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Details about Answered Prayer:

PRAYER
When a baby is born, there is a suspenseful
moment when all those in attendance watch
eagerly for the newborn baby to begin
breathing. In the same way, when a person is
born again he begins to sustain a spiritual
life through prayer. A wise man, Rowland
Hill, once said, “Prayer is the breath of a
newborn soul, and there can be no life
without it.” Accordingly, when people speak
of having a “prayer life” they should
realize that prayer is not just a feature of
spiritual life but the thing that keeps
spiritual life going.
In prayer you are talking to your Father-God
in heaven, thanking Him, praising Him,
blessing Him, loving Him, and asking His
help for yourself and others in times of
need. Meanwhile, He desires to speak love
and encouragement to you.
But sometimes it’s hard to get past feelings
that question whether God hears your
prayers, or that you can really hear His
replies. The following keys to vital prayer
will help you know that your prayers are
heard and answered.
WHAT IS PRAYER?
Prayer is a two-way conversation with God.
It is the most intimate relationship with
the Creator you can have. In prayer, the
depths of your spirit are in communion with
the depths of the Spirit of God. Out of this
fellowship can come instruction, guidance
and suggestions for new focal points in your
prayers.
Often when we pray we make use of our
rational minds. There are times when we can
only pray in the Spirit, such as when we
don’t know how to pray about a specific
situation. At times like these, the Apostle
Paul says, “The Spirit Himself intercedes
for us with groanings too deep for words”
(Romans 8:26). These “groanings” may take
the form of a “prayer language” in which we
speak to God directly in a language that
only He understands.
HOW SHOULD I PRAY?
When Jesus’ disciples asked Him how to pray,
He gave them what we know as the Lord’s
Prayer (Mathew 6:9-13). As you meditate on
each phrase, you’ll see how the Lord’s
Prayer touches on each fact of our lives and
God’s character. It is a wonderfully
complete outline for your prayers and a good
model to build on.
As we pray The Lord’s Prayer, we begin by
acknowledging God’s sovereign fatherhood
when we say, “Our Father, who art in
heaven.”
Then, we adore His name. Because His name
represent His nature, we praise His very
being when we say the next phrase, “Hallowed
be Thy name.”
Next, we must be concerned about the
extension of His kingdom. We must care that
people should come to know Him and submit to
Him, so we say, “Thy kingdom come. Thy will
be done, on earth as it is in heaven.”
Then. we turn to our personal concerns and
ask God for our daily bread – not only
literal bread, but whatever we need to carry
out His work. This prayer is for His daily
provision for our immediate needs, and so we
pray, “Give us this day our daily bread.”
Next comes a prayer of release from sin and
guilt, the prayer of confession, repentance,
and forgiveness; “And forgive us our debts,
as we also have forgiven our debtors.” Here
we are asking God for His grace in our
relationships with other people, because His
forgiveness of us and our forgiveness of
others go hand in hand. If we are going to
expect answered prayer, we must be willing
to forgive other people, even as God is
willing to forgive us.
Finally, we seek God’s protection from
temptation and evil. “And do not lead us
into temptation, but deliver us from evil.”
We ask Him to keep us walking in His way so
that we might be covered by His power and
anointing and might not be susceptible to
evil influences.
Another way to pray is to organize your
prayer time according to the different modes
of prayer. The first part should be praise
of our heavenly Father, followed by
intercession for the needs of others.
Then, in prayers of petition, you ask for
your own needs to be met. All prayer should
close with praise and thanksgiving to our
Father, who out of His love for us provides
answers to our prayers. Conclude prayer with
praise like Jesus concluded The Lord’s
Prayer saying, “For Thine is the kingdom and
the power and the glory, forever Amen”
(Matthew 6:13b).
HOW CAN I KNOW THAT GOD WILL ANSWER MY
PRAYER?
The Bible overflows with God’s repeated
promises to hear and answer His children’s
appeals. “And this is the confidence which
we have before Him, that, if we ask anything
according to His will, He hears us. And if
we know that He hears us in whatever we ask,
we know that we have the requests which we
have asked from Him” (1 John 5:14, 15). To
pray according to God’s will means to pray
in a way that is consistent with the
principles in His Word.
The Bible shows us that a righteous person’s
prayers will be answered: “The effective
prayer of a righteous man can accomplish
much” (James 5:16). But righteousness means
a lot more than “clean living”. It means
depending on Jesus Christ for answers to
every problem you face. The Old Testament
prophet Elijah was one such “righteous man”;
“He prayed earnestly that it might not rain;
and it did not rain on the earth for three
years and six months. And he prayed again,
and the sky poured rain, and the earth
produced its fruit” (James 5:17, 18). If you
need to call forth showers of blessing in a
dry and barren situation, remember that the
key is righteousness - your position
according to God’s promises.
As you commit your requests to Him, believe
that His will is being done according to the
greatness of His power and wisdom. Don’t
underestimate God’s ability to make a way
for you when one doesn’t seem possible. With
our limited understanding and abilities, we
often forget His boundless wisdom and power.
