THE PARADOX OF PRAYER

THE PARADOX OF PRAYER

JACK COTTRELL – 2020

     QUESTION:   If God can do whatever He chooses, and if He really loves us, why doesn’t He answer all of our prayers? 

     ANSWER:  The answer to this question might seem like a paradox to some, but here is at least part of the deal:  God does not answer all of our prayers just because He loves us!.

      Here I will approach this issue based on James 5:13-18.  I will use this text to help resolve the paradox of prayer.  First, I will make some general comments on these verses (using the NASB); then I will use them in explaining three kinds of prayer and how God responds to each.

PART ONE:  COMMENTS ON THE TEXT

      VERSE 13.  “ Is anyone among you suffering? Then he must pray. Is anyone cheerful? He is to sing praises.”   Here the word “suffering” means any time things are going bad for you in any way. “Cheerful” means any time things are looking good for you in any way.  In either case, we should TALK TO GOD about it – either in petition or in praise.

      VERSE 14.  “Is anyone among you sick? Then he must call for the elders of the church and they are to pray over him, anointing him with oil in the name of the Lord….”    This is very important:  the word “sick” can refer to physical illness or spiritual weakness. James has BOTH in mind.  When elders are called, they first apply oil to the sick person, for medicinal purposes (Isaiah 1:6; Luke 10:34; Mark 6:13) and perhaps a symbolic purpose, representing God’s blessing.  The main thing elders do in this situation is pray over the sick, for their healing.

      VERSE 15.  “And the prayer offered in faith will restore the one who is sick, and the Lord will raise him up, and if he has committed sins, they will be forgiven him.”    The word for “restore” is the usual word for “save.”  Sometimes it means “to heal a physically sick person.”  But—and this is very important—sometimes it refers to salvation from SINS (see 5:20).  There are two kinds of restoration: being “raised up” from the physical illness, and being forgiven of sins.

      VERSE 16.  “Therefore, confess your sins to one another, and pray for one another so that you may be healed. The effective prayer of a righteous man can accomplish much.”   As in v. 15, the word used here for “healed” can refer to physical healing, OR to spiritual healing from sins (for the latter, see John 12:40; Acts 28:27; 1 Peter 2:24).  Sometimes there is a connection between physical sickness and sinful deeds; thus confession of sins is necessary for physical healing.

      VERSES 17-18.   “Elijah was a man with a nature like ours, and he prayed earnestly that it would not rain, and it did not rain on the earth for three years and six months. Then he prayed again, and the sky poured rain and the earth produced its fruit.”    Elijah is an OT hero who   prayed some mighty prayers: that God would raise a dead boy to life (1 Kings 17:22), that God would send fire from heaven to consume an offering (1 Kings 18:36ff.), that God would stop and start rain in Israel (1 Kings 17, 18).  Why is Elijah cited as an example for us?  After all, he was a prophet and a miracle-worker, and we are not!  Answer:  because he was still JUST A MAN.  He had no more inherent power than you or I.  The answers to his prayers came from GOD.

PART TWO:    APPLICATION TO OUR PRAYER LIFE

      In this part of the lesson I will apply the teaching of James 5:13-18 to the Christian’s prayer life.  The main point here is the fact that there are at least three kinds of prayer.  How God responds to our prayers depends on which of these three kinds they may be.

I.  PRAYERS GOD WILL NEVER ANSWER

      The first kind of prayer is prayers that God will NEVER answer.  These are prayers contrary to His nature, and prayers contrary to His purposes.

      A.  Prayers contrary to God’s nature, contrary to WHO GOD IS.  For example, God is a rational, logical being.  He will not answer a prayer to do something that contradicts logic, e.g., a prayer to make a square circle. For another example, it is God’s nature to exist on a time line, with a past and a future.  For God, the past is past and the future is future.  Thus He will never answer prayers to change the past.  Also, God is a holy being; He cannot do evil.  Thus He will not answer prayers that make it easy for us to sin.

      B. Prayers contrary to God’s purposesHere I will name three such purposes.  First is His purpose of creation, which includes His purpose of creating beings with free will.  When God created us with free will, it was His purpose to make our relationship with Him depend on our own free-will choices. 

Thus, God will NOT answer prayers that require Him to violate our free will.  Specifically, He will never answer our prayers for the lost that require Him to force or cause a sinner to believe.  See Matthew 23:37.  Of course, God can and will do all sorts of things that influence a lost person toward faith, without pushing him over the line.  So it is still valid to pray for the lost. But in the end, accepting Christ must be the lost person’s own free choice.

      Another of God’s purposes is His purpose of redemption.  He will never answer a prayer that interferes with His plan to save us from sin and restore us to fellowship with Himself (Acts 2:23)—even if that prayer is prayed by Jesus Himself (Luke 22:42)!

      A third such purpose is God’s purpose of placing the physical world under a curse. Once sin entered the world, it was God’s purpose to put a curse upon the entire physical creation.  See Genesis 3, and Romans 8:18-22.  This curse is summed up in the word DEATH.

      Christ has laid the groundwork for removing this curse on the physical world, but it will not actually be done until His second coming, via the resurrection of our bodies and the making of the new heavens and new earth.  Sickness and death are not natural for human beings, but they are a part of the world as we know it:  FALLEN and CURSED.  This is why God will not answer prayers that remove this curse ahead of time.  (E.g., see Hebrews 9:27.)  So there is no need to pray that we will never get sick, get old, or die.  God may give temporary relief from the curse, namely, He may heal sickness, ease pain, postpone death, and protect from storms.  Obviously He does this in answer to some prayers. 

