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Lessons Learned from Trying to Force a Miracle [Excerpt]

Have you ever ever prayed for something that would advance God’s kingdom, but your plan didn’t work out? This can be disconcerting, to say the least.

“This could be God saying ‘Not yet’ instead of ‘No,’” a friend says. But a delay is mysterious when we see a clear need for God’s intervention. “Why would God wait?” I’ve thought. “Doesn’t he know the timeframe I’m working with? I only get about three score and ten years to make a difference!”

These concerns come out dramatically in this true story from pastor and author Mark Batterson. This story is from his book The Circle Maker: Praying Circles Around Your Biggest Dreams and Greatest Fears, and I hope you find it as encouraging as I did.

-Adam Forrest, Zondervan

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When the Answer to Prayer is Bigger than our Brains [Excerpt by Mark Batterson]

 

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(Excerpt from The Circle Maker: Praying Circles Around Your Biggest Dreams and Greatest Fears by Mark Batterson.)

One day, I was praying for God's provision when I felt a prompting to pray for a $2 million miracle. The first thing I had to do was decipher whether this prompting was just my own desire to be debt free or whether it was the Holy Spirit who dropped that promise into my heart. It's tough to discern between natural desires and holy desires, but I was about 90 percent sure it was the Holy Spirit who put that promise in my heart. I had no idea how God would do it, but I knew I needed to circle that promise in prayer.

I love the ending of the book of Daniel… In his final vision of the book, he asks the question that all of us want the answer to: "My lord, what will the outcome of all this be?"

Well, God always answers, but it's not always a straight answer. This certainly doesn't mean it's not an honest answer; it just means it's far too complicated, with infinite twists and turns, for our logical left brains to comprehend. …

 "Go your way, Daniel, because the words are rolled up and sealed until the time of the end." [See Daniel 12:1-13]

 

He's never early. He's never late. When the time comes … the prayer will be unsealed and the answer revealed.

I realize this specifically references the prophecies given to Daniel by the Holy Spirit, but I also believe there is a universal principle in this passage. Our prayers are prophecies, and God Almighty seals them until their designated time. He's never early. He's never late. When the time comes … the prayer will be unsealed and the answer revealed.

 

Natural World vs. Supernatural Prayers

At some point, our spoken words cease to exist because they are subject to the law of entropy. Our spoken words, aka sound waves, run into friction and run out of energy. 

PSM_V13_D058_Sound_waves_1

Our words fade from hearing, but God keeps our prayers.

Our prayers, however, are sealed forever. Our prayers never cease to exist because … the supernatural laws of prayer defy the natural laws of time and space [including the law of entropy].

 

What God Can Do with Four Words

While it's impossible to trace the pinball path of a single prayer, our prayers somehow exit our four dimensions of space-time in order to get to the God who exists outside of the four space-time dimensions He created when He said, "Let there be light." Our prayers don't dissipate over time; our prayers accumulate through eternity.

 

According to the Doppler Effect, our universe is still expanding. The significance is this: The four words that God spoke at the beginning of time, "Let there be light," are still creating galaxies at the edge of the universe. If God can do that with four words, what are you worried about? There is nothing He cannot do. After all, He created everything out of nothing.

 

His words never return void. Neither do your prayers when you pray the word of God and the will of God. The same God who hovered over the chaos at the beginning of time is hovering over your life, and you never know when His answer will reenter the atmosphere of your life. But you can know this: The Lord is watching over His word to perform it…

- Mark Batterson


A thought for the road: The final verse in the book of Daniel reads, "As for you, go your way till the end. You will rest, and then at the end of the days you will rise to receive your allotted inheritance." (Daniel 12:13)

What's one way you can choose to 'go your way till the end'?

 

 

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Watch session one of The Circle Maker DVD Group Study

Follow Mark Batterson on Twitter (@MarkBatterson)

 -Adam Forrest, Zondervan

 

(Images & some styling above are web-exclusive features not included in the text of The Circle MakerImage attribution: Sound waves | Date = 1878 |Author = Unknown, Scientific American Monthly |Permission = {{PD-old}}, via Wikimedia Commons. This post does not represent the views of Zondervan or any of its representatives. The writer's personal opinions are shared only for information purposes. To receive new Zondervan Blog posts in your reader or email inbox, subscribe to Zondervan Blog.)

 

 

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When We Don’t Have the Answers [Excerpt by Lois Tverberg]

 

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(Excerpt from Walking in the Dust of Rabbi Jesus: How the Jewish Words of jesus Can Change Your Life by Lois Tverberg.)

 

Disciples Who Don't Always Know

God doesn't answer our every doubt or explain everything to our satisfaction. How can we deal with our inability to know the answers?

 

The book of Job reveals some profound Hebraic wisdom. There too we encounter God’s reluctance to fully divulge himself. Grieved and in agony, Job implores God to explain why he allows the innocent to suffer. After thirty-seven chapters of arguments between Job and his friends, God finally sweeps onto the scene. But when God speaks, he never answers Job's heart-wrenching queries. Rather, he flips the tables and interrogates Job. Job humbly retracts his questions, and God never discloses the answer to the question of the ages.

 

There is wisdom in the humility to be able to say 'I don't know' sometimes, and to let God alone know all things.

But God actually does reveal something to Job through his frustrating "non-answer," when he challenges Job to explain the intricacies of nature and describe how he planted the foundations of the earth. When Job realizes that an infinite chasm separates human and divine intellect, he is utterly humbled. Einstein could explain relativity to an amoeba more easily than God could answer Job. What Job sought to know was utterly beyond his ability to grasp.

 

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God answers Job out of the whirlwind. Image by William Blake [Public Domain], via Wikimedia Commons.

 

God's answer to Job should make all the more sense in light of what we've discovered about the universe. In Isaiah 55:9, God proclaimed, "As the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts." To the ancients, the heavens appeared to be a great canopy, perhaps five or ten miles up. But now we realize that the stars are billions of light-years away. It should be all the more apparent that if God revealed even a portion of his wisdom, its sheer magnitude would overwhelm us. We forget that God designed everything from neutrons to galaxies, and that we are just specks in comparison to his unfathomable magnitude. Whole libraries have been written to describe the workings of just one human cell. There is wisdom in the humility to be able to say "I don't know" sometimes, and to let God alone know all things…

 

Neither Job nor his friends knew God's thoughts, but Job at least understood God's great compassion for the hurting. Perhaps God would rather hear us voice angry doubts that show concern for others' pain than to knit ourselves a comfortable theology that shows no love.

 

We honor God more by trying to love as he loves than by trying to know all that he knows.

As Christians, we struggle with how many people suffer in the world unjustly. But we know that in Christ, God willingly suffered as an innocent person to gain forgiveness for our sins. We can always put our trust in God's empathy and goodness, even if we don't know all of his thoughts. Since we are small and finite, we honor God more by trying to love as he loves than by trying to know all that he knows.

 

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Learn more about Walking in the Dust of Rabbi Jesus.

 

Follow Lois Tverberg on Twitter (@LoisTverberg)

 


(*Images above are web-exclusive features and are not included in the text of Walking in the Dust… This post does not represent the views of Zondervan or any of its representatives. The writer's personal opinions are shared only for information purposes. To receive new Zondervan Blog posts in your reader or email inbox, subscribe to Zondervan Blog.)

 

 

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