When God is Silent

7 Dec Livin on Prayer“I pray, but God is silent. At these times, I wonder if God is even there.”

That is a perfectly logical conclusion. After all, if you told a friend all your troubles and they sat silent as a stone—no advice, no gesture of empathy, no words of encouragement—wouldn’t you wonder if they’d gone deaf, or worse, just didn’t care? What, then, are we to make of the silence of God?

Who’s There?

When someone gives us “the silent treatment,” we run through a mental checklist: Have I offended him? Failed to keep a promise? Behaved badly? We imagine that if we can attribute the silent party’s unresponsiveness to some egregious action of our own, perhaps we can make amends and return to speaking terms. The burden, we believe, is on us.

But “God is not human, that he should lie, not a human being, that he should change his mind.”1 Perhaps the first error we make in understanding God’s silence is failing to understand his nature. We forget that God is not a man, and we attribute human motives and emotions to him in an attempt to explain his actions. But our ways, he says plainly, are not his ways.2

And while other human beings might predicate their responses to us on our behavior—good or bad—God does not. His behavior is an out flowing of his character, not our own. And his very nature is love.3

Silence and the Saints

“It’s not very loving,” you might say, “for someone who loves you to be silent.” But silence from God has been experienced by many devoted God-followers to whom you might assume God would never stop speaking. Even Mother Teresa wrote privately that she failed to sense God’s presence in her life for more than fifty years—an astounding confession from a woman whose love for God produced so many good works.

“Jesus has a very special love for you,” she wrote to one of her mentors, [but] as for me, the silence and the emptiness is so great that I look and do not see, listen and do not hear.”4 Mother Teresa could not explain God’s silence, but she did not question his love—perhaps because she knew that God’s ways were not her ways.

Scottish theologian Oswald Chambers argued that “God’s silences are His answers.”5Silence from God, therefore, may be an overture of intimacy, not a retreat from it: “Are you mourning before God because you have not had an audible response? You will find that God has trusted you in the most intimate way possible, with an absolute silence, not of despair, but of pleasure, because He saw that you could stand a bigger revelation. If God has given you a silence, praise Him, He is bringing you into the great run of His purposes.”6

From this view, God’s silence is not punishment or abandonment but an intimate gift of trust.

When All Is Quiet

So when God seems silent, what should we do?  To begin with, we could use the silence as an occasion to remember the ways he has spoken in the past. When you are separated from a loved one and cannot converse, it’s common to remember conversations or moments of intimacy from your previous times together.

Instead of wondering “where God went,” consider using the perceived “lull” in communication to remember those times. Remind yourself of the moments when you keenly felt his presence, the times you believe you heard his instruction, encouragement, or affirmation.  Let those memories fill the void and strengthen your faith.

As you remember, thank God for those times. Praise him, too, for his attributes, his character, his mighty acts of the past, and the ways he has been faithful to you. Let gratitude—not fear or doubt—begin to fill the emptiness you may be feeling. His character is not dependent upon your perception of him—something else for which to be thankful!

Understand that your faith is being exercised when God seems absent. During the silent times, you must trust something beyond your own feelings and emotions. “Anyone who comes to [God],” said the writer of Hebrews, “must believe that he exists and that he rewards those who earnestly seek him.”7

Belief in times of silence is hard. When God is silent, we’re tempted to stop believing that he exists or that he cares. “What makes [unbelief] in many was more appealing [than belief] is that whereas to believe in something requires some measure of understanding and effort, not to believe doesn’t require much of anything at all.”8Take the hard road. Let your faith be strengthened as you believe without seeing or hearing.

It is also important to continue to obey God—especially during those times when his presence is not felt. Don’t fall into the trap of saying, “If you’re not going to talk to me, I’m not going to try to listen to you!” So much of God’s will and instruction is given to us not individually, but corporately. Within the pages of His Word, he has said much about how he wants his people to live.

He speaks through the Bible, through other people, through his created world, and through the “still, small voice” of his Spirit. Often what we imagine as silence from God is far from it. Obey what he has already said, and you will be poised to hear even more from him.

Remember. Praise. Obey. Repeat.

“I’ve done all these things,” you might say. “Doesn’t God owe me proof of his presence now? Doesn’t he have something just for me?” No. And yes.

No, he does not owe us proof that he is. (He gives us this in many ways, but it is not owed.) What we are due on the basis of our performance is, thankfully, not what he gives those of us who put our trust in Christ.

