The Supposed “Problem” of Unanswered Prayer

by: John Park, June 6th, 2011

Matt Perman, on his blog, posted this quote from J.I. Packer’s Knowing Christianity that was particularly helpful for me.

We need not be discouraged by the problem of supposedly unanswered prayer. I say “supposedly” because I challenge the supposition.

While God has not bound himself to hear unbelievers’ prayers, his promises to answer the prayers of his own children are categorical and inclusive. It must then be wrong to think that a flat no is ever the whole of his response to reverent petitions from Christians who seek his glory and others’ welfare.

The truth must be this: God always acts positively when a believer lays a situation of need before him, but he does not always act in the way or at the speed asked for. In meeting the need, he does what he knows to be best when he knows it is best to do it.

The parable of the unjust judge shows that God’s word to his elect concerning the vindication for which they plead is “wait” (Lk 18:1-8), and he may say “wait” to other petitions as well. Christ’s word to Paul, “My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness,” when Paul had sought healing for his thorn in the flesh (2 Cor 12:7-9), meant no, but not simply no. Though it was not what Paul had expected, it was a promise of something better than the healing he had sought. We too may ask God to change situations and find that what he does instead is to give us strength to bear them unchanged. But this is not a simple no; it is a very positive answer to our prayer.

I remember a scene from my childhood. As my eleventh birthday approached I let my parents know by broad hints that I wanted a full-size bicycle. They thought it was too soon for that and therefore gave me a typewriter, which was in fact the best present and became the most treasured possession of my boyhood. Was not that good parenthood and a very positive answer to my request for a bicycle? God too allows himself to improve on our requests when what we ask for is not the best.


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Follow Your Heart?

by: John Park, May 27th, 2011

Jon Bloom has been putting out some great blog posts about belief over at the DG blog. Here, in this post, he writes of the inherent dangers of the mantra “Follow your heart.” Here’s an excerpt from it:

Christians have the strange experience of living with two hearts. And both speak to us. One we must reject and the other we must trust. We must be discerning. We know the corrupt heart is speaking when it says, “Believe what I promise you and you will be happy.” We know the new heart is speaking when it says, “Believe what Jesus promises and he will make you happy forever. Therefore, only do what your heart tells you if it is telling you to believe in Jesus.

Read the entire post here.

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For Everyone Who Believes the World Will End in 2012

by: John Park, April 18th, 2011

Mark Driscoll explains how to think about the end of the world.

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God is BOTH Loving AND Holy

by: John Park, March 24th, 2011

The only way an infinitely holy and righteous God could love self-centered sinners like us unconditionally is because Jesus Christ met every single one of those conditions on our behalf.

Jesus lived the life I couldn’t live and then ultimately died the death I should have died. Trusting in Christ’s life and death is the only reason God loves us.

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Richard Keyes: Idols Point to the Reality of God

by: John Park, March 10th, 2011

Since we were made to relate to God – but do not want to face him – we forever inflate things in this world to religious proportions to fill the vacuum left by God’s exclusion.” - Richard Keyes, “The Idol Factory” in No God But God, p. 32.

In other words, the reason we blow common things to biblical proportions and the reason why we make such mundane things so much more glorious in our lives than they really are is because we know the truth that a God who really is that glorious is there. But because we don’t want to face that God, we make up our own counterfeit gods (which will eventually fail us) to fill that gap.

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