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by Dr Bill Bright
“Ask and you will be given what you ask for. Seek, and you will find. Knock and the door will be opened. For everyone who asks, receives. Anyone who seeks, finds. If only you will knock, the door will be open” (Matthew 7:7,8).
We were conducting a Bible study on the subject of prayer when Amy, a professing Christian most of her life, said, “God never answers my prayers. In fact, I cannot recall a single prayer of mine that God has answered specifically.”
Several others in the group chimed in and said, “Neither can I.” So we turned to this passage and discussed it together. Would God lie to us? Is His Word trustworthy? Or is prayer an exercise in futility? Are we simply talking to ourselves and each other, or is there a God who hears and answers? If so, why have these not had their prayers answered?
First of all, we had to review the qualifications for prayer. Jesus said, “If you abide in Me and My Word abides in you, ask what you will and it shall be done unto you.” The Scripture also says, “If I regard iniquity in my heart, the Lord will not hear me.” So if we expect to have our prayers answered, Jesus Christ must be the Lord of our lives. There must be no unconfessed sin in our lives and we must be filled with the Holy Spirit.
Further, 1 John 5:14,15 reminds us: “If we ask anything according to God’s will, He hears us and answers,” so we must be sure that we are praying according to the Word of God. As we pray, the Spirit of God impresses upon us certain things for which to pray specifically, such as the salvation of a friend, the healing of a body or a financial need. If the prayer is offered with a pure motive and according to God’s will, we can expect an answer to it.
And we cannot pray casually. We must enter into an expectant spirit of prayer, knowing that, when we meet His conditions, God will hear and answer us.
Within a matter of weeks everyone in that Bible study, especially Amy, was inspired by the exciting challenge of prayer. God had truly heard, and again and again, they were able to point to specific answers.
Bible Reading: Luke 11:5 -13
Today’s action point: I shall review my spiritual walk to be sure I am meeting God’s conditions: (1) Christ is Lord of my life. (2) I am filled with the Holy Spirit. (3) There is no unconfessed sin in my life. (4) I am praying according to God’s Word. And (5) I am praying specifically. As a result, I expect my prayers to be answered because God promises they will be.
About the Author
This devotional was written by Dr. Bill Bright. Read more about him here: http://www.talk.thelife.com/authors/dr-bill-bright/
Related Reading
Walk in the Spirit: http://thelife.com/study/investigatespirituality.html?section=walkin_spirit&ft=BSG-OS
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I find this a challenging area- there is all too often little thought given as to why our prayers individually and corporately are not answered. Frankly “God always answers prayer, it’s just that sometimes He says no” is an all too common but inadequate response.
Often prayer is unanswered because we have failed to work out what to pray for, and therefore unanswered prayer can be useful in training us in how we determine God’s will. If we fail to tackle the subject or shy away from challenging others who claim some sort of insight into what God’s will is (and so encourage us to pray in a particular direction), there is no change in the status quo, and no learning from what has happened so that we (and they) don’t repeat our mistakes in the future.
If we have a sense that God may be leading us to pray for something in particular, we should pray. If that prayer is unanswered we should be open to the possibility that we got it wrong and try to learn from the experience.