      But note:  these are exceptions to the general purpose of the curse, and we cannot complain if our prayers in this area are not answered.  James 5 should be read in this light.  Living in this fallen and cursed world is like living on a hillside down which a steady sea of volcanic lava is flowing toward us. We can pray for God to enable us to endure it, or temporarily avoid it, but ultimately it will engulf us. This is part of the fruit of sin.

II.  PRAYERS GOD MAY OR MAY NOT ANSWER

      A second kind of prayer is prayers that God may or may not answer, according to His choice.  Here it is important to understand God’s relation to His created universe.  Especially, we must be assured that He has complete sovereignty over the laws of nature.  He can “tweak” or manipulate them if He so chooses, for example, in reference to the weather (see Job 37:1-13).  Or He can even suspend or bypass these laws, as He has done when empowering individuals to work miracles. 

      A.  God and the laws of nature.  Here we are affirming that God can and does sometimes tweak the laws of nature in answer to our prayers.  He is perfectly able to do so, in our time in terms of His special providence.  Thus we should always pray. 

      We should remember that God’s intervention into natural causes can bring about results that we would consider good or positive, or results that we would consider to be harmful or negative. He can cause people to die, if He has reason to do so (see 2 Samuel 12).  Or He can raise people from the dead, if He has a reason to do so; see Elijah and the widow’s son (1 Kings 17:17-24), and Jesus and Lazarus (John 11).  He can also make sick people well (as King Hezekiah, Isaiah 38; and Epaphroditus, Philippians 2:27).  Remember:  sickness and death are the essence of the curse upon the world because of sin.  This curse has been reversed by the death and resurrection of Jesus, nevertheless it will not be removed until His second coming.  Nevertheless, prayer may cause it to be delayed.

      Thus here is the point:  in individual cases, God can and sometimes does intervene, and heals, or eases pain, or slows down a killer disease, or gives new insight to doctors, or gives inner peace.  Thus we should always pray for God to thus intervene.  This is one point James 5 is making:  the prayer of faith will restore the sick!  Sometimes God will answer such prayers, giving temporary and exceptional relief from the curse.  Thus we should never cease offering these prayers up to Him.

      B.  The paradox of prayer.  But here is “the paradox of prayer” that continues to haunt us:  even though God is all-powerful and truly loves us, sometimes He will decide NOT to answer such prayers. Why not?  Because God always sees a bigger picture than we do, and He knows of an ultimate good that will result from allowing the present course to continue.  In a sense it is the same reason why loving parents, even those with unlimited means, do not always grant every request of their children.  As the title of an old TV show rightly said, “Father knows best!”  And our heavenly Father knows best of all, since He is indeed all-knowing and all-wise.  Thus, sometimes, in His infinite wisdom, God knows that a BETTER purpose will be accomplished by NOT answering our prayers; so we must trust His wisdom.

      There are prominent Biblical examples of this.  One of these is our hero, Elijah himself!  Elijah prayed for God to take his life (1 Kings 19:4), but God did not answer this prayer.  Also, the Apostle  Paul prayed for God to remove his “thorn in the flesh” (2 Corinthians. 12:7-9), but God did not answer this prayer!  An old song by Garth Brooks has it right: “Sometimes I thank God for unanswered prayers.”

      The bottom line is this: we must trust the wisdom of God, and trust His promise of Romans 8:28:  “And we know that God causes all things to work together for good to those who love God, to those who are called according to His purpose.”  Thus when we pray, we must always say, “If the Lord wills” (James 4:15).

III.  PRAYERS GOD ALWAYS ANSWERS

      The third kind of prayer is prayers that God will always answer.   Specifically, God always answers a sinner’s prayer for personal salvation.

      We must remember that the sickness James is writing about is not just physical sickness, but also the spiritual sickness of sin.  The prayers he is talking about are not just prayers for the healing of physical sickness—which God may or may not answer.  But he is also talking about prayers for salvation from sin – which God will always answer when they come from a heart of sincere repentance and faith.

      God has always been willing to answer this kind of prayer: “Whoever calls on the name of the LORD will be saved.”  So say Joel 2:32 and Romans 10:13.  God’s messenger Ananias alluded to the verse in Joel when he said to the sinner Saul of Tarsus: “Now why do you delay?  Get up and be baptized, and wash away your sins, calling on His name” (Acts 22:16).  This “calling on His name” in Christian baptism is the only true and Biblical “sinner’s prayer” in the modern sense of that term.

      If you are not a Christian, you can pray this prayer RIGHT NOW, and you can SEE it answered with your own eyes, when you meet Jesus in Christian baptism!  1 Peter 3:21 says that baptism now saves you, not by washing dirt off your body, but because it is an appeal to God – a prayer to God, a calling upon the name of God – for forgiveness of your sins, and therefore for a good conscience before Him.

      If you are not yet saved, most likely there are many people praying for you and for your salvation right now!  But God cannot answer those prayers against your own free will.  The only prayer for your salvation that God can answer is yours.  Pray it now, as a prelude to meeting your Lord in Christian baptism!

Comments

THE PARADOX OF PRAYER — 2 Comments

  1. Thankyou for sharing your insight Dr. Cottrell. You are much appreciated.