Dictionary: Prayer

A distinction needs to be made between the various occurrences of the words “pray” and “prayer” in most translations of the Bible and the modern connotation of the same words. In the OT, the main Hebrew words translated as “to pray” and “prayer” (palal and tepillah) refer to the act of bringing a petition or request before God. They do not normally, if ever, refer to the other elements that we today think of as being included in the act of praying, such as praise or thanksgiving. The same is the case in the NT, where the main Greek words translated “to pray” and “prayer” (proseuchomai and proseuchē) also specifically denote making a petition or request to God. But other words and constructions in both Testaments are also translated “to pray” and “prayer,” and this article will deal with the larger concept, including praise, thanksgiving, petition, and confession, as opposed to the narrower meaning of the particular Hebrew and Greek terms (see also Praise; Thanksgiving; Worship).

Old Testament

In the OT there is no language or understanding comparable to modern ways of talking about prayer as conversational or dialogical. Prayer does not involve mutuality. Prayer is something that humans offer to God, and the situation is never reversed; God does not pray to humans. Understanding this preserves the proper distinction between the sovereign God and the praying subject. Therefore, prayers in the OT are reverential. Some OT prayers have extended introductions, such as that found in Neh. 1:5, that seem to pile up names for God. These should be seen as instances not of stiltedness or ostentation, but rather as setting up a kind of “buffer zone” in recognition of the distance between the Creator and the creature. In the NT, compare the same phenomenon in Eph. 1:17.

Many of the prayers in the OT are explicitly set in a covenantal context. God owes nothing to his creatures, but God has sworn to be faithful to those with whom he has entered into covenant. Thus, many OT prayers specifically appeal to the covenant as a motivation for both those praying and God’s answering (1 Kings 8:23–25; Neh. 1:5–11; 9:32; Pss. 25:10–11; 44:17–26; 74:20; 89:39–49). In postexilic books such as Ezra, Nehemiah, and Daniel, an important feature in the recorded prayers is the use of prior Scripture, praying God’s words (many times covenantal) back to him (in the NT, see Acts 4:24–30). Also, the closeness engendered by the covenant relationship between God and his people was unique in the ancient Near Eastern context. So Moses can marvel, “What other nation is so great as to have their gods near them the way the Lord our God is near us whenever we pray to him?” (Deut. 4:7).

Prayer must be made from a heart that is right toward God. There is no guarantee that God will hear every prayer (Ps. 66:18; Prov. 1:28; Isa. 1:15; 59:2). For the most part, the “rightness” that God requires in prayer is “a broken and contrite heart” (Ps. 51:17; cf. Isa. 66:2).

Although several passages talk about prayer in the context of sacrifice (e.g., Gen. 13:4), there is surprisingly little emphasis on prayer in the legal texts about sacrifice in the Pentateuch, no prescriptions for the kinds of prayer or the words that are to be said in connection with the sacrifices. Interestingly, however, in later, perhaps postexilic contexts, where there is no temple and therefore no sacrifice, we find texts such as Ps. 141:2, where the petitioner asks God to accept prayer as if it were an offering of incense and the evening sacrifice (cf. Prov. 15:8; in the NT, see Rev. 5:8).

A presupposition of prayer in the OT is that God hears prayer and may indeed answer and effect the change being requested. Prayer is not primarily about changing the psychological state or the heart of the one praying, but rather about God changing the circumstances of the one praying.

There is a striking honesty, some would even say brashness, evident in many OT prayers. Jeremiah laments that God has deceived both the people (Jer. 4:10) and Jeremiah himself (20:7) and complains about God’s justice (12:1–4). Job stands, as it were, in God’s face and demands that the Almighty answer his questions (Job 31:35–37). The psalmist accuses God of having broken his covenant promises (Ps. 89:39). While it is true that God does, to some extent, rebuke Jeremiah and Job (Jer. 12:5; Job 38–42), he does not ignore them or cast them aside. This would seem, ultimately, to encourage such honesty and boldness on the part of those who pray.

Literarily, accounts of prayers in narratives serve to provide characterizations of the ones praying. The recorded prayers of people such as Abraham, Moses, Hannah, Ezra, and Nehemiah demonstrate their true piety and humility before God. By contrast, the prayer of Jonah recorded in Jon. 2, in its narrative context, betrays a certain hypocrisy on the part of the reluctant prophet.

New Testament

The depiction of prayer in the NT is largely consistent with that of the OT, but there are important developments.

