Transformative Power of Prayer in Believer's Life

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1) "I think if you go at prayer with just the idea that it's just a transactional thing, I think you're going to have a real difficult time. Because here's the reality, is that God does answer prayers, but he answers them the way that he sees fit to answer them. And that's why we're called to pray according. According to God's will. Because if we're praying according to our will, we don't really know what God is doing in the context of everything that's going on. Timothy Keller, he tells us that if we knew all the things that Jesus knew, if we knew all the things that God knew, the prayers that we would pray would be very, very different. And so we're admonished to pray according to the will of God." [40:02] (37 seconds) (Download raw clip | Download cropped clip)
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2) "I don't know about you, but I'm always disappointed at my prayer life. When I look at my prayer life, I'm convinced that I am not matching up to what my prayer life should look like. And I think that if we were honest with ourselves, we could probably say the same thing, that our prayer life doesn't really match up to what we probably envision a prayer life should look like. And the reality is, is that we are. We're broken. We're fallen. We operate in the flesh. We are drawn by the flesh. We are at war with the flesh. And the last thing the flesh wants to do is rely on God. And so we have a problem that's there. We're fundamentally prone towards anything that has to do with a reliance on God. And prayer is one of those things." [41:36] (43 seconds) ( | | )

3) "Prayer is important because it's important to Jesus. So when we ask that question of why did Jesus pray? Well, it was important to Jesus. And if it's important to Jesus, we also should take on this life of prayer. As difficult as it can be sometimes, as much as we bungle it, according to J.C. Ryle, as much as we fall short of what prayer should look like, it is still something that we should strive for and something that we should pray for. We should tap into if for any other reason than it was important to Jesus to do. Jesus, who was God, he was the son of God. He was God in the flesh." [42:40] (37 seconds) ( | | )

4) "If you're not praying, then you are quietly confident that time, money, and talent are all that you need. Isn't that powerful? And yet here we are, we struggle so hard to pray. Just like the disciples, we struggle so hard to pray. Yet prayer is important. It shows that we are relying on God, not the things of this world. And the reality is, is that we in this culture, in our culture, we have so many crutches, so many things that we can rely on outside of God. That it makes it very, very difficult. I think that that's why God talked about the difficulty of a rich person. Jesus, in a lot of his messages, when he's talking to the Pharisees and the Sadducees and the people of Israel, often he talked about how money could be an evil. And the reason it could be is because it was a crutch. It was something that you would rely on other than God." [47:30] (50 seconds) ( | | )

5) "Jesus prayed to demonstrate communion with God. In other words, he used prayer as a way to build up a relationship with God. Luke chapter 5, verse 16, he says, yet he often withdrew to a deserted place and prayed. You'll see many places in scripture where Jesus would walk away from the disciples and go pray. There'd be times when the disciples would ask, where is Jesus? And they would find him praying. There were a lot of times when he would minister to the crowds, the big crowds that were following him. And he would finally tell his disciples, I've got to get away. I've got to get away. And I've got to spend time with my heavenly father. He would use those opportunities to commune with God." [49:01] (37 seconds) ( | | )

6) "Jesus prayed to demonstrate his dependence on God. We just talked about all these other things that we tend to put our trust in, time and talent and money and all sorts of other crutches. But what Jesus wanted to demonstrate is that he needed to depend on God. And that's where we've got to get to. We've got to get to a place where we depend on God. You know, we can live in the joys and the highs of life, and we can think on the positive things of God. But if we don't learn to depend on God in the midst of our joy and our sorrows, we're going to struggle. We see that John 5, 19 said this, Jesus replied, Jesus was totally dependent on God. He saw that he couldn't do anything of his own strength and his own power." [50:28] (60 seconds) ( | | )

7) "Jesus prayed to demonstrate glorification to God. In other words, he used prayer as a mechanism to glorify God. We see that in John chapter 17. John chapter 17, by the way, is a great chapter on prayer. If you want to read about prayer and having a heart of prayer, go home this week and read John chapter 17. But verses 1 through 5, it says this, Jesus spoke these things, looked up to heaven and said, Father, the hour has come. Glorify your son so that the son may glorify you. Since you have given him authority over all people so that he may give eternal life to everyone you have given him. This is, eternal life, that they may know you, the only true God, and the one you have sent, Jesus Christ." [54:03] (49 seconds) ( | | )

8) "Prayer does not fit us for the greater work. Prayer is the greater Prayer does not fit us. In other words, we're not praying to have strength to do the greater work. From Oswald's perspective, prayer is the greater work. That is the matter. So once again, Philippians 4, 4 through 9, rejoice in the Lord, always. Again, I will say rejoice, rejoice. Let's not fear taking our petitions before God. Let's not get so caught up in the transactional aspect of, Lord, if I ask for this and you give me this, that is a part of prayer. But at the end of the day, prayer is transactional, yes, but relational even more so when we look at it through the lens of why Jesus prayed. When we pray, we're praying to build a relationship with God and we're winning the battle when we're in prayer." [01:02:49] (61 seconds) ( | | )

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