Concerning faith, be like Abraham when you
pray. The Bible says of Abraham, ”With
respect to the promise of God, he (Abraham)
did not waver in unbelief, but grew strong
in faith, giving glory to God, and being
fully assured that what He had promised, He
was able also to perform” (Romans 4:20, 21).
Lastly, Jesus told us to pray in His name
(John 14:13, 14). He is the Architect,
Creator, and Sustainer of all that is, and
He promises in His words to the disciples:
“All things for which you pray and ask,
believe that you have received them, and
they shall be granted you” (Mark 11:24). No
obstacle is too great to withstand His
power: “Truly I say to you, whoever says to
this mountain, ‘Be taken up and cast into
the sea’, and does not doubt in his heart,
but believes that what he says is going to
happen, it shall be granted him” (Mark
11:23). Begin on a regular basis to pray
about the biggest obstacle you face, and
command that particular personal mountain to
move by the power of the name of Jesus.
HOW CAN I KNOW GOD’S WILL?
God’s will is best understood through a
combination of different sources - sources
that balance and complement one another and
protect the believer from errors. The first
source is the Bible. If you are familiar
with the Bible and can interpret it and
understand it clearly, you will know the
will of God, because He has laid it out for
us there.
Another major source for knowing the will of
God is prayer, in which you communicate with
God and learn what pleases Him. The Bible
says, “Let the peace of Christ rule in your
hearts…” (Colossians 3:15). That inner peace
that you experience when you are in
communion with Him (or the lack of it) can
show you whether you are praying according
to God’s will.
God also reveals His will for us through
godly counselors - people whose wisdom and
walk with the Lord you can trust. We may
sometimes discern His will through
circumstances that seem to favor or hinder a
course of action; but remember, in whatever
way God reveals His will to you, it must
agree with His Word, the Bible. He will not
oppose Himself, “for He cannot deny Himself”
(2 Timothy 2:13).
Once we have learned God’s will, we must
stay in it, abiding in the Lord Jesus who
said, “If you abide in Me, and My words
abide in you, ask whatever you wish, and it
shall be done for you” (John 15:7). We
cannot abide in Jesus and at the same time
keep holding on to unbelief, unforgiveness,
resentment, or bitterness. Such sins will
keep us from that intimate relationship that
He desires with us, and they will cloud our
ability to know His will (Psalm 66:18).
WHAT ABOUT UNANSWERED PRAYER?
Nowhere in His Word does God promise that
all of His answers will be instantaneous.
Unfortunately, far too many people measure
God’s response by what they are immediately
able to see with their natural capacities.
We must wait on the Lord if need be.
“Now faith is the assurance of things hoped
for, the conviction of things not seen”
(Hebrews 11:1). Faith requires we expect an
answer to prayer whether we “see” it
immediately or not. Many people have become
disappointed and discouraged because they
did not see the answers to their prayers at
the time when they thought they should.
If an answer is delayed, don’t doubt.
Doubting only undermines our ability to see
any of our prayers answered. The Bible says
of one who prays, “But let him ask in faith
without any doubting, for the one who doubts
is like the surf of the sea driven and
tossed by the wind. For let not that man
expect that he will receive anything from
the Lord” (James 1:6, 7).
Many times we think that God has failed to
answer a prayer and that He has not honored
His Word, when actually He is working out
something in our lives far greater than we
had imagined possible. We must be patient
and bear in mind that His ways are far
beyond ours: “For as the heavens are higher
than the earth, so are My ways higher than
your ways” (Isaiah 55:9).
IS IT PERMISSIBLE TO PRAY MORE THAN ONCE
FOR SOMETHING?
Some people teach that if we pray once, that
is sufficient, and any prayer beyond that is
evidence of a lack of faith. This is not
consistent with God’s Word. Jesus taught in
Luke, chapter 18, that at all times we ought
to pray and not lose heart. He used the
parable of the unrighteous judge and the
helpless widow who kept on pleading with him
for legal protection. Because of her
persistence, the judge granted her request.
In the same way, Jesus taught, the constant
cries of God’s children are heard and their
prayers answered. This is because each time
we pray about a situation, we pray in faith,
believing God hears us and is responding to
our prayer.
Jesus also said, “Ask and it shall be given
to you; seek and you shall find; knock, and
it shall be opened to you. For everyone who
asks receives, and he who seeks finds, and
to him who knocks it shall be opened”
(Matthew 7:7- 8).
We are also told to “pray without ceasing”
(1 Thessalonians 5:17). Rather than ask if
it’s alright to pray again and again about a
thing, perhaps we should ask if it’s right
to ever stop praying about it until we
receive an answer. Through our constant
believing prayer, we not only receive
answers, but we acquire a growing maturity
in our life in Christ.
YOU CAN BREATHE EASIER
Now that you understand God’s desire for you
to talk with Him constantly and His promise
to answer your prayers, you can start
praying with boldness and with the
confidence that right now He is revealing
answers to the dilemmas and uncertainties
you face. Now your spirit will begin growing
strong and vigorous with the deep, life-
giving breath of prayer. God is supplying
what you lack and honoring your petitions
according to His will. So, as you praise Him
in your time of prayer, remember to praise
Him as the One who hears and answers.
Remember to give thanks often that He is not
far away but near you, providing for you,
fighting your battles, and directing your
choices.
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