He offers grace to the person who confesses their shortcomings and asks for mercy. He gives himself to those who ask. Yes, he does have something just for you. If his voice is not clear, if his plan is not plain—keep doing the things you know. Keep remembering his goodness and love. Keep praising him. Keep obeying as much of his will as you know.

And as you focus on these things, keep the ear of your heart tuned God-ward.  You will hear his voice again. Until then, receive the silence. It teaches, too.

For more about the series, Livin’ on Prayer, got to www.RidgeFellowship.com

Footnotes
  1. The Holy Bible, New International Version © 2011, Numbers 23:19.
  2. Ibid., Isaiah 55:8.
  3. Ibid., 1 John 4:8.
  4. David Van Biema, “Mother Teresa’s Crisis of Faith” Time, August 23, 2007.
  5. Oswald Chambers, My Utmost for His Highest (Deluxe Christian Classics)(Uhrichsville, OH: Barbour Publishing, 2000), 207.
  6. Ibid.
  7. The Holy Bible, Hebrews 11:6.
  8. Frederick Buechner, Listening to Your Life, (San Francisco: HarperSanFranciso, 1992), 218.
Written by Leigh McLeroy
For more great articles like this, check out www.ExploreGod.com
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Does Prayer Work?

7 Dec Livin on PrayerPrayer can be an ongoing conversation with God, but does it make any difference?

When we talk to God, we’re praying. When God talks to us, we’re schizophrenic. Lily Tomlin

The idea of talking to God—praying—is kind of weird, isn’t it?

Usually when you talk to someone, you can hear his or her response to you. But prayer is different. Prayer looks like you’re basically just talking to yourself.

How do you talk with someone who doesn’t necessarily talk back—audibly, at least? And if you believe that God not only listens to prayers but answers them too, how do you distinguish your own thoughts and feelings from God’s answers?

Then there’s the really big question: Does prayer even work?

What’s the point of praying if God already knows the future, orchestrates what’s going to happen, and knows what we need? And yet, billions of people all over the world practice some form of prayer. Why bother if it doesn’t make a difference?

Why Bother?

Buddhists, Christians, Hindus, Muslims, and adherents to many other religions share a common thread of prayer.

For instance, Buddhists believe not so much in praying to an external god but in praying to awaken their own abilities buried deep within. Muslims believe that their prayers, which are required five times a day, are a reminder of God and a calling to a greater purpose beyond themselves.

Christians, too, believe that prayer can powerfully change lives, that it should be practiced regularly, and that it can help us refocus our priorities. Christianity further teaches that prayer also has the ability to dramatically affect the world and influence how God chooses to interact with humanity.2

But how does that work? If God is a supreme, omnipotent being, won’t he work out his purposes however he wants? It seems unlikely that our measly little prayers would affect his plans.

Many Christians would describe it like this: In mysterious but sovereign ways, God has decided to allow prayer to influence and accomplish his will. He chose prayer as the means through which to involve his followers in his plan. Prayer is one way God accomplishes his purposes in, through, and surrounding the one who prays.

A Changed Heart

Many of us pray to God as if he were a genie in a bottle. We hope that, if we’re lucky, he’ll hear us and act according to our wishes.

However, many faiths, including Christianity, paint a deeper and more intimate portrait of prayer. Rather than using God as a means to an end, within prayer God is the end. The believer prays, trusting in the character and power of God.

One of the chief purposes of prayer, then, is to transform the heart of the person praying to more closely resemble the heart of God. It’s not so much about getting tangible “results” from God. It is rather an opportunity to know God more fully, to better understand what he wants of each of us, and to establish a lifelong relationship.

Prayer is a lifestyle of humble dependence, of living in community and harmony with God, the source of life.

Ask and It Will Be Given

This is not to say that there’s no place for making specific, personal requests for God’s direction and provision. In speaking to his disciples about prayer, Jesus said:

Ask and it will be given to you; seek and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to you. For everyone who asks receives; the one who seeks finds; and to the one who knocks, the door will be opened. Which of you, if your son asks for bread, will give him a stone? Or if he asks for a fish, will give him a snake? If you, then, though you are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father in heaven give good gifts to those who ask him!3

According to these verses, prayer is an opportunity to approach the greatest father of all time and openly express our needs and desires and directly ask for help.

But how could God, an entity massive enough to create the universe, really care about the little details of my tiny life?

This is the heart of the Christian message—God cares so deeply about each one of us that he has provided a way for us to have an authentic, intimate relationship with him. Prayer is one of the incredible blessings of the Christian faith, for the more we believe, the more God reveals himself.

