One of the most
wonderful mysteries in the universe is that prayer changes things. God has so
arranged his world that we have the ability to make significant choices, some
good and some bad, which affect the course of history. One means God has given
us to do this is prayer—asking him to act. Because he is all-wise and
all-powerful, knowing "the end from the beginning" (Isa. 46:10), he's able to weave our requests
into his eternally good purposes.
At this point our
thinking can seriously go astray in one of two directions.
The first is to say,
"If God is all-powerful, all-knowing, and all-good, and if everything is
preordained, then he's going to do whatever he wills anyway and thus our
prayers can't have any significant effect. Sure, they may help us
psychologically, such that talking to God helps us get things off our chest
that may help us feel better, but prayers don't count for much in the grand
scheme of things. So why bother?"
Here there's an
overemphasis on God's absolute sovereignty.
The second route,
though different from the first, ends up in the same place by denying the
usefulness of prayer. Here's the objection: "If human beings are free to
make up their own minds, then God can't be absolutely sovereign; he must take
risks such that human decisions can thwart his purposes, so there are severe
limits to what we can ask for without undermining human freedom. If, for
example, you have been praying for your sister to become a Christian, and God
has done everything he can to bring her to himself, but somehow she won't
surrender to him, why bother asking God to save her? It's out of order to
pressure God to do more than he can do. So just give up on prayer."
Here the emphasis
rests on a certain understanding of human freedom ("libertarian").
Strange Logic
Taken at face value,
both objections appear to have some force, but only because they employ a
strange "logic" that goes beyond Scripture. It's always foolish and
dangerous to play up one aspect of what the Bible teaches at the expense of
something else it equally affirms. The God of the Bible is presented as the one
who rules over all; he's all-knowing, all-wise, and all-powerful. He isn't
surprised by anything we may think or do. On the other hand, Scripture also
presents human beings as responsible moral agents who make significant choices,
doing what we desire to do ("freedom of inclination"). God has chosen
to relate to us personally without compromising the fact that he is God.
That said, Scripture
describes the sovereign God as "repenting" or "relenting"
in response to human prayer. Take Exodus 32, for instance. At this point in
salvation history, the people of Israel have broken the Ten
Commandments by building and worshiping a golden calf. Incensed, God vows to
wipe them out. "I have seen these people, and they are a stiff-necked
people," he says to Moses. "Now leave me alone so that my anger may
burn against them that I may destroy them. Then I will make you into a great
nation" (vv. 9-10). But Moses steps into the breach and reminds God of his
promises, arguing his reputation will be brought into disrepute for saying one
thing—"I will save the people"—and doing another—destroying them,
appearing to renege on his promises to Abraham. Moses appeals to God as the
sovereign king to show mercy (vv. 11-13). And that's exactly what happens:
"Then the LORD relented and did not bring on his people the disaster he
had threatened" (v. 14).
Certain Means
The theoretical
problem raised by a belief in the efficacy of prayer to a sovereign God is
acknowledged by C. S. Lewis, who helpfully places it within the wider context
of God using certain means to achieve desired ends:
Can we believe that
God really modifies his action in response to the suggestions of men? For
infinite wisdom does not need telling what is best, and infinite goodness needs
no urging to do it. But neither does God need any of those things that are done
by finite agents, whether living or inanimate. He could, if he chose, repair
our bodies miraculously without food; or give us food without the aid of
farmers, bakers, and butchers; or knowledge without the aid of learned men; or
convert the heathen without missionaries. Instead he allows soils and weather
and animals and the muscles, minds, and wills of men to co-operate in the
execution of his will. "God," said Pascal, "instituted prayer in
order to lend to his creatures the dignity of causality." But not only
prayer; whenever we act at all he lends us that dignity. It is not really
stranger, nor less strange, that my prayers should affect the course of events
than that my other actions should do so. They have not advised or changed God's
mind—that is, his overall purpose. But that purpose will be realized in
different ways according to the actions, including prayers, of his creatures.
Our problem in trying
to see how prayer "works" is that we often have a wrong view of God
in relation to his world. Often we think of God like Bruce Almighty,
sitting in a celestial office and feverishly dealing with all the requests that
arrive: "Mrs. Green prays her husband's cancer be cured," "Mr.
Young prays his wife might conquer alcoholism," and so on—with a million
more worthy requests. It's seems to be in line with God's will that Mr. Green
be healthy and Mrs. Young be sober. But what if both get worse? Does this mean
that God doesn't answer prayer?
The tangled web of
humans living in a fallen world makes things more complex. At times, the good
ends God desires arise from certain evils. So at one level, cancer is an evil,
part of the curse on a rebellious world. God sometimes does answer prayers for
healing (and in one sense all healing is divine in that God is working
providentially). But we also must recognize that since we're mortal, all people
die sometime. What's more, other prayers may be offered and answered that can
only be answered if there's not healing—like gaining patience through suffering
or an increased focus on the world to come. Maybe Mr. Green's son has turned
his back on God, and through his father's illness he'll return. So in order to
"answer" one prayer, the return of the son, God doesn't
"answer" the other, complete healing. God alone knows what is best.
As Jesus Did
Therefore, we're
called to pray as Jesus did. As a result of our prayers, some things will
happen that wouldn't otherwise. And we're responsible for whether we pray or
not. Because God is a personal God, he invites us to share in his work through
prayer. As Bruce Ware puts it, "God has devised prayer as a means of
enlisting us as participants in the work he has ordained, as part of the
outworking of his sovereign rulership over all. . . . The relationship between
divine sovereignty and petitionary prayer can be stated by this word: participation."
God has the power and
wisdom to use our prayers as he sees fit and to do what we could never imagine.
If he weren't all-powerful, there'd be little point in praying. If he weren't
all wise, it'd be dangerous to pray; after all, who'd want to ask an
all-powerful but foolish person to do anything? But God is both perfectly wise
and infinitely powerful, which is why you and I can pray with confidence.
This article has been
adapted from Melvin Tinker's book Intended for Good: The Providence of God (InterVarsity).
You are invited to join with others for Corporate Prayer this evening at 6:30pm in Room 133 at North Raleigh Church of the Nazarene.
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