Sermon for the 19th
Sunday after Pentecost
(Proper 21)
Text: James 5:13 Are any among you in trouble? They should pray. Are any among you happy? They should sing praises. … The prayer of a good person has a powerful effect. |
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Does prayer really matter?
As I was
reading and thinking about the text for this week from the Letter of James, I
realised that I had more questions than answers about is said about prayer.
Maybe it was the past experiences that came to mind that led me to want
to argue with James. Let me
explain.
He says,
Are any of you in trouble, suffering, enduring hardship?
Then you should pray.
Are any of you happy, having received many blessings from God?
Then you should pray and sing songs of praise.
Are any of you sick? Then pray and
the Lord will restore you to health and make you whole.
Are any of you sinners needing forgiveness? Then pray and confess to one
another.
James sums up saying, “The prayer of a
good (upright) person has a powerful effect”
(James 5:17a). And then James refers
to Elijah who prayed fervently that it wouldn’t rain, and it didn’t rain for
three and a half years. Then he
prayed again for rain and heaven opened and the drought was broken.
Here is my
dilemma. Overall, I can’t disagree
with what James has written here but the problem is this – he is so black and
white when it comes to prayer.
Pray and this will happen.
Pray and the Lord will make you well.
Like Elijah, pray and God will make it rain.
Pray and God will get you through your troubles.
I don’t know about you, but in real life, do these things work out quite like
that?
Some examples.
Two sets of parents are sitting next to the hospital beds of their very
sick children, both with serious cancer.
Both sets of parents are constant in their prayers that their little one
would be saved from this terrible disease.
As time went on one child was discharged, the cancer was in remission,
and went home, while the other died and left his parents grief-stricken.
They were
people of faith who prayed sincere prayers, but the outcome was so different.
Didn’t we hear James say today,
“This prayer made in faith will heal the sick; the Lord will restore them to
health” (James 5:15a)? What bothers so many is the inconsistency in the way
God answers the prayers of the faithful.
Jesus says, “Ask and you will
receive”, but is that the case in every situation?
Philip Yancey
wrote a book entitled Disappointment with
God and received a mountain of mail detailing how friends, supporters and
congregations began with high hopes as they prayed for help and healing for
people with breast cancer, brain tumours, pancreatic cancer and healing after
surgery and accidents, only to have their hopes dashed with disappointment. It
seemed their faith was dangling on a thin thread of unanswered prayer.
Some blamed themselves for not having enough faith or a proper faith
because if they had, the results would have been different.
I might add that if an answer to our prayers depended on the quality and
quantity of our faith, then we needn’t bother God at all.
Here’s another
dilemma. It has been pointed out
that the peaceful changeover of power and the collapse of apartheid in South
Africa came because of the prayers of many people in Africa and around the
world. When Nelson Mandela was
released from prison and became the first elected black president, there could
have been massive retaliations and terrible bloodshed.
In that sense God answered the prayers for peace.
But while these prayers were being spoken over many years, how many South
Africans faced torture and execution by police hit squads, their homes
destroyed, innocent people killed and often simply disappeared.
Isn’t it possible that God was a bit tardy and could have spared so many
people cruelty and hardship if he had answered those prayers sooner?
Or was there a greater plan?
Every day a
missionary couple in India and their young children prayed for peace in their
local community, their new church, the people they served and for God’s
protection over themselves as they went about their everyday tasks.
One day they were attacked and the whole family was murdered. The
question is inevitable – why didn’t God answer their prayer?
The whole topic
of prayer is a complex one – too big to cover everything today.
I have no doubt that God answers prayer and what James is telling us is
true, “The prayer of a good person has a
powerful effect” but what bothers me is the seemingly inconsistent and
random way God answers our prayers?
Sometimes we
can explain this inconsistency in God’s answers because it’s the way we pray.
We pray thinking that God is at our disposal to do our bidding.
“Lord, I’m running late for this appointment and I badly need a parking space”.
Or “Lord, please give us a sunny day for today’s soccer game.
I’m sick of standing in the rain”.
Or the person who kicks a goal and points to the sky as if to say, “I kicked the
ball and God did the rest”.
We know the disciples made the same mistake when they asked for prominent
positions in God’s kingdom. Our
selfishness, our focus on ourselves gets in the way of our prayers, and we can
understand God shaking his head when we treat him as our personal genie.
Of course,
there is the problem of people praying for opposite things.
Two farmers are praying for their crops.