Building Trust

Like anything worthwhile, prayer is a process. It takes time, commitment, and discipline.4 Prayer is not meant to happen only in times of desperation. It is meant to be an ongoing conversation.

And that’s where it gets fascinating. As someone invests in and becomes more comfortable with prayer, one of the ways in which it “works” is in the growing trust that person gains.

Praying people have reported miracles and answers to prayers that they never would have imagined and certainly couldn’t have created on their own. They believe that prayer made the difference.

Imagine a miracle that you would like to see—maybe the healing of sick relative, the repairing of a broken relationship, or the redeeming of a seemingly hopeless situation. Could prayer be your answer? Could miracles become your experience?

For more about the series, Livin’ on Prayer, got to www.RidgeFellowship.com

Footnotes
  1. Jane Wagner, In Search for Signs of Intelligent Life in the Universe, directed by John Bailey, (Showtime Networks, 1985), performed by Lily Tomlin.
  2. There are numerous examples of this throughout the Bible. For just a few, see The Holy Bible, New International Version © 2011, Genesis 25:21, 2 Samuel 24–25, 2 Kings 20:5, 1 Chronicles 5:20, Isaiah 38:5, Luke 1:13, and Acts 28:8.
  3. Ibid., Matthew 7:7–11.
  4. If you find yourself struggling, it may help to find another person or group of people with whom you can pray regularly. This can help you stay motivated and focused. Ask a friend or family member, or join a prayer group at a local church. You can also contact us at info@ExploreGod.com to pray with you and help you get started.
Written By:  Joel Lindsey
For more great articles like this, check out www.ExploreGod.com
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Why Pray Anyway?

7 Dec Livin on PrayerHere are four reasons:

1.     Pray Because God Loves Me

One reason we don’t pray is that we have a hard time believing that God is really interested in us.  We can’t seem to conceive that the creator of the entire universe is interested in the details of my life.  But he is.  If he has the hairs on my head numbered (Luke 12:7) he cares about the details!

When we fully discover how much God really loves us, prayer will no longer be an issue. The issue is not, “I should pray more.”  It’s that we don’t realize how much God cares about and loves us.  Why?

  •  We love to talk to the people who love us the most.   No one loves us more than God.

I no longer call you servants, because a servant does not know his master’s business. Instead, I have called you friends.”  John 15:15

A reason to talk to God about anything  in prayer is because we’re friends.  Isn’t that amazing? God says, “I don’t treat you like servants, like slaves.  I treat you as friends.”

Have you ever been away from someone you love for a period of time?  And then when you see or call the person you talk and talk and get caught up. No matter how much the long distance phone bill may be?   It may be 2:00 in the morning, but you want to stay up and talk. Why?  Because you are interested in everything that had gone on in his/her life and they are interested in everything that had gone on in your life.  We love to talk to those who love us the most.

  •  When I fully discover how much God loves me, prayer will be like talking to a friend.

 

 2.     Pray Because God Will Meet My Needs

 Prayer is God’s chosen method of meeting my needs.  The Bible teaches that there are some things that God has promised to do only if we pray.  Some people think, “God knows what I need so I don’t need to ask.  He’ll just give it when I need it.”  That’s not true.  God has set it up in His plan that there are some things He will only do if you ask.

  •  Prayer is God’s chosen method of meeting my needs

  “Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God.” Phil. 4:6

What do I pray about? Everything!

How often?   “Give us this day our …. DAILY bread.”  Matt. 6:11 Daily.

You do not have, because you do not ask God.” James 4:2

Over twenty times in the New Testament the Bible says “Ask”.  Ask, seek, knock, keep on asking.

  •  What am I lacking right now in my life simply because I’m not asking God for it? 

C.H. Spurgeon, a great pastor in London, England, once said this, “God never shuts His storehouses until you shut your mouth.”  You have to ask.

 

3.     Pray Because God Can Do For Others What I Can’t

 Have you ever wished you could do more for someone?

  •  I am limited. God is not. 

People may reject your appeals, reject your arguments, reject you as a person, but they’re totally defenseless against your prayers.   They go straight to the heart.

Prayer is not limited by space.  Prayer is like sending a missile.  I could pray for somebody in Guatemala and it’s like sending a missile directly to their heart and I never leave Texas.  It is limitless in its power.

“I urge, then, first of all, that requests, prayers, intercession and thanksgiving be made for everyone– for kings and all those in authority” 1 Tim. 2:1-2

Instead of complaining about our country’s leaders, pray for them. Pray for those in authority over us, pray for your boss or manager.  Pray for our loved ones.  Nagging may change a loved one, but not always for the better.  Pray more nag less. Pray more complain less.

