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I suspect that most people pray at one time or another, even people who have no formal faith. Even people who, most of the time, consider themselves agnostics or even atheists.
We pray because we believe – or because we want to believe. We want to believe in some Higher Power; a Being with awareness and intelligence. A Being with compassion. A Being with influence, with power to affect our circumstances.
Why do we want to believe? Because we feel some need. Most often, it’s some physical need: health, finances, the presence of some threat. It may be an emotional need for relationship with someone who truly cares and understands us. It may be an intellectual need, a desire for something to help make sense of the world, a desire to find the meaning and purpose of our lives.
Whatever the need, it arises from the fact that there are many things in life that are
beyond our influence and control, beyond our understanding. Belief gives us a framework for dealing with these things. And the hope of resolution – salvation.
Over all this, there is the biblical assertion that we were made for relationship with God. Psalm 65:2 says – “O, You who hear prayer, to You all men will come.” We can draw two conclusions from these thoughts.
First, God is listening. He wants to hear from us. Whether He responds to our prayers in the way we expect is beside the point. He desires contact, dialogue and relationship. Why else create beings in His own image, capable of appreciating and emulating His nature?
Second, apart from any specific need or desire, we need to be in contact with God. We were designed and created for this relationship. We are incomplete and unfulfilled without it. This need alone moves us to prayer so that “all men will come” to Him at some time.
So let’s talk to God. Often. He is waiting to hear from us.
We pray because we believe – or because we want to believe. We want to believe in some Higher Power; a Being with awareness and intelligence. A Being with compassion. A Being with influence, with power to affect our circumstances.
Why do we want to believe? Because we feel some need. Most often, it’s some physical need: health, finances, the presence of some threat. It may be an emotional need for relationship with someone who truly cares and understands us. It may be an intellectual need, a desire for something to help make sense of the world, a desire to find the meaning and purpose of our lives.
Whatever the need, it arises from the fact that there are many things in life that are
beyond our influence and control, beyond our understanding. Belief gives us a framework for dealing with these things. And the hope of resolution – salvation.
Over all this, there is the biblical assertion that we were made for relationship with God. Psalm 65:2 says – “O, You who hear prayer, to You all men will come.” We can draw two conclusions from these thoughts.
First, God is listening. He wants to hear from us. Whether He responds to our prayers in the way we expect is beside the point. He desires contact, dialogue and relationship. Why else create beings in His own image, capable of appreciating and emulating His nature?
Second, apart from any specific need or desire, we need to be in contact with God. We were designed and created for this relationship. We are incomplete and unfulfilled without it. This need alone moves us to prayer so that “all men will come” to Him at some time.
So let’s talk to God. Often. He is waiting to hear from us.