One a wheat farmer who wants nice warm dry weather to ripen his crop and
another farmer just across the road who grows vegies wants rain to push along
his crop ready for the market. We
can understand God’s lack of an answer to such contradictory prayers and perhaps
he can look into the heart of the pray-er and see that contradictory prayers
very rarely consider the needs of the other person.
We know that
God answers prayers not according to our schedule but in his time.
Sometimes it’s better that our prayers are unanswered.
Country singer
Garth Brooks had a hit song, “Thank God
for Unanswered Prayers”, in which he recalls his impassioned prayers for God
to melt the heart of his high school sweet heart.
He was so sure this was the girl for him.
Some years later he met her again and it was clear that this would have
been a terrible mistake. He sings,
“Just because he doesn’t answer, doesn’t
mean he don’t care. Some of God’s
greatest gifts are unanswered prayers”.
To this point
I’ve explained some of the obvious reasons why God doesn’t answer some of our
prayers – either they are selfish, and we are treating God like our own personal
genie to fix things what we can fix ourselves; or contradictory prayers are
spoken equally fervently, or God knows the right time and the best answer to our
prayer.
Sometimes God
simply and straight out doesn’t answer.
Moses, Job, Jonah and Elijah all prayed to die – God ignored their
prayers. Several times the armies
of Israel prayed for victory over their enemies, but they were soundly defeated
– this led the people to some deep soul-searching and a renewed relationship
with God.
Having said all that, I come back
to my original question that I asked when James makes it quite clear that prayer
is powerful and effective. He
says without any explanation, “Are
any among you in trouble? They should pray. Are any among you sick? The prayer
made in faith will heal the sick; the Lord will restore them to health. Pray for
forgiveness and you will be healed. … The prayer of a good person has a powerful
effect”.
Jesus said,
“If you believe, you will receive whatever you ask for in prayer” (Matthew
21:22)
There are 3 clear presumptions we get from what the Bible says about prayer.
1.
God wants us to pray and
invites us to pray.
2.
He listens to our prayers,
even though we can get everything so awfully wrong.
3.
God made us and cares for us
even though we might think that our corner of the world is really small compared
with the big things that are happening in other places.
He asks us to
trust his love and goodness to answer our prayers just as a child trusts a
parent. He knows us, our
circumstances, our future, the direction our life is taking, the people who are
affected by our lives and a whole lot more – to put it like this – he knows a
lot more about each one of us than we know about ourselves.
When it comes
to the way he answers our prayers, he answers in a way that considers the bigger
picture. It’s this bigger picture
that we can’t see. We can only see
what’s happening immediately around us and in front us – our loving God sees a
lot more then we can see and lovingly answers with this in mind.
In the end we
need to come to the same conclusion as the apostle Paul.
“Oh, what a wonderful God we have! How
great are his riches and wisdom and knowledge! How impossible it is for us to
understand his decisions and his methods!
For who can know what the Lord is thinking? Who knows enough to be his
counsellor?” (Romans 11:33-34)
When
we think that God is ignoring our prayers, contradicting our requests; when we
disagree with God’s answers, question him, shout at him, weep tears of sadness
and grief, we are looking at his answers from our earthly time-bound
perspective. Our emotions and
feelings overwhelm us, but the truth is this as expressed in Psalm 139,
You
know everything about me.…
You know everything I do.
You know what I am going to say
even before I say it, Lord.
You go before me and follow me. …
Such knowledge is too wonderful for me,
too great for me to understand! (Psalm 139:1b-6)
God knows us intimately and he does care
about us because he is our heavenly parent.
We know that when a child suffers, a parent suffers as well.
When we come to him with our anguished requests, our helplessness, our
tears of pain whether they are tears from physical pain or tears from a heart
that is hurting, our heavenly Father feels that pain.
I, along
with many others, will never be able to fathom the role prayer plays in events
like the path that a cyclone takes, events like tsunamis and wars, or how God
answers prayers of opposing political ideologies or theological debates that we
argue passionately from time to time in the church, but the strange thing is
this – God wants us to pray about these things and I know as we pray for these
things we become more aware and more caring about our own world and the people
for whom we are praying.
God knows us. He is our Father in
heaven. He has shown us how much he
loves us in his Son. The question
remains for each of us, “How can I, in an even greater way frame every day with
prayer, trusting God more and relying on his love to answer my needs and those
for whom I am praying.”
© Pastor Vince
Gerhardy
E-mail:
sermonsonthenet@outlook.com
30th September, 2018