Showing posts with label unanswered prayer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label unanswered prayer. Show all posts

Monday, February 7, 2022

Figs and Faith

 

Figs and Faith

February 7, 2022


Matthew 21:18-20, NRSV - In the morning, when he returned to the city, he was hungry.  And seeing a fig tree by the side of the road, he went to it and found nothing at all on it but leaves. Then he said to it, “May no fruit ever come from you again!” And the fig tree withered at once.  When the disciples saw it, they were amazed, saying, “How did the fig tree wither at once?”  Jesus answered them, “Truly I tell you, if you have faith and do not doubt, not only will you do what has been done to the fig tree, but even if you say to this mountain, ‘Be lifted up and thrown into the sea,’ it will be done.  Whatever you ask for in prayer with faith, you will receive.”

 

                This passage is a mixed bag for me.  On one hand, I love it.  What Jesus does with the fig tree endears Himself to me.  Feeling a bit, as we say these days, “hangry” (hunger that causes a heightened sense of irritability), Jesus spots the fig tree and He thinks He’s getting breakfast.  Finding the tree without any fruit, he curses the tree and makes it fruitless forever.  In other words, he takes out His frustration on the tree.  I am somehow comforted that Jesus got frustrated like I often get frustrated.  I read this little episode and I know that Jesus knows how I feel when I smash a project I’m working on when it’s not going my way.

                But then, the story changes.  The disciples see how the tree literally withers before their very eyes and they are amazed.  For the life of me, I cannot not understand their amazement because these guys have witnessed Jesus resurrecting the dead.  They have seen hundreds healed of every possible disease, the blind receive their sight (as recently as the day before this fig tree incident), the lame begin to walk again, and other miraculous displays of power.  Why would they be impressed by their Rabbi simply draining the life out of an insignificant tree?  Perhaps it is because they are familiar with Jesus performing life-giving miracles, not life-taking miracles.  I don’t know.

                In any case, Jesus uses their question about it as a teaching moment.  He informs them that they could do the same miracles, and anything else for that matter – even command a mountain to be thrown into the sea. 

“Whatever you ask for in prayer with faith, you will receive,” Jesus concludes.

Here’s where I (and millions of others) get hung up.  Here’s the problem.  This statement is not literally true.  Since Jesus uttered these words, I suspect that millions of requests/commands uttered in complete faith have not resulted in the specific miracles requested/commanded.  To clarify, I have personally witnessed dozens of miracles that I absolutely attribute to prayers lifted in great faith.  What I can say with conviction is that, while faith does change what is possible in any given situation, it does not always conjure the specific result that we want.  And if we’re honest, this is a good thing. 

                I have wished “unpleasantness” (I’m intentionally using ambiguous word) upon people who have hurt me and people I cared about.  I have done so, having complete faith that God is indeed capable of granting my ill-conceived wish. Furthermore, I’ve made such wished with at least part of me willing that God would use that omnipotence to do me the favor.  It’s only later that I am relieved that God did not act on my anger and frustration.  I feel pretty sure most of us have had similar experiences. 

                There are other circumstances though where my faith-filled intentions and requests are good, at least in my own estimation.  I truly believed God could have removed my aunt’s cancer and my brother-in-law’s brain tumor and I prayed with all the mustard seeds I could muster for God to do exactly those things.  They were both incredible people and the world would certainly have benefited from them continuing to live here on this earth.  It was not to be and now, they are both in Heaven.  Don’t get me wrong.  I’m not bitter about that.  On the contrary, I celebrate that my loved ones have been delivered from the miseries they endured and now know complete joy.  I also celebrate that I have not said goodbye to them forever.  Because the same faith that I exercised to pray for the removal of their cancer, I know I will see them both again.  Praise be to our God who conquers even the power of bodily separation and death!

