
verses again are,
Luke 22:42,
Philippians 4:12 and
Psalms 73. Get well
acquainted with the
passages. I really
believe they will
bring peace to your
soul.
Grant Phillips
grantphillips@windstream.net
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