Jesus tells his disciples to address God as “Father” (Matt. 6:9; cf. Rom. 8:15; Gal. 4:6). Although recent scholarship has demonstrated that “Abba” is not the equivalent of our “daddy,” it expresses a certain intimacy that goes beyond what was prevalent at the time, but retains an element of reverence as well. God is not just “Father,” but “our Father in heaven” (Matt. 6:9). Even Jesus addresses God as “Holy Father” (John 17:11), “Righteous Father” (John 17:25), and “Father, Lord of heaven and earth” (Matt. 11:25). And Paul, as mentioned earlier, uses a buffer zone, rarely in his epistles using the word “Father” by itself, but instead referring to “God our Father” (e.g., Rom. 1:7) and frequently using the phrase “the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ” (Rom. 15:6; 2 Cor. 1:3; 11:31; Eph. 1:3; cf. Eph. 1:17; Col. 1:3). God is our Father, but still he is a Father before whom one reverently kneels (Eph. 3:14).

Prayer to God is now to be made in the name of Jesus (Matt. 18:19–20; John 14:13; 15:16; 16:23–26). While there is some debate as to the exact nuance of this idea, it seems clear that, at the very least, prayers in Jesus’ name need to be ones that Jesus would affirm and are in accordance with his holy character and expressed will. It is, in essence, saying to God that the prayer being offered is one that Jesus would approve.

Prayer can also be made to Jesus (John 14:14), and such devotion to him in the early church is evidence of his being regarded as deity. The instances of this in the NT are rare, however, and generally either exclamatory or rhetorical (Acts 7:59; 1 Cor. 16:22; Rev. 22:20). The norm would still seem to be that prayer is to be made to the Father, through Jesus’ name.

Unlike anything prior in the OT, Jesus tells his followers to pray for their enemies (Matt. 5:44). Jesus and his followers serve as examples (Luke 23:34; Acts 7:60).

The Holy Spirit plays a vital role in prayers. It is by him that we are able to call out, “Abba, Father” (Rom. 8:15; Gal. 4:6). The Spirit himself intercedes for us (Rom. 8:26). Our praying is to be done in the Spirit (Eph. 6:18; Jude 20; possibly 1 Cor. 14:15).

Jesus encourages fervent and even continual or repeated prayer (Luke 18:1–8), but not showy or repetitive prayer (Matt. 6:5–8).

Jesus becomes the model of prayer. He prays before important decisions (Luke 6:12–13) and in connection with significant crisis points (Matt. 14:23; 26:36–44; Luke 3:21; 9:29; John 12:27). He offers prayers that are not answered (Luke 22:41–44) and prayers that are (Heb. 5:7). Even as he tells his disciples to always pray and not give up (Luke 18:1 [which is also the meaning of the sometimes overly literalized “pray without ceasing” in 1 Thess. 5:17 NRSV]), so he himself wrestles in prayer (Luke 22:41–44; Heb. 5:7). He has prayed for his disciples (John 17; Luke 22:32), and even now, in heaven, he still intercedes for us (Heb. 7:25). Indeed, our intercession before God’s throne is valid because his is (Heb. 4:14–16).

Showing 251 to 275 of 4877 results

Sermon
Bill Bouknight
... room where the windows opened toward Jerusalem. My favorite place is in the left-front corner of Wilson Chapel where I can look up at the stained-glass window depicting Christ with outstretched arms. Having a specific, reserved place will put you in a prayerful mode as soon as you arrive there. Here is Daniel’s second admonition: HAVE A REGULAR TIME. Daniel prayed three times per day, evening, morning, and noon. Psalm 55:16 tells us that this was the regular Jewish custom: "Evening, morning and noon I ...

Sermon
Robert G. Tuttle
... the leader of the elders of his church. He said, "Jim, I have just read this passage from James. I want you to come over right away and pray for me." The elder replied, "Pastor, I have never done this. I have no special power; you are the Man of Prayer." But the Pastor would not take "No!" for an answer. He said, "Jim, I am dying. You have got to come." The elder arrived. He laid hands on his pastor and prayed. His pastor was healed and soon returned to his church. The Pastor and his elder were so impressed ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... exalted the humble and meek. He hath filled the hungry with good things; and the rich he hath sent empty away." Would you have blamed Roland Hayes if he had said to them, "Oh, how the mighty are fallen!" But that isn't what he did. His years of prayer had helped him overcome bitterness and now saved him from an onslaught of pride. Instead he asked if there was anything he could do to help. He reached into his pocket and pulled out a check from several of his largest concerts. He handed it to his mother's ...

Sermon
Eric Ritz
... a parade of people, but on the 44th person it would stop, zoom in for a close-up of this one man and then continue scanning. It is like a prospector sifting grains of sand and suddenly stopping for a pearl. What is there about this man Jabez and the prayer he prayed that we should remember him 2500 years after his death? Maybe it’s his name. A mother names her son "Jabez" for, she says, he was borne in pain. Names are important in the Bible. In ancient times a name was often given to a child to describe ...

