Prayer Power
PRAYER
POWER
By
David Brandt Berg
The Lord
leaves a
The
Lord leaves a lot up to us—our faith, our prayers and what we want done. If we
stir ourselves to pray for a needy person or situation, then God will stir
Himself to do something about it. A lot of people have a lazy attitude and seem
to think the Lord will do it all no matter what, but the truth of the matter
is, a lot depends on us. He wants us to show concern and pray, and to be
specific about what we want Him to do.
If we really believe, every prayer is heard and answered.
But if we don’t pray, it is not done. An awful lot depends on us. We need to
visualize the people we’re praying for and pray specifically for the Lord to do
this or that for them.
GOD WROTE THE RULES OF THE GAME, AND HE FIRED THE BREAK SHOT The very intensity with which we pray and really mean
it or desire it is reflected in the answer. Like a radio beam that hits a
satellite, our prayer is reflected according to the intensity of the original
beam. The power with which it is sent determines the power that is reflected
and the power that is received. The result of our prayer—the answer or help
that the person we pray for receives—is determined by the power of our prayer
for him. He is not going to receive any more than we send.
Why do
certain answers take longer to come than others? Some prayers are like radio
waves being bounced off a distant planet: It may take years to get the answer,
but it will eventually come.
Also,
while we would like for our prayers to be answered immediately, the Lord may
know that it’s not the best time. It’s sort of like sending a spacecraft to the
moon, the timing of which is dependent on both the position of the earth and
the position of the moon. Why do they pick a certain day to send it? Because
the moon needs to be at its closest point to the earth when the spacecraft
arrives, so that when it’s time to leave, the moon will still be close enough
for the spacecraft to get home.
The game of pocket billiards, or pool, also makes a fitting
analogy. There are a number of variations of the game, but all are played on a
six-pocket billiard table and have the same basic object: to use a cue ball to
knock other balls into the pockets.
The player controls the original force and direction in
which the cue ball is set in motion, and that determines everything else that
happens. The most common variations of the game start off with 15 numbered
object balls arranged in a tight triangle toward the far end of the table. One
player takes the opening shot, or break shot, to scatter the balls around the
table. Then each player, in turn, tries to knock as many of the object balls as
he can into the pockets. He is not allowed to move any of the balls by hand
from the positions they land in—not even the cue ball, except in special
situations. He must try to shoot the cue ball in such a way that it strikes
another ball at just the right angle to knock it or one of the other object
balls into a pocket, using one or more of the side cushions, if necessary.
Prayer
works much the same way. God wrote the rules of the game, and He fired the
break shot. People and situations are out there in the positions He destined
them to be in, and we have to play by His rules. He sets the original scheme of
things, and we need to try to do something with what He has set up.
The position of each of the people or situations involved
has a major bearing on what happens next, but the way in which we pray for them
also helps determine the outcome. The way we word or express our prayer and the
way we ask God to answer are like the way we hit the cue ball. The force, the
angle and the spin we put on it all work together to help determine the
outcome.
Depending
on the variation of the game that is being played, the players must hit the
numbered balls into the pockets in a certain sequence. They can’t hit a certain
ball into a pocket until its number comes up, and of course the One who created
the game numbered the balls.
As one
of the players, you don’t control where on the table that numbered ball or the
cue ball are going to be when it’s your turn to shoot. Those factors are
determined by the way the balls were scattered in the first place, and what’s happened
since then. You have to wait until the cue ball and your target ball are in
good positions in relation to one of the pockets, and then you must shoot just
right to get the target ball to go where you want it to.
The
lead player is God. He made the break shot that scattered the balls originally.
Shot by shot, He and you and the other players keep changing the position of
the balls. The only difference is, God is not trying to beat you. He’s actually
trying to help you win, if you’re on His side.
It’s like playing doubles: Your partner is God, and your
opponents are the Devil and his ilk. Your partner, God, tries to set up your
next shot for you. But of course, it doesn’t matter how good God sets things
up, if you don’t shoot straight, it won’t do any good.
And no matter how good your aim is, that target ball
(the person or situation you’re praying about) has to be in a certain position
for you to be able to hit it right. You may be doing everything right, but if
the path to the object of your prayer is obstructed, your prayer is not going
to get through. A lot depends on the recipient of your prayers, too. To get the
benefit of your prayer, you have to be in the right position and he
has to be in the right position.
Let’s take radio waves for another illustration: Say you’re
going to send a radio message via satellite, for someone on the other side of
the world to pick up. First of all, your transmitter won’t have any power
unless it’s plugged into the current. Next, your transmitter has to be in good
condition. If it’s faulty or out of whack or tuned to the wrong frequency, it
won’t transmit properly and it won’t get the message through clearly. Also, the
antenna has to be aimed so that the message is beamed in exactly the right
direction to hit the relay satellite.
In this
illustration, you are the transmitter and antenna, the Holy Spirit provides the
power, and God’s will is the satellite. God controls and limits the direction
of your prayer, in a sense, because if you don’t beam it in the general area of
His satellite, it will miss altogether. The satellite of God’s will is on a
fixed orbit that you can’t change—like God’s overall plan that is fixed. You
must use your antenna to aim your prayer within the limits of that fixed orbit.
It won’t do a bit of good if you’re firing off in some other direction. You’ve
got to be on target.
If
you’re in tune, the Holy Spirit directs your prayer. If your set is automated
so that the Holy Spirit is in control, then it’s automatically tuned just
right—power, beam, direction, everything—by the Lord’s own computer, and it
can’t miss! But if you’ve been fooling around with the dials and the settings,
you can mess up the whole works by trying to do it your way. Also, the
satellite of God’s will has to be in just the right position to bounce it down
to the intended recipient, and the recipient has got to be in just the right
position and have his receiver turned on in order to receive it.
There are several factors that affect the whole process of
prayer, any one of which could explain why we don’t always get the answer we
ask for right away. The trouble may be with us, or maybe it’s not God’s time
because His satellite isn’t in the right position yet, or the trouble may be at
the other end.
Prayer
depends on these four principal factors: your position, God’s position, the
position of the person or situation you’re praying for, and the way you pray.
In the pocket billiards illustration, it depends on the
positions of the cue ball, the target ball, the pocket, and the way you shoot.
You don’t control the outcome completely, the person you’re praying for doesn’t
control it completely, and God has specifically limited Himself not to control
it completely, but to let it be affected by these other factors.
In the radio transmission illustration, the position of
His satellite is set, but how it is used depends on you and the recipient. In
other words, God has set the position of His overall plans, but how you fit
into the plan depends on your position, the position of the person or thing
you’re praying for, and whether or not your beam is aimed right to hit the
satellite.
YOU ARE THE TRANSMITTER AND ANTENNA, THE HOLY SPIRIT PROVIDES THE POWER, AND GOD’S WILL IS THE SATELLITE. So God
has left a lot up to you and a lot up to them. He will always do
His part. His orbit is set, and His satellite will always be where it’s
supposed to be at any given time. So the only things that will change the
outcome are your position, the recipient’s position, and the power and
direction of your transmission.
So
that’s how prayer works. If it’s according to God’s will—what He knows is best
for everyone concerned—and you and the object of your prayer are in the right
position and you aim straight, your prayer will hit the target and have the
desired effect!
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