A.C. Dixon wrote, “When we depend upon organizations, we get what organizations can do; when we depend upon education, we get what education can do; when we depend upon man, we get what man can do; but when we depend on prayer, we get what God can do.”

James 5:15-16 “The prayer offered in faith will make the sick person well; the Lord will raise him up. If he has sinned, he will be forgiven. Therefore confess your sins to each other and pray for each other so that you may be healed.”

  •  I can’t change people, but God can.

 

 4.     Pray Because God Will Keep My Conscience Clean

 All of us have regrets.  All of us make mistakes.  All of us fall short.  I don’t come up to my own standard, much less God’s.  It’s not very hard to admit you’re not perfect.

Jesus was perfect.  His reason for coming and dying on a cross was to pay for our mistakes, regrets, sins or shortcomings.  The book of Hebrew explains this…

“Since we have confidence to enter the Most Holy Place by the blood of Jesus, by a new and living way opened for us through the curtain, that is, his body, and since we have a great priest over the house of God, let us draw near to God with a sincere heart in full assurance of faith, having our hearts sprinkled to cleanse us from a guilty conscience.”Heb 10:19-22

  •  Nothing can take away my guilt or clear my conscience, except Jesus.

God wants to forgive us.  He says that over and over.  When we come to God and confess our sins to Him, we don’t need to beg “God, please!  Pretty please with sugar on it!.”   And we don’t have to bargain “God, if you forgive me, I will never do it again!” If it’s an area of weakness, I’ll be back there within a day or two.  We don’t have to bribe “God, if You’ll forgive me, I promise to always read my Bible.  We don’t have to beg, bargain or bribe.  Just confess! Confess means agree.

 “If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just and will forgive us our sins and purify us from all unrighteousness.” 1 John 1:9 

  •  I will do wrong, but confession to God brings forgiveness and peace of mind.

There is no reason in the world for us to carry guilt and shame.  None at all!  God has made a provision for that. It is called confession.   Don’t repress it.  Don’t suppress it. Confess it.  That’s how we get rid of guilt. God says, “Because of Jesus, I will cleanse you.”

He forgives us instantly, totally, completely and freely.

One of the greatest benefits of prayer is that I can unload my guilt.  If I’m carrying guilt I’m not taking advantage of what Jesus Christ did on the cross.  I give God my guilt, and then I am clean and free.  I hope you will too.

Darrell

For more about the series, Livin’ on Prayer, got to www.RidgeFellowship.com

All verses are from The New International Version of the Bible

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What Is Prayer?

7 Dec Livin on PrayerIs prayer more than just asking for what you want?

Kevin is searching for a job. He needs to provide for his family, but he also wants to find work that makes a positive difference in his community. Before each interview he asks God to help him favorably impress the interviewer with his skills and experience.

Elise is the mother of three young children, and they are all with her on a rushed trip to the grocery store. Her youngest is hungry and crying, and her two toddlers are removing items from the lowest shelves and playing a spirited game of “football” with them while other shoppers stare disapprovingly. “Help me keep it together, Jesus,” she whispers under her breath.

Ty always keeps a list of names with him. Each time he sees it, he selects one friend and briefly asks God to watch over them. He considers how he might encourage or support them that day and asks for insight into their unique needs.

Shelly sits at the highest point on a familiar trail just after sunrise. The view is spectacular and fills her with joy. Without thinking or even realizing what she’s doing, she begins to hum a familiar song from childhood: “O Lord my God, when I in awesome wonder, consider all the worlds Thy hands have made.”1

Are Kevin’s deliberate requests prayers? What about Elise’s quiet plea on aisle seven? Would Mark’s “go-down-the-list” remembrance of friends be considered prayer? Could Shelly’s spontaneous song?

What is prayer?

Prayer Is Communication

Ask a dozen people, “What is prayer?” and you will likely receive a dozen different answers. “It’s talking to God,” one person might say. Another might respond: “It’s saying the Our Father or the Hail Mary.” Some might say prayer is asking a higher power for what you want or need.

For our purposes, let’s consider prayer to be “intentionally conveying a message to God.2 And not just a message to any God, but to the God Christians call “the Almighty One,” the God whose history with his people is recorded in the pages of the Bible.

God encourages his people—those who believe in him and follow him—to pray to him.3 The Bible is filled with the prayers of ordinary men and women who intentionally conveyed their messages to God. Many of those were messages of petition, but others were words of praise and adoration; expressions of joy and wonder; confessions of doubt, fear, and anxiety; and statements of hope.