Sermon
Maxie Dunnam
... nor ministry, we must dare to believe that a “learned ministry” is a goal still to be sought. For the sake of the church and the Kingdom, a “learned ministry” must be shaped in character—morally and spiritually—in the context of prayer and spiritual formation. We must clarify what it means to be a holiness school. Justification without sanctification is not a complete salvation. Meister Eckhart warned that “there are many who are willing to follow our Lord halfway—but not the other half ...

Sermon
Maxie Dunnam
... known. In the back of a little book I had been reading, I wrote down some of what I was feeling – words that I intended to share if the position actually became mine to accept. Here is what I wrote: I want to deliberately enter “the school of prayer.” I’ve been an auditor before – not fully matriculated – but I want to be a full-time student. I’ll be willing to share my pilgrimage. I must honestly confess that what I have to share right now is not expertise, but conviction. If you want one who ...

Sermon
J. Howard Olds
... father who kept saying to me, “It’s better to be thought a fool than to speak up and remove all doubt.” I think about that today. On the one hand, enough has already been said. On the other hand, you keep asking. So in a spirit of prayer and deep humility, I share some thoughts with you today that I hope might guide us as we seek our way forward in this diverse body of faith, as citizens of a beloved country in a world that desperately needs to discover community. United Methodists have never been of ...

Sermon
J. Howard Olds
... that speech to everyone who joins that church. Is it any wonder that the Spirit of God is moving through them in a powerful sort of way? You see, when you get people on the same page loving one another and you get the power of the Spirit coming through prayer, only God knows what might happen. The Spirit teaches us to pray and to love. Could you use the Holy Spirit today? III. THE HOLY SPIRIT REMINDS US. In Verse 26 we read, “The Holy Spirit will remind you of everything that I have said to you." It's ...

Luke 11:1-13
Sermon
... I am open to the God who forgives me no matter what I do or don't do, I become, at least, a bit more open to forgiving this person first even if they don't ask for it. Only then can I ask, as I pray the Lord's Prayer, for the for­giveness of my sins. Only when I have first forgiven those who have sinned against me may I stand before my God and pray: for­give me my sins for I have forgiven those who have sinned against me. 1. John McCutcheon, "Forgive Us," This Fire: Politics ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... and are alive through Christ, our life is being sustained by power from above. No matter how bad life may be ‘down here’ on earth, we are connected to the Source of Life, and that connection keeps us going.” (4) For the church, everything begins with prayer. Do you pray for your church? Do you pray for me as your pastor? It would make a difference if you did. The church is not simply another civic organization. It’s not another well-meaning social agency. Either we draw our strength from God, or we ...

Sermon
R. Kevin Mohr
... planted in each one, so that the work of God begun at baptism would bear fruit all through each life and to eternity. That is our prayer for all of our children, for our youth, and for every face we see here this morning, as well as for those who should be here ... brothers’ and sisters’ keepers, concerned for them and their growth in following Jesus and the ways of God’s kingdom. But the prayer of longing is also for us, personally: “Lord, let my heart be good soil!” We pray that God would work the ...

Luke 9:28-36, (37-43a)
Sermon
King Duncan
... you’re here today, and I hope you have an experience in which God speaks to you or strengthens you or becomes real to you in such a way that it changes your life. And that brings us to the second thing we learn from this passage: prayer prepares us to experience God. Prayer opens our mind to God’s presence and God’s will for us. Jesus took Peter, John and James with him up to a mountain to pray. This was Jesus’ regular practice: to go away, often up in the mountains, to pray and spend time with God ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... for, but he refuses to give up. As he says, “It takes courage not to be discouraged.” (6) This is Jesus’ challenge to his disciples. Have the courage not to be discouraged. But there’s a second thing he wanted us to see: persistent prayer is a powerful instrument for advancing the kingdom. Jesus continues the parable: “For some time (the judge) refused. But finally he said to himself, ‘Even though I don’t fear God or care what people think, yet because this widow keeps bothering me, I will ...

Sermon
Walter Kimbrough
... , “Don’t you forget that these are your people.” Obviously, there is a free-flowing spirit between God and Moses. This can be attributed to the fact that God and Moses kept in touch. Are you keeping in touch with God on a daily basis in prayer or is the relationship dying from neglect? Keep in touch. Presence God said to Moses, “My presence will go with you.” Moses said, “How will anyone know that you are pleased with me and with your people unless you go with us?” To paraphrase Moses, “God ...

Sermon
Donald Zelle
... plans! David is not to be lifted up here for what he had done and what he was going to do. God is lifted up in this prayer-text for what he had done and what he was going to do. God had a "no" and a "yes" for David. it was not in God' ... yield or respond to him. Whether we are walking the hilltops of our lives or walking the valleys, we can only walk on our knees. In his prayer, David first gives God humble thanks for what he has done (verses 17-24). Then he prays to God to fulfill that which God said he was ...

