GUEST ARTICLE
Seven “Laws” to Pray By Does the privilege of prayer
apply equally to every one? Are there limitations on objectives
for which one may pray? Are there conditions regulating
the effectiveness of prayer? Let us reflect upon these
challenging questions.
Prayer comes very close to
being a basic human instinct. When one is in a life-threatening
danger, the inclination is to pray. When the sorrows of
human existence come crashing in and the heart is crushed
under the burden, one can scarcely restrain himself from
calling out for help—even when no discernable person is
present.
When one is heavily burdened
under the weight of his own guilt, and recognizes he is
powerless to find refreshment, he can’t help crying for
help—if he has a fragment of conscience remaining. We innately
feel that there must be someone who hears us, understands
our plight, and is capable of rendering some response that
could alleviate the pain.
Christ
and Prayer
Surely the Bible
student cannot but be impressed with the importance of
prayer in the life
of Jesus Christ. No less than fourteen times in the Gospel
narratives mention is made of the prayers of our Lord,
with the greatest concentration in Luke’s narrative. This
has led some to characterize the third Gospel as the “Gospel
of prayer.” This mightily underscores the humanity of the
Savior.
If one follows the common logical
line of reasoning called a fortiori (from what is
less likely to be the case, to that which is more probable)
a compelling argument can be made for the urgency of prayer
in the Christian’s life. If Jesus, the perfect Son of God,
saw the need for prayer in his life, how much more
ought we?
Christ’s ministry, from the
day of his baptism to the hour of his death, was saturated
with prayer. The Lord prayed for himself (Matthew 26:39),
for his disciples as a group (John 17:6-19), for them personally
(Luke 22:31-32), for the church of the future (which includes
me! – John 17:20-26), and even for his enemies (Luke 23:34).
Little wonder, then, when he had finished a period of private
prayer one day, a disciple requested: “Lord, teach us how
to pray” (Luke 11:1). Alfred Plummer’s essay on “Prayer” would
pay rich dividends to the student who is able to avail
himself of the material (Hastings 1909, 390-393).
A rather common view seems
to be that one can pray any way he wishes—off the cuff,
so to speak—with no restrictions or guidelines of any sort
required. Not even that unnamed disciple was so naïve,
for he acknowledged that the proper procedures for prayer
must be taught. James, the half-brother of the Lord,
emphatically stated: “You ask, and receive not, because
you ask amiss” (James 4:3). “Amiss” has to do with that
which is wrong or wicked; in this case it involved an improper
motive.
This does not mean that there
is a rigid format that must be in place in every situation,
or else God will not hear. He is intimately familiar with
our awkward stumblings and lack of discipline. I am suggesting
there are certain guidelines that must be operative if
our prayers are to be as effective as we desire.
In this brief article I wish
to call attention to what I will classify as “Laws Regulating
Prayer.” This list may not be exhaustive; it is, however,
extremely important.
The
Law of Connection
Jesus taught
his disciples to pray, “Our father in heaven…” (Matthew
6:9). This phrase assumes a father/child relationship.
Prayer is designed
to be a mental or verbal contact between one who has entered
into a covenant relationship with God, accepting him as
a Father who has paternal authority, and who loves and
blesses his people as children.
According to the Lord’s teaching
elsewhere, that relationship is achieved by means of a
process that is expressed metaphorically as being “born
again” (John 3:3-5). This event takes place when one accesses
and understands the basic facts about Christ and his atoning
death, and responds in obedience to the sacred plan for
obtaining forgiveness of all past sins (Galatians 3:26-27).
Prayer is a special privilege
for those who are “in Christ” (John 15:7; Ephesians 1:3).
The Creator views the prayers of those who deliberately
turn away from his law as an abomination (Proverbs 28:9).
The ears of the Lord are open to the supplications of the
righteous, but his face is against them who pursue evil
(1 Peter 3:12).
This is not to suggest that
God might not respond to the sincere longings (reflected
in prayer sentiments) of those who are of honest hearts,
and are searching for the truth. The prayers of the noble
centurion, Cornelius, were “heard” (Acts 10:31; cf. v.
4), and Providence saw to it that he was exposed to the
gospel and was given opportunity to obey, thus receiving
pardon (11:14; cf. 10:48). But he was not permitted to
detour around Heaven’s plan of redemption.
Surely the mysterious “man
of Macedonia” in Paul’s vision (Acts 16:9) represented
the prayerful desires of sincere souls in that region who
sought to know Heaven’s saving truth (see 16:13-15,23-34).
These situations, however, do not nullify the need to become
a child of God through contrite obedience; they confirm
it.
The
Law of Communication
There are those
who see no real need to pray. After all, they contend,
God knows his
people’s hearts. Why is it necessary to verbalize them?
