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You say your prayers, then pause and listen ... and you hear nothing in
return. So why talk to God?
What is prayer? How does it work? When should I do it? We took these questions and others
to Timothy Jones, author of The Art of Prayer.
What is the purpose of prayer?
Prayer puts us into a day-by-day, moment-by-moment relationship with God. It allows us to
get to know him. It's how we communicate with him. But it's more than just talking to God.
So often we think of prayer as doing or saying something, but sometimes it's just being in
God's presence.
Why don't I always feel God's presence when I pray?
There could be a number of reasons. Perhaps you're feeling disconnected because your times
of seeking God have been inconsistent. That can make a difference. Perhaps there is so me
unconfessed sin in your life that's nagging at you, making you feel like you need to slink
around when near God. Or maybe
you're mad at God and need to have it out with him. But even a bigger issue: Feelings lie.
We tend to take our emotional temperature at every turn. Feelings aren't everything. The
important thing is to keep praying. Don't quickly conclude that because you don't
"feel" much nothing is happening. There is never prayer where nothing happens.
Why don't I hear God respond to my prayers?
[Graphic omitted] How do you know you haven't heard God? How do you know God hasn't been
answering, perhaps in a whisper, or through circumstances, or through your conscience? A
lot of times we're so rushed and busy talking we don't pause to listen. We fill our lives
with sound and drown out God's normal way of speaking, which is through a still, small
voice.
It takes patience and practice to hear God. As we grow in familiarity and intimacy with
him, we will be better able to hear. God communicates with us all the time--through the
beauty of creation, the love of friends and family, and especially through Jesus Christ.
Jesus was the Word of God made flesh. His coming to earth was God conking us over the head
with the truth that we can enjoy fellowship with him. And then, of course, he speaks to us
through the Bible. It's called "The Word" for a good reason. It's full of all
the truth and guidance we need to live a rich, faithful Christian life.
Sometimes it's hard for me to talk to someone I can't see, someone I can't really picture.
I think having a mental picture of the God you're talking to is absolutely essential for a
vibrant prayer life. To form that picture, you have to understand something about the
nature of God. Obviously, if your idea of God is a silent or uncaring being, it's not
going to inspire very much prayer. But if you take to heart what Scripture says about God,
you'll find he's a God of compassion--a caring God who wants us to come to him.
I first began to see this when I was in junior high. I remember one day I
was talking to my best friend, and a mutual friend of ours came up and asked my friend,
"Have you ever read the Bible?" I don't remember how my friend responded, but I
remember that an answer began forming in me which was, "Here I've gone to church all
these years, and I really don't know what's in the Bible. I don't really read it for
myself. I don't have that firsthand acquaintance with God."
So I went home and began reading the Gospels. As I read I found myself awed. I began to
sense that God was real, and that Jesus was not just a historical figure but a living
reality. That made all the difference in my prayer life. I began waking up in the mornings
with this wonderful sense of discovery, realizing that God loved me and that he was there.
It was a big motivator for me to want to spend time with God.
When the Bible says to pray without ceasing, what does that mean?
It obviously does not mean we're always holed up in our room, on our knees with hands
folded. It cannot mean that because we have to live, we have to eat, we have to relate to
people.
I think it's talking about a life characterized by prayerfulness. I also think it's
talking about a discipline that's cultivated throughout the day, one of learning to turn
the mind and attention to God. You can do that while taking a test, walking to school or
driving a car. Whenever a thought of God comes or
whenever a need arises, we can offer it to him in prayer. So I need to learn to pray
throughout the day. But should I also set apart some time when I can focus solely on
prayer?
Someone once said that the only way to pray all of the time everywhere is to resolutely
set about to pray some of the time somewhere. In other words, I think if a person
tries to pray only when they're on the run, only in the car, or only when they're walking
from one class to another, that's going to make for a pretty scarce prayer life. So we
should set apart times when we can really focus on God--regular times of sitting down or
going for a walk or run, getting away from the normal routine.
That's not to say you have to legalistically clock a certain number of minutes at a
certain time each day. I would just say that every day should have some period of time
where God is given our primary focus. I mean, we eat every day, we talk to our friends
every day, we do all kinds of things every day, things we wouldn't dream of not doing. I
think prayer should be one of those things.
Do my prayers really matter that much? I mean, doesn't God already have everything planned
out?
For some reason God has willingly chosen to act through us and through our asking. This
seems almost too good to be true. It boggles the imagination of many people I know. They
reason that either God wills something, in which he brings it about anyway. Or he does not
will something, and their asking can't change anything. But I believe there's another option: that God intends for some particular
thing to happen and wants to use us to make it happen. Perhaps for some things he wants
and plans to do, he even waits for our prayers before he acts. Yes, this is an incredible
opportunity he gives us. It's also a responsibility. It's a promise not only of what can
happen, it suggests what may not happen if we ignore the invitation. There is more to our
asking than we can ever imagine, because there is more to God than we can ever fathom.
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