The Foolishness of Prayer - article by Joel Hempel Is prayer ever foolish? The short answer is Yes! If we pray to some other god than the Triune God, yes! If we pray for something that we know is against God’s will, yes! If we pray for something about which God has made us responsible, but we do nothing and leave it all up to God, yes! For example, if I pray for God to help me cut back on sugar consumption, and then I go out and buy Oberweis Banana-licious Chocolate Chunk ice cream because I need the potassium, it’s a foolhardy prayer. When and how do we know with certainty that our prayers are not foolish? Here is how the Apostle John answers that question: And this is the confidence that we have toward him, that if we ask anything according to his will he hears us. And if we know that he hears us in whatever we ask, we know that we have the requests that we have asked of him.1 This Sunday, we begin corporately Discerning God’s Will for GLC. How is it that we can be so confident entering this time of prayer for our congregation’s future? Because what we are seeking we know is God’s will. We are seeking to GROW – maybe numerically, but certainly spiritually, which God desires for his church.2 We are seeking to be FAITHFUL to our calling as a congregation.3 We are seeking to GIVE GOD GLORY for however he blesses us.4 The specific results of our prayer have yet to be revealed. But we can know with absolute certainty that what we are seeking will be blessed. For our prayers are not to satisfy foolish fantasies or selfish desires. We seek God’s wisdom and Christ’s leadership into a future he has prepared for us. And as we pray, we work! A friend recently reminded me of a famous quote attributed to Martin Luther: “Pray as if everything depends on God, and then act as if everything depends on you.” What concurrent “activity” are we to be about as we pray? Bible study! We have selected specific Bible passages to study that relate to our life together as a church. There may be other passages God brings to your mind that would also be relevant for us to pray over. But the ones selected will be our starting point. As we read and reflect on God’s Word, ask yourself: What captures your attention? What words in the text demand your prayerful reflection? What in God’s Word convicts you like never before? How does God’s revelation apply to Glendale Lutheran Church? To God be the glory! 1. 1 John 5:14-15 2. Ephesians 4:10-16; Acts 6:1-3, 7. 3. Acts 2:42-47; Romans 12:9-10; 1 Thessalonians 5:11. 4. 1 Corinthians 10:31; Psalm 96:7-9; Matthew 5:16; 2 Peter 3:18. |