The simple answer is this: because he commands such.
Jesus himself declared that
the “Father knows what things you have need of, before
you ask” (Matthew 6:8). Nevertheless, he charged his disciples
to: “Ask” (Matthew 7:7). The inspired James affirmed: “[Y]ou
have not, because you ask not” (James 4:2).
Prayer is an act of faith;
if one cannot exert the effort to communicate with his
Creator, can he really complain when blessings are withheld?
Pity the blighted soul who is not on speaking terms with
the God of heaven and earth—or refuses to be!
The
Law of Confidence
How would one
feel if approached by a friend who said: “I really doubt this will do any
good—since you are known to be stingy—but could you help
me with a loan?” That is the disposition some of the Lord’s
people have with reference to prayer. They don’t believe
that petitioning God will accomplish much, but they will
go through the motion anyhow. James addresses this lack
of confidence in the goodness and ability of the Lord.
But if any of you lacks wisdom,
let him ask of God, who gives to all generously and reproaches
not; and it shall be given him. But let him ask in faith
[trust, confidence], nothing doubting: for he who doubts
is like the surge of the sea driven by the wind and tossed.
For let not that man think that he shall receive anything
from the Lord: a double-minded man, unstable in all his
ways (1:5-8; cf. Matthew 17:19-20).
We are realistic enough to
admit that we don’t always know what is best for us (Romans
8:26), but we can be absolutely confident that God will
(or will not) respond to our prayers—consistent with our
genuine spiritual needs (cf. 2 Corinthians 12:8-10).
The
Law of Continuity
Some appear to entertain the
notion that prayer is a tool to be utilized mostly when
an emergency arises. But God is not a sort of watchdog
entity, to be thrown a few crumbs from time to time, and
kept on call until such time as a crisis arises. And yet
not infrequently he is treated in precisely this way. At
other times, some have very little to say to the Lord.
Not a few neglect to offer their gratitude even at meal
times.
In his first epistle to the
Christians in Thessalonica, Paul charges: “Pray without
ceasing” (5:17). The verb “pray” is in the imperative mood
(a command) and present tense. The verbal tense, along
with the adverb rendered “without ceasing,” denote a steadfast
practice of prayer—not an uninterrupted, all-day-and-night
prayer, which of course would involve an impossibility
(cf. Romans 1:9; 1 Thessalonians 1:2-3).
One grammatical aspect of the
Greek present tense is to suggest intermittent activity,
and that surely is the point in this text. As one grammarian
observed:
The
idea of the present imperative is not that believers are
to pray every minute of every day, but that we should offer
prayers to God repeatedly. We should make it our habit
to be in the presence of God (Wallace 1996, 521).
In the parable of “the friend
at midnight” (Luke 11:5-10), Christ illustrated the concept
of persistency in prayer by telling of a man whose neighbor
came calling late one night, asking for food with which
to feed an unexpected guest. But the man, having already
retired, did not wish to be bothered, hence, refused the
request initially. But the friend would not be deterred;
he kept knocking. Accordingly, as a result of the “importunity” (v.
8, ASV) of the late-night visitor, the host arose and provided
him with what he needed. The term “importunity” suggests
the idea of asking to the point of shameless continuity.
With three verbs, each in the
present tense, Jesus emphasizes: keep on asking,
seeking, and knocking, and you will receive. The point
was this: if a grouchy neighbor can be goaded into action,
surely a loving Father will delight in responding when
his dear children persist in prayer.
Compare a similar parable in
Luke 18:1ff, where the lesson is stated specifically: God’s
children “ought always to pray, and not to lose heart” (v.
1). The Christian must keep his “praying muscle” exercised! “To
neglect this privilege is one of the greatest of sins” (Jones
1961, 58).
The
Law of Consecration
In a brief allegory, in which
the Lord sought to encourage his disciples to maintain
a close relationship with him so as not to become fruitless,
and thus destroyed, the Savior said:
If
you abide in me, and my words abide in you, ask whatever
you will, and it shall be done unto you (John 15:7).
In this passage the effectiveness
of prayer is made dependent upon two conditions. First,
the petitioner must be “in” Christ, and remain steadfastly
in that relationship. Second, the Lord’s teaching must
be resident in the heart of that person. The power of prayer
is promised neither to the drifter, nor the superficial
disciple (cf. 1 John 3:22).
Similarly, James wrote that
the “supplication of a righteous” person “avails much in
its working” (5:16). What does that say regarding the petition
of the worldly individual?
Again, from the pen of Peter
(quoting from the Old Testament):
[T]he
eyes of the Lord are upon the righteous, and his ears unto
their supplication; but the face of the Lord is against
them who do evil (1 Peter 3:12).
An old saying, “A dancing foot
and a praying knee do not grow on the same leg,” contains
a ton of truth.
