Overcoming Obstacles to Deepen Your Prayer Life

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A proper understanding of the Gospel helps us see how our guilt can be a motivator to pray, not an obstacle. After all, wasn't it the Lord Jesus who invites us to pray, "forgive us our debts" in the Lord's Prayer? This means that God not only expects us to pray for forgiveness but that we can't be faithful Christians without it. [00:00:52]

Hebrews 4:15 and 16 says, "For we do not have a high priest who is unable to sympathize with our weaknesses, but one who in every respect has been tempted as we are, yet without sin. Let us then with confidence draw near to the throne of grace, that we may receive mercy and find grace to help in time of need." [00:01:44]

Legalism is trying to earn God's approval by our works, in this case, our prayers or our prayer life. Legalism often adds rules to our faith that God never gave us, and there are two main ways we can be legalistic about prayer: thinking too much about the quality and the quantity of our prayers. [00:04:09]

Thankfully, a glance at Biblical teaching on prayer shows that God cares about our heart posture, prayer, and the content of our prayers instead of more arbitrary measures like quantity or quality. I'd like to give recovering legalists some encouragement as we think about what God wants and doesn't want in terms of the quality and quantity of our prayers. [00:04:56]

The Bible offers no time length prescriptions or quotas for our prayers. You have to pray x times a day for X number of minutes for it to count in God's eyes. If it did, we would probably care more about watching a clock or checking off boxes to fulfill spiritual duties than actually seeking God. [00:06:44]

Have you ever felt like God was giving you the silent treatment? You pray repeatedly for things, and yet it seems like God isn't listening. Maybe you understand that God cares for you, but you struggle because you haven't received the answer to your prayer that you were looking for. [00:09:34]

Faith is exactly what you and I need to get through these frustrating times of silence. We may not know exactly what is going on, but we can keep praying in confidence. Before we see why, let's quickly look at a few biblical reasons why God may not receive our prayers, and note that this is different from God not hearing us. [00:10:26]

God always answers our prayers but often doesn't do so in the timing we want or in the ways we prefer. His answers may come as a yes, as a no, or as a wait. And waiting is often the hardest part, isn't it? I can usually deal with a no, but waiting for answers can be painful. [00:14:02]

God's sovereignty and human responsibility is a big topic, but I'm convinced that this is an easy obstacle to overcome as it relates to prayer. So let's look at three propositions that can help us: Proposition one, God sovereignly governs the world. Ephesians 1:11 says God works all things according to the counsel of his will. [00:15:59]

God has determined to sovereignly use our prayers for his purposes. To think that God's sovereignty makes prayer unnecessary or unfruitful fails to acknowledge that God is sovereign even over our prayers and that God has decided in all his great wisdom to use the prayers of imperfect people like us as a means to carry out his purposes in the world. [00:17:17]

What is your motivation for prayer? Okay, you know and I know that the answer should be and is the glory of God. Perhaps you've known that for ages, but is that always the motivation of your heart? I wish I could say I've always had perfect motives for prayer, but the truth is I haven't. [00:20:46]

Let me suggest it is simply remembering who God is and what he has done. 1 Corinthians 15:10, the Apostle Paul shares with us what drove him forward in his gospel work. We can apply what he says to prayer: "By the grace of God, I am what I am, and his grace toward me was not in vain." [00:21:55]

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