Sermon
... week. The surgeon had seen this happen before and so he asked, "Did he belong to a group and did this group pray for him?" They checked it out and learned that was exactly the case. When I hear of experiences like that, I sometimes wonder, "Why don’t my prayers get answered?" The doubts increase when I hear Jesus making a wide-sweeping promise such as he did in the Upper Room as recorded in John 16: "Truly, truly, I say to you, if you ask anything of the Father, he will give it to you in my name." Is ...

Sermon
Wallace H. Kirby
... he came home irritated about something that happened at work, and at the dinner table he took out his irritation on the family, speaking sharply to Mrs. Miller and the children. That night, as he was tucking the same five-year-old into bed, he began the prayer. "Dear God, forgive me for being so fussy at dinner tonight." There was a kind of awed silence. Then very quickly, his little girl went through the familiar "Now I lay me" and the usual God blesses. The next night it happened that Mr. Miller was again ...

Matthew 25:31-46
Sermon
D. Wayne Burkette
... ways. Finally, there is a third response to this complex world of human need. We can, all of us, pray for it. Intercessory prayer can be used as a cop-out, a way of easing a guilty conscience without lifting a finger to offer aid or advocacy ... was weak. You defended me when I was vulnerable; you spoke up for me when no one would listen; you offered yourself for me in your prayers." And the faithful will say, "You must be mistaken, Lord. As much as we might wish we had, we simply never did all that. How could ...

Sermon
Gary W. Houston
... approved of sin. But we find over and over that although he does not approve of sin, he loves sinners. If you and I are to be counted among the harvest, we need to pray for others, have compassion for the lost, and zeal for the Lord’s glory. Prayer reminds us what we are about. Compassion reminds us that others are like us. Zeal reminds us that Jesus Christ works miracles through small people. I remember praying one special day in a church a few years ago when I did not feel my sermons were helping anyone ...

Philippians 4:10-20
Sermon
Raymond Gibson
... to me, ‘My grace is sufficient for you, my power is made perfect in weakness." As a result of his confession of weakness in prayer, Paul was thus able to say, "I will all the more gladly boast of my weaknesses, that the power of Christ may rest upon ... be for us! God is anxious to give us power through our trust in him. When we surrender our weaknesses and problems to him in prayer, he makes his power available to us, power to do all things. The power of Christ is also available from the Bible. The Bible ...

1 Chronicles 29:1-9
Sermon
Bill Bouknight
... even mentions Goliath's name! Nor does he discuss the national wealth. Not one word about the Psalms he has written or how far he has come from humble, shepherd-boy origins. Instead, David offers one of the most beautiful prayers of the Bible, a prayer that ascribes to God all glory, power, and majesty, a prayer in which David humbly asks, "Who are we that we dare to give to you, O Lord, because even what we give to you is something we received from you in the first place." What truths can we harvest from ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... bow his head and speak in a soft voice, the boy asked his mother, "What did Mr. Bryan say to his plate?" (3) For many people prayer has no more real meaning than talking to their plate. It is a ritual, a mindless act, a conditioned response. For others, it is a ... smiling at him, telling him to move forward. And he did, knowing that God was with him. No wonder St. Paul could rejoice. Prayer was something very real for him, he kept his eyes focused on those things that are positive, and he trusted that he could ...

Sermon
Eric Ritz
... ’s tune of the 1960s, "O Lord, please send me a Mercedes-Benz; My friends all drive Porches, I must make amends; Worked hard all my life with no help from my friends, O Lord, please send me a Mercedes-Benz." And maybe it is. We have to read this prayer within the context of the Old Testament. The Jew had no promise of heaven. All he had was this world. So the reward for righteousness was a long and prosperous life. When he asked God to bless him, Jabez was asking for no more than what was due him under ...

Sermon
Eric Ritz
... the flour the mill; And back of the mill is the wheat, and the shower, And the sun, and the Father''s will." [1] THIRDLY, THIS PRAYER SPEAKS OF TRUSTING GOD FOR ALL THE NEEDS FOR LIFE''S JOURNEY. The word "daily" according to Kittel''s Dictionary of the Bible is found only ... to tea. At six, I would go to see Mrs. Brown at the hospital. At seven-thirty, I''d come back to the church for the prayer hour. At nine-ten, I would sit down to my evening meal. I would go to bed at ten o''clock and wake up in glory!" ...

Ephesians 1:15-23
Sermon
Maxie Dunnam
... 1st chapter, the 15th through the 23rd verses. This is the word of the Lord. “For this reason, because I have heard of your faith in the Lord Jesus Christ, and your love toward all the saints, I do not cease to give thanks for you, remembering you in my prayers. That the God of our Lord Jesus Christ the father of glory may give you a spirit of wisdom and a revelation in the knowledge of him. Having the eyes of your hearts enlightened that you may know what is the hope to which he has called you. What are ...

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