Prayer can take many forms, but deliberate communication directed to God is the heart of prayer.

More than Words

Many people learn to pray by listening to the prayers of others. Maybe as a child you heard prayers repeated in church or you remember the words of The Lord’s Prayer, and you use them when you want to pray.

This can be a great place to start, but simply mouthing words is not prayer. “Otherwise,” wrote theologian C. S. Lewis, “a team of properly trained parrots would serve as well as men.”4

The heart is involved in prayer as well. Prayer and relationship are inextricably intertwined. They belong together.

Francis Chan, a pastor, author, and philanthropist, has described prayer as “a way of walking in love.”5 Certainly that “way” involves more than repeating words and phrases and hoping that those rote words will magically connect us with God.

More than Petition

While petition (asking for our needs or desires) is a legitimate and well-known part of prayer, prayer involves more than just asking God for things. If we never move beyond “I want” or “give me,” then our prayers—and the relationship flowing out of them—will be stunted and unsatisfying.

Imagine a friendship or a marriage in which nothing but requests or demands were communicated. No words of affection. No thanks or compliments or appreciation. No sharing of hopes or dreams or even sorrows. Just “I need this,” or “give me that.”

Would you ever want a relationship like that? Could you run away from it fast enough?

A Growing Relationship

“Prayer,” says author and theologian Richard Foster, “is nothing more than an ongoing and growing love relationship with God the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.”6Just as we grow close to the people with whom we spend quality time, we grow closer to God by spending time in his presence—praising, thanking, seeking wisdom, making petitions, meditating on his words, listening for his commands.

Prayer is not meant to be a magic remedy for supplying wants and needs—at least not exclusively. The point of prayer is relationship. Therefore, prayer “works” if it builds, enhances, solidifies, or deepens the relationship between the one who prays and the one to whom those prayers are directed.

“We ask in prayer,” writes author and theologian Mark Roberts, “because we want God’s answers. But more profoundly, we ask because asking brings us near to God. When we approach the throne of grace boldly, seeking mercy and grace in our time of need, we get more than what we came for. We receive both God’s help and God’s presence. We ask in prayer because we need answers. But we ask because, most of all, we need God. Supplication opens the doors to deeper relationship with the Lord.”7

Over time, our prayers become less about us and the “things” we bring before God and become more about him. “In the beginning,” states Richard Foster, “we are indeed the subject and the center of our prayers. But in God’s time and in God’s way a . . . revolution takes place in our heart. We pass from thinking of God as a part of our life to the realization that we are part of his life.”8

When this happens, the real adventure of divine love begins.

For more about the series, Livin’ on Prayer, got to www.RidgeFellowship.com

 

Footnotes
  1. “How Great Thou Art,” words adapted into English by Stuart K. Hine, sung to a Swedish melody. First verse and chorus: “O Lord my God, when I in awesome wonder consider all the worlds thy hands have made, I see the stars, I hear the rolling thunder, Thy power throughout the universe displayed: Then sings my soul, my Savior God, to thee: How great thou art! How great thou art! Then sings my soul, my Savior God, to thee: How great thou art! How great thou art!”
  2. John Piper, “Pray Like This: Hallowed be Thy Name” (sermon on Matthew 6:5–18, December 30, 2007). Available at http://www.desiringgod.org/resource-library/sermons/pray-like-this-hallowed-be-your-name, accessed February 27, 2013.
  3. See The Holy Bible, New International Version © 2011, Jeremiah 29: 7, 11–12; 2 Chronicles 7:14; Psalm 122:6; Matthew 5:44; Luke 6:28; Philippians 4:6–7; 1 Timothy 2:1–2; John 14:12–14; John 15:7; 1 Thessalonians 5:17; James 1:5–8, 5:13-16.
  4. C. S. Lewis, The World’s Last Night and Other Essays, (San Diego, CA: Harvest/HBJ, 1960), 6.
  5. Francis Chan, “Prayer as a Way of Walking in Love: A Personal Journey.” Paper presented at the Desiring God 2011 Conference for Pastors. (Notes taken by author during the presentation).
  6. Richard Foster, Prayer: Finding the Heart’s True Home, (San Francisco, CA: HarperSanFrancisco, 1992), 13.
  7. Mark Roberts, No Holds Barred, (Colorado Springs, CO: Waterbrook Press, 2005), 28.
  8. Foster, Prayer, 15.
 Written by Leigh McLeroy
For more great articles like this, check out www.ExploreGod.com
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