God Wants Us to Ask Him!
Jonathan Edwards' Sermon Summary
Our God is truly mighty. Unlike impotent idols, He knows we are weak and needy, and He hears and answers our prayer requests. For example, God granted Jacob safety from Esau and Moses safety from Egypt; He gave Samson water and later strength after he was blinded; He empowered Joshua to stop the sun; and He enabled Elijah to stop the rain (Psalms 65:2, 1 Corinthians 8:4, Genesis 32:7-12, Judges 16:25-30, Joshua 10:12-14, 1 King 17-18).
Because of His infinite grace and mercy, we—the worthless—can boldly and confidently go to Him for everything we need. God likes to hear from us, particularly if we are righteous. Prayer acknowledges our dependance on His power and prepares us to give Him glory (Hebrew 4:16, Song of Solomon 2:14, James 5:16).
God commands us to pray. He requires prayers to bestow mercy. Though He knows our needs, He wants to hear our prayers (Proverbs 2:1-5, James 1:5, Acts 8:22).
We are instructed to ask the Father through Christ, our mediator at His right hand. Christ’s obedience to Him has atoned for our sins and earned us His ears (Revelation 8:3-4, Luke 1:10).
But God doesn’t answer requests with wrong motives, such as those born from pride or selfishness. These requests, if granted, can become our idols, later used to oppose Him.
Insincere requests also are ineffective, such as asking God to purge our sins while indulging in them or asking in apparent humility while actually being arrogant. He also won’t listen to requests that aren’t good for us. He knows what is best and will give much more than our requests (James 4:3, Isaiah 65:24, Habakkuk 2:3, James 1:5-6, Psalm 86:5, Romans 10:12, 1 King 3:10-13, Ephesians 3:20).
Ask and it will be given to you. Don’t be anxious about anything. Give God no rest till He answers your requests, like Jacob refusing to let God go until he received His blessing, or like the blind man shouting for Christ until Christ responded (Matthew 7:7; Luke 18:1-8, 35-43; Luke 11:5-8; Philippians 4:6-7).
So, alertly, persistently, and earnestly pray at all times, without ceasing. Don’t give up. God answers prayers.
Summary of “The God Who Hears and Answers Prayer!” a Jonathan Edwards’ sermonhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OzoKCj6r4Ig
Because of His infinite grace and mercy, we—the worthless—can boldly and confidently go to Him for everything we need. God likes to hear from us, particularly if we are righteous. Prayer acknowledges our dependance on His power and prepares us to give Him glory (Hebrew 4:16, Song of Solomon 2:14, James 5:16).
God commands us to pray. He requires prayers to bestow mercy. Though He knows our needs, He wants to hear our prayers (Proverbs 2:1-5, James 1:5, Acts 8:22).
We are instructed to ask the Father through Christ, our mediator at His right hand. Christ’s obedience to Him has atoned for our sins and earned us His ears (Revelation 8:3-4, Luke 1:10).
But God doesn’t answer requests with wrong motives, such as those born from pride or selfishness. These requests, if granted, can become our idols, later used to oppose Him.
Insincere requests also are ineffective, such as asking God to purge our sins while indulging in them or asking in apparent humility while actually being arrogant. He also won’t listen to requests that aren’t good for us. He knows what is best and will give much more than our requests (James 4:3, Isaiah 65:24, Habakkuk 2:3, James 1:5-6, Psalm 86:5, Romans 10:12, 1 King 3:10-13, Ephesians 3:20).
Ask and it will be given to you. Don’t be anxious about anything. Give God no rest till He answers your requests, like Jacob refusing to let God go until he received His blessing, or like the blind man shouting for Christ until Christ responded (Matthew 7:7; Luke 18:1-8, 35-43; Luke 11:5-8; Philippians 4:6-7).
So, alertly, persistently, and earnestly pray at all times, without ceasing. Don’t give up. God answers prayers.
Summary of “The God Who Hears and Answers Prayer!” a Jonathan Edwards’ sermonhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OzoKCj6r4Ig