                So, I return to what I said earlier about what my best guess is as to what Jesus is trying to teach His disciples and us.  What is possible in every situation we find ourselves is changed when we possess faith. I do not believe that God gives us everything we want because we have faith.  But in faith, we gain access to God’s unmatched and equally mysterious power.  Our wish is not God’s command, but our faith brings hope that God will somehow bring about goodness from situations where all the news seems nothing but bad.  I aim to keep asking for specific miracles, but also simultaneously trusting that God knows what miracle is needed.  This doesn’t mean that I will always understand or even like the result.  But my greater aim is to keep trusting God even when I don’t understand or like what God does. 

 

Question:  How has faith changed what is possible in your life?

 

Prayer:  Omnipotent God, we seldom understand your ways and that is frustrating at times to say the least.  Help us see our circumstances through the lens of a faith that changes those circumstances by inviting you into the equation.  Amen.

 

Prayer:  Pray for people that you know are angry and/or frustrated with God.

 

Song:  Yet I Will Praise – Melissa Boraski

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7hujNAmtA0c

Monday, September 13, 2021

Matthew 7:7-11 - The Problem w/ "Name it and Claim it"

 


Daily Devo w/ Pastor Eric September 13, 2021

The Problem w/ “Name It and Claim it.”

 

Matthew 7:7-11, NLT - “Keep on asking, and you will receive what you ask for. Keep on seeking, and you will find. Keep on knocking, and the door will be opened to you.  For everyone who asks, receives. Everyone who seeks, finds. And to everyone who knocks, the door will be opened.  “You parents—if your children ask for a loaf of bread, do you give them a stone instead?  Or if they ask for a fish, do you give them a snake? Of course not!  So if you sinful people know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your heavenly Father give good gifts to those who ask him.

 

A quick take on this teaching from our Lord is that if we want something from God, just keep asking. If we want to find something, just keep looking and we will find it and if we just keep banging on the door, eventually God will open it.  There are at least a couple of problems with this simplistic view though, so let’s take a better look.  The first problem is that this view suggests that we can control God by mere persistence.  God will give us whatever we want if we “name it and claim it.”  If that were actually true and carried to it’s logical conclusion, it would mean that the real “God” in this equation is us.  If God has to give us what we ask, then God is not actually God.  I assure you…that is NOT what Jesus is suggesting here. 

The second problem that I will mention is the things for which we ask.  As a teenager who was really angry, I once prayed for an enemy to die.  On another occasion, feeling especially desperate, I suggested to God that it wouldn’t be the worst thing for me to die.  I’m really glad God didn’t answer that literal death wish.  Even now, I  find myself asking God for things that later, I realize are foolish requests.  I am really thankful that God is actually God and I am definitely not.  I now trust God to ignore foolish requests AND to shed more light on the requests that I make that aren’t so foolish.

This is why Jesus adds the bit about being decent parents.  Most parents realize that you shouldn’t give kids everything they ask for and most parents also want to give good things to their children.  My Dad used to say to me as a kid something to the effect, “you watch, Eric; as you get older, I will get smarter.”  I now realize that he didn’t actually think he would get smarter (although I think that he has).  He knew that I would begin to see the intelligence of his actions towards me as I got older and wiser.  He was right.  I’m glad about some of the decisions he made that, at the time, I thought made no sense.  Maturity allows us to see wisdom is former “foolishness.”

A mature relationship with God gains the same kind of wisdom.  We keep on asking God for what we want.  However, at the same time, we trust God to help us see the foolishness of some requests and the wisdom of NOT getting what we want in the moment.  We trust in God’s nature in the same way a child children can trust parents to want good things for them. 

 

Question:  Are there some prayers that you have prayed in the past that you are now glad God did not do what you desired?

Prayer:  God, we trust you to give us what is good even though we don’t always recognize it as such.  Thank you for not only enduring, but encouraging our sometimes ill-conceived prayers, for in praying them, we learn over time of your wisdom and goodness.  Amen.

 

Prayer Focus:  Pray for teachers today.

 

Song:  Unanswered Prayers - Garth Brooks

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sXzdm1cz1XU