I’ve found that some of my most important conversations happen in the most mundane of places. The car. The hallway. Even the bathroom.
My preschool-age son is super proud that he is fully potty trained. I mean, it is a big accomplishment. He’s now moving into the phase where he prefers that I wait behind the closed door while he “accomplishes,” and we often talk while we’re a door apart. One day last week he said, out of the clear blue, “Jesus lives in my heart. God lives in the sky. And sometimes God cannot hear us when we pray.”
I jumped on that one, let me tell you, and a good long bathroom-door-between-us heart to heart ensued.
Even at three years old, I want him to know that God always, always hears us. In the every-moment chatter. In the impassioned and pleading, tear-filled prayers. In the muttered-under-our-breath asks for patience. In the silent moments when the Spirit intercedes for us. In the joyful praises. In the desperate pleas for a swift answer.
He hears them all.
“This is the confidence we have in approaching God: that if we ask anything according to His will, He hears us. And if we know that He hears us — whatever we ask — we know that we have what we asked of Him.”
{1 John 5:14-15}
We can be assured that He hears us. I was once taught that there are three answers to prayer: yes, no, and not yet. This may be theologically simplistic, but it brings me peace to know that “unheard” isn’t an option.
No matter where we pray, how we pray, the eloquence of our words notwithstanding . . . He hears. Our words don’t fall on emptiness but go right to the throne room, rising like incense.
Revelation tells us that an angel “was given much incense to offer, with the prayers of all God’s people, on the golden altar in front of the throne. The smoke of the incense, together with the prayers of God’s people, went up before God from the angel’s hand.“ It goes on to say the angel took the prayers and bowl of incense, filled it with fire from the altar, and “hurled it on the earth; and there came peals of thunder, rumblings, flashes of lightning and an earthquake.” {Revelation 8:3-5}
The scent of incense permeates and sticks, and I like to think that our prayers do the same to the heart of God.
He hears and He cares. While our prayers may be answered in much quieter ways than rumbling thunder and flashes of lightning, they never go unheard. I want my little boy to know this. I want my own heart, and yours, to know this too, and to rest in the peace of knowing that each word spoken to Him is delivered.
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Bev @ Walking Well With God says
Anna,
I really think God is getting His message across to me regarding prayer. He has been speaking to me a lot, through His Word, other blogs, books, etc., that my prayer life needs a little shaking up. It’s so much more than a checklist. I read one viewpoint that prayer is active…like two buckets on a pulley…while one is ascending to Heaven with our prayers, the other is already descending with God’s answers. I’ve also been learning to pray with thanksgiving…not after the prayer has been answered, but pre-emptively thanking God for how He is going to answer my prayer. These are just a couple of Ah-ha moments for me…but you are so right in reminding your son, and us, that God ALWAYS answers prayers. Thanks for reinforcing a message God has been speaking to my heart.
Blessings,
Bev
Anna R. says
Thank you, as always, for your encouragement Bev! Love hearing about what you’re learning of prayer, of Him.
Joanne Peterson says
Hi Anna,
I really like the illustration the bible gives of the incense is the prayers of the saints going to heaven, and the incense is sweet smelling. So, our prayers are sweet smelling to God. He delights in them. Dutch Sheets touched on the prayers getting full and then the angel emptying the bowl with the answer. We’re filling our prayer bowls when we pray. Pretty powerful, whether it is thunder and lightning, or as you mentioned, quietly. It still is moving the heart of our God.
Joanne
Anna R. says
Yes! This is one of my favorite images from Scripture too.
Chris says
Hi Anna, “The scent of incense permeates and sticks, and I like to think that our prayers do the same to the heart of God.” Yes, He never tires of us and just bids us “Come” to a living, breathing, deep relationship with Him. My faith is growing to not only view Him with reverence and awe (the Divine wonder of God), but also as a Best Friend, as someone deeply invested in loving and guiding me. So appreciated your words.
Veronica says
Lol, hubby and I share an email with both our names, force of habit writing his name first, posted by Veronica. 🙂
Anna R. says
Thanks for your words, Veronica! And now I know not to credit them to Chris 😉
FYI says
“Therefore this is what the Lord says: ‘I will bring on them a disaster they cannot escape. Although they cry out to me, I will not listen to them.” Jeremiah 11:11
There may be time or reason that although God can hear our prayers…he doesn’t listen.
Anna R. says
True. I’d love to dive into the Hebrew and see what they used for the word ‘listen’ vs. the word ‘hearing’ – even in todays contexts I think those have different meanings. Interesting stuff – the Bible never fails to make me think!!
Anna R. says
Love, love love that Jenn!!
