Just because we don’t get everything we ask for does not mean that
prayer does not mean that prayer does not avail. The
very fact that God teaches us to pray means that He will hear our
prayers. Can you imagine a father urging his children to talk to
him if he refuses ever to hear them? Do you think Jesus would
teach his disciples how to pray if God did not hear? Surely not.
Let us consider a unique case. In Matthew
24, Jesus is instructing His disciples about what they should
do when the Roman army came to destroy Jerusalem. Jesus was
able to foresee, and forewarn His disciples about a forth-coming battle
that would totally demolish the city. He gave them certain signs
to look for so they would know the time was near. He wanted them to flee
from the city to the hills when that army came. And in preparation
for that event He said, ‘Pray that your flight
may not be in winter or on the Sabbath" (Matt.
24:20). On the Sabbath, the gates of the city would be closed
and they could not get away. In the winter, travel would be
difficult at best. So He told them to pray that their flight would
not be at those times. But notice: their flight would be when the
army came. That is equivalent to praying for the army to come (or
not come) at a certain time. Imagine that! The prayers of
the Christians determining the time the heathen army would arrive in
Jerusalem.
Prayer is powerful. It can even determine the course of a
heathen army! That means the prayers of the saints were more
powerful than Caesar! Yes, prayer avails. Else Jesus taught
His disciples to pray in vain.
We may not always understand how God hears, nor why He answers us the
way He does, but this we know: He is our Father and we can talk to Him!
– W. T. Hamilton, October 2000 –