When Paul spoke of “lifting
up holy hands” in prayer (1 Timothy 2:8), he was stressing
a godly life as an enabling support of prayer. As we have
indicated elsewhere (Jackson 2007, 63):
The “lifting up holy hands” is
more than likely an expression borrowed from the Old Testament
because of a common (though not fixed) ancient practice
of raising hands when praying (see 1 Kings 8:22; Psalm
28:2; Isaiah 1:15). There is, however, literally speaking,
no such thing as “holy hands.” This is a figure of speech
known as the synecdoche (the part put for the whole); “holy
hands” stand for a holy person (cf. the body parts mentioned
in Proverbs 6:16-19).
The
Law of Compatibility
Many seem to
entertain the notion that they are permitted to pray
for anything and
everything. Supposedly, there are no limitations. The apostle
John emphatically instructs otherwise: “If we ask anything
according to his will, he hears us” (1 John 5:14).
As if to punctuate the point
further, in the following narrative the apostle observes
how useless it is to pray for those who sin the sin that
is “unto death” (v. 16)—which apparently is a sin (any
sin) pursued with such absolute determination that there
is utterly no inclination to change. To petition God for
forgiveness on behalf of such a one, while ignoring the
person’s rebellious spirit, is futile. . . .
One may not expect an answer
to prayer if he prays to or through Mary, or one of the
other ancient holy people of God. One may not pray for
the salvation of those who have died lost. One may not
petition the Lord to circumvent his plan of redemption
in the interest of some family member who repudiates Christ
as Savior, or despises the gospel system. Our prayers must
be compatible with the teaching of Scripture.
The
Law of Compassion
Our hearts throb
with the challenge of emulating our Lord who, while suspended
on the cross,
prayed: “Father, forgive them, for they know not what they
do” (Luke 23:34). It defies the ability of any writer to
describe the breathtaking magnificence of this prayer of
only eight words in the Greek text.
The prayer reveals an absolute
divesting of all self-interest on the part of the Savior.
Tortured in the most agonizing manner possible, ridiculed
by a blood-thirsty mob, forsaken by most of his apostles,
and separated even from his loving Father (by God’s permissive
will in implementing the plan of a perfect sacrifice for
salvation—Matthew 27:46), at this crisis moment he thought
only of others. He longed desperately for the redemption
of the vilest of creatures. Greater love has never been
demonstrated.
The Lord’s request was not
that the hateful murderers be pardoned unconditionally.
Rather, this prayer besought a last chance for the guilty
people. And the Father, who is One with the Son in long-suffering
and love, heard the prayer of the Savior. After the people
of Jerusalem had tempted heaven by casting out Jesus in
this manner and causing Him to be crucified, the Father,
who is also the God of history, gave them for another forty
long years the opportunity, through the mighty signs of
Pentecost and the ministry of the apostles and other believers,
to repent in time and to be saved. Several thousands made
use of this period of grace and were saved, but the majority
were in their folly precipitated into the abyss (Geldenhuys
1956, 609).
The manner in which they were
pardoned is simply set forth in Acts 2:37-42. Professor
Robert Stein has insightfully commented that “Jesus’ prayer
clearly makes any attempt to justify anti-Semitism on the
basis of the crucifixion impossible” (1992, 589).
How long has it been since
you prayed “for them that persecute you” (Matthew 5:44)?
I recently reflected upon this matter and concluded that
my prayers in this regard were long overdue. I proceeded
immediately to remedy that neglect.
Conclusion
It has not been
our intention to approach the thrilling theme of prayer
in a legalistic
fashion—as some might be prone to charge. But rather to
simply call attention to the fact that Scripture itself
emphasizes divinely directed guidelines to effective prayer.
Surely every conscientious Bible student wishes to respect
the will of God in this matter, as in all others.
Sources/Footnotes
Geldenhuys, Norval. 1956. Commentary
on the Gospel of Luke. Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans.
Hastings, James, ed. 1909. A
Dictionary of Christ and the Gospels. Vol. 2. Edinburgh,
Scotland: T.&T. Clark.
Jackson, Wayne. 2007. Before
I Die – Paul’s Letters to Timothy and Titus. Stockton,
CA: Courier Publications.
Jones, Russell Bradley. 1961. Proclaiming
the New Testament – The Epistles of James, John, and
Jude. Grand Rapids, MI: Baker.
Stein, Robert. 1992. Luke – The
New American Commentary. Nashville, TN: Broadman.
Wallace, Daniel. 1996. Greek
Grammar Beyond the Basics. Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan.
--Wayne Jackson
© 2007 by Christian Courier
Publications. All rights reserved.
http://www.christiancourier.com/articles/print/seven_laws_to_pray_by
|