Hannah Fancher says
I love this! It reminds me of a quote I read earlier. It went something like “when it’s hard to pray, pray hard”. I have no idea who said it.
Recently, I realized a parenting mistake I was making. Before I would take my five kids into a store (and at various other times) I would tell them to not ask me for anything. Well, at one point I was pondering the difficulty that I have with asking God for things or just talking to him about small things. After thinking about it I realized that the root came from being taught, by my well intentioned parents, to never ask anyone for anything…including them. And that kind of changed my perspective with my kids. My relationship with them is teaching them about their relationship with God, right? I want them to be comfortable asking…because I want them to get into the habit of understanding that there’s just as much love behind my ‘no’ and ‘not yet’ as there is behind my ‘yes’. Because I want them to translate that to their relationship with God. I want them to know that whether or not they get the answer they are hoping for, God loves them and hears them. There is just as much love behind HIS ‘no’ and ‘not yet’ as there is behind HIS ‘yes’.
Elizabeth Fisher says
As a young teen I was taught wrongly that I had to have EVERY sin in my life confessed or God didn’t hear my prayers. Basically He turned His back unless my confessions were absolutely complete and led to a perfectly clean slate. The enemy has used that bad theology to shred my prayer life ever since.
Beth Williams says
Anna,
I am proud of you for setting your son straight. It is important for him to know that God will ALWAYS hear our prayers–no matter what!
I have heard several formulas for prayers like: Parts–Praise, Ask, Repent, Thank & Share. It doesn’t matter how eloquent we are or how often we pray for one thing or person. Just begin by praising God for all He’s done for you. Then ask for your requests. Thank Him for answers soon to come & share with others. Don’t just pray a “prayer-list” type of prayer. God will always hear our prayers as sweet smelling incense. We need to do it often.
Blessings 🙂
Gary says
“Ask, and it will be given you; search, and you will find; knock, and the door will be opened for you. 8 For everyone who asks receives, and everyone who searches finds, and for everyone who knocks, the door will be opened. I will do whatever you ask in my name, so that the Father may be glorified in the Son. 14 If in my name you ask me[a] for anything, I will do it.
—Jesus of Nazareth
Do you remember asking Jesus for the BIG stuff when you were a little kid? You asked Jesus to give you three ponies ( a black one, a brown one, and a white one) for Christmas. You asked Jesus to bring back your favorite GI Joe after he washed down the street drain in a storm. When your dog, Tippy, died you asked Jesus to bring him back from the dead. When you heard about all the starving children in the world, you prayed to Jesus to leave an envelope with one million bucks inside on your doorstep the next morning so you could feed all those starving kids.
So why don’t you ask Jesus for the BIG stuff anymore? He said to ask for anything and he would do it!
Answer: When we get a little older we realize that Jesus didn’t really mean what he said. What he meant to say was this,
“If you ask anything in my name, I will do it…if…it is my will to do it. If it isn’t my will, I won’t.”
So as we get older we stop asking Jesus for the big things, the hard things, because we have learned that Jesus never answers those prayers. Ok, maybe once in a great while Jesus answers a big or hard prayer but it is always something that could have happened by chance anyway, isn’t it? Even really rare things can happen by chance. But Jesus never resurrects Grandpa or Grandma from the dead, no matter how hard we pray, does he? Jesus never reattaches a severed limb from an amputee, does he?
No, Jesus doesn’t answer those prayers. That is asking Jesus for just a little too much, isn’t it, dear Christian? That is why when you get older you only ask Jesus for the easy stuff: To bless your food. To give you a “nice day”. To keep your kids safe.
And when it is time to go to bed at night, you get down on your knees by your bed and you ask Jesus to bless everyone in your life; you thank him for having let you and your children live one more day…and then you fall asleep into your pillow…to wake up in the morning…to repeat the same prayer…full of easy requests, so you don’t ask too much of Jesus…who promised to give you anything that you asked for.
But, maybe you’re not asking Jesus for too much. Maybe the reason Jesus doesn’t answer the big or the hard prayer requests is because Jesus can’t hear you. Jesus can’t hear you…because Jesus is dead.
Dear Christian: You are an adult now. Just as you stopped believing in imaginary beings called Santa Claus and the Tooth Fairy, it is time to stop believing in and praying to an ancient man/god who died 2,000 years ago. The “Virgin Birth”, the “Resurrection”, etc., are ancient folk tales. Jesus doesn’t answer your prayer requests any more than Santa and the Tooth Fairy answered your requests to them when you were a kid.
It’s a silly superstition and nothing more, friend. The fact that Jesus doesn’t answer your “big” prayers is proof. I know that it is painful to accept, but its the truth.