Prayer Quotes
Prayer: Does It Make Any Difference?
by
Philip Yancey6,840 ratings, 4.20 average rating, 507 reviews
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Prayer Quotes
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“Prayer is not a means of removing the unknown and predictable elements in life, but rather a way of including the unknown and unpredictable in the outworking of the grace of God in our lives.”
― Prayer: Does It Make Any Difference?
― Prayer: Does It Make Any Difference?
“God formed an alliance based on the world as it is, full of flaws, whereas prayer calls God to account for the world as it should be.”
― Prayer: Does It Make Any Difference?
― Prayer: Does It Make Any Difference?
“The main purpose of prayer is not to make life easier, nor to gain magical powers, but to know God.”
― Prayer
― Prayer
“Most of my struggles in the Christian life circle around the same two themes: why God doesn’t act the way we want God to, and why I don’t act the way God wants me to. Prayer is the precise point where those themes converge.”
― Prayer
― Prayer
“We truly live only one day at a time. It doesn’t really help to worry about the future, which we can’t control, or the past, which we can’t change.”
― Prayer: Does It Make Any Difference?
― Prayer: Does It Make Any Difference?
“Why value humility in our approach to God? Because it accurately reflects the truth. Most of what I am — my nationality and mother tongue, my race, my looks and body shape, my intelligence, the century in which I was born, the fact that I am still alive and relatively healthy — I had little or no control over. On a larger scale, I cannot affect the rotation of planet earth, or the orbit that maintains a proper distance from the sun so that we neither freeze nor roast, or the gravitational forces that somehow keep our spinning galaxy in exquisite balance. There is a God and I am not it. Humility does not mean I grovel before God, like the Asian court officials who used to wriggle along the ground like worms in the presence of their emperor. It means, rather, that in the presence of God I gain a glimpse of my true state in the universe, which exposes my smallness at the same time it reveals God’s greatness.”
― Prayer
― Prayer
“Prayer helps correct myopia, calling to mind a perspective I daily forget. I keep reversing roles, thinking of ways in which God should serve me, rather than vice versa. As God fiercely reminded Job, the Lord of the universe has many things to manage, and in the midst of my self-pity I would do well to contemplate for a moment God’s own point of view.”
― Prayer
― Prayer
“…I interviewed ordinary people about prayer. Typically, the results went like this: Is Prayer important to you? Oh, yes. How often to you pray? Every day. Approximately how long? Five minutes – well, maybe seven. Do you sense the presence of God when you pray? Occasionally, not often. Many of those I talked to experienced prayer more as a burden than as a pleasure. They regarded it as important, even paramount, and felt guilty about their failure, blaming themselves. Does this sound familiar? (pp. 14/Prayer: Does It Make Any Difference?)”
― Prayer: Does It Make Any Difference?
― Prayer: Does It Make Any Difference?
“When a doctoral student at Princeton asked, “What is there left in the world for original dissertation research?” Albert Einstein replied, “Find out about prayer. Somebody must find out about prayer.”
― Prayer
― Prayer
“Make it so the poor are no longer despised and thrown away. Look at them standing about — like wildflowers, which have nowhere else to grow.”
― Prayer
― Prayer
“When I am tempted to complain about God’s lack of presence, I remind myself that God has much more reason to complain about my lack of presence.”
― Prayer
― Prayer
“History is a test of faith, and the correct response to that test is persistent prayer.”
― Prayer: Does It Make Any Difference?
― Prayer: Does It Make Any Difference?
“I can view prayer as a way of asking a timeless God to intervene more directly in our time-bound life on earth. (Indeed, I do so all the time, praying for the sick, for the victims of tragedy, for the safety of the persecuted church.)”
― Prayer: Does It Make Any Difference?
― Prayer: Does It Make Any Difference?
“In a sort of negative proof of the power of prayer, three times God commanded Jeremiah to stop praying; God wanted no alteration in his plans to punish a rebellious nation.”
― Prayer: Does It Make Any Difference?
― Prayer: Does It Make Any Difference?
“We do not pray to tell God what he does not know, nor to remind him of things he has forgotten. He already cares for the things we pray about... He has simply been waiting for us to care about them with him.”
― Prayer: Does It Make Any Difference?
― Prayer: Does It Make Any Difference?
“I know Christians who yearn for God's older style of a power-worker who topples pharaohs, flattens Jericho's walls, and scorches the priests of Baal. I do not. I believe the kingdom now advances through grace and freedom, God's goal all along. I accept Jesus' assurance that his departure from earth represents progress, by opening a door for the Counselor to enter. We know how counselors work: not by giving orders and imposing changes through external force. A good counselor works on the inside, bringing to the surface dormant health. For a relationship between such unequal partners, prayer provides an ideal medium.
Prayer is cooperation with God, a consent that opens the way for grace to work. Most of the time the Counselor communicates subtly: feeding ideas into my mind, bringing to awareness a caustic comment I just made, inspiring me to choose better than I would have done otherwise, shedding light on the hidden dangers of temptation, sensitizing me to another's needs. God's Spirit whispers rather than shouts, and brings peace not turmoil. Although such a partnership with God may lack the drama of the bargaining sessions with Abraham and Moses, the advance in intimacy is striking. . . The partnership binds so tight that it becomes hard to distinguish who is doing what, God or the human partner. God has come that close.”
― Prayer: Does It Make Any Difference?
Prayer is cooperation with God, a consent that opens the way for grace to work. Most of the time the Counselor communicates subtly: feeding ideas into my mind, bringing to awareness a caustic comment I just made, inspiring me to choose better than I would have done otherwise, shedding light on the hidden dangers of temptation, sensitizing me to another's needs. God's Spirit whispers rather than shouts, and brings peace not turmoil. Although such a partnership with God may lack the drama of the bargaining sessions with Abraham and Moses, the advance in intimacy is striking. . . The partnership binds so tight that it becomes hard to distinguish who is doing what, God or the human partner. God has come that close.”
― Prayer: Does It Make Any Difference?
“A human being is not someone who once in a while makes a mistake, and God is not someone who now and then forgives. No, human beings are sinners and God is love.”
― Prayer
― Prayer
“Prosperity may dilute prayer too. In my travels I have noticed that Christians in developing countries spend less time pondering the effectiveness of prayer and more time actually praying. The”
― Prayer
― Prayer
“My publisher conducted a website poll, and of the 678 respondents only 23 felt satisfied with the time they were spending in prayer. That”
― Prayer
― Prayer
“When I listened to public prayers in evangelical churches, I heard people telling God what to do, combined with thinly veiled hints on how others should behave. When”
― Prayer
― Prayer
“We cannot simply pray and then wait for God to do the rest.”
― Prayer: Does It Make Any Difference?
― Prayer: Does It Make Any Difference?
“Prayer means keeping company with God who is already present.”
― Prayer: Does It Make Any Difference?
― Prayer: Does It Make Any Difference?
“Prayer is an expression of who we are…. We are a living incompleteness. We are a gap, an emptiness that calls for fulfillment.”
― Prayer
― Prayer
“Not even Jesus was exempt from unanswered prayer. In Gethesemane Jesus prayed with both the faith of protest and the faith of acquiescence. He turned for help first to God, pleading “ let this cup pass”; then to his friends, who were sound asleep; then to the religious rulers, who accused him; then to the state, which sentenced him; then to the people, who rejected him. Finally he uttered that awful cry of dereliction, “ My God, why have you forsaken me?” For C. S. Lewis, that sequence of helplessness illustrates “ the human situation writ large…. Every rope breaks when you seize it.”
― Prayer
― Prayer
