His Will Not Ours

Whenever the subject of prayer comes up among my Christian friends, there is some debate over how and why we should pray. But what it comes down to in the end is that if we pray God’s will, those prayers will be answered. Some might question the point in praying then. I mean, if God’s will is to accomplish something in particular and we pray for it, it doesn’t change anything. And if our prayers are for something other than His will, that prayer won’t be answered anyway. (My feeling is that praying is an avenue to connect with, and bring me closer to, God.)

The question may arise—does God change His mind? Can we pray our will hard enough that He’ll listen and adjust His plan and purpose? Mark 11:24 says Therefore I say to you, whatever things you ask when you pray, believe that you receive them, and you will have them. Taken out of context, some may interpret this to mean that if we have the faith to believe that we will get what we ask for, it will be ours. It is scripture verses such as this that give validity to the Prosperity Gospel—or the Name It and Claim It Gospel, as some call it. But if this is true, why then did the apostle Paul, a man with more faith than I’ll ever achieve, have to suffer the “thorn” in his flesh? He asked three times for healing, yet God had a purpose in his pain.

Several years ago, when I attended our church’s ladies Bible study, I became acquainted with a woman named Susan. I was immediately struck by her strength of faith and biblical knowledge. It was a little intimidating, because I didn’t always agree with her. When she claimed God cured her of leukemia because she had enough faith, I was hesitant to tell her that my own sweet mother died of leukemia only a few short years before. Was she saying, in essence, that had my mother had more faith, God would have spared her life?

Fast-forward five years. This same woman laid on her deathbed, her body riddled with cancer. She’d made the claim over and over that God would heal her. And one of my wise Christian friends says that it’s true—God would heal her on the other side. She refused treatment, because she truly believed her faith was enough. Sadly, it wasn’t. But in the years since, I’ve thought about Susan’s spiritual health. Did she pass away with the belief that her faith wasn’t strong enough? Where was the peace and comfort in that? It also left her family spiritually handicapped and angry at God.

During the months I prayed for Susan before her death, I was moved to look up the Prosperity Gospel on gotquestions.org. “While the prosperity gospel and the idea of controlling one’s future with his thoughts or faith is appealing to sinful man, it is insulting to a sovereign God who has revealed Himself in Scripture. Instead of recognizing the absolute sovereign power of God as revealed in the Bible, the name it and claim it adherents embrace a false god who cannot operate apart from their faith. They present a false view of God by teaching that He wants to bless you with health, wealth and happiness but cannot do so unless YOU have enough faith.”

People die of disease every day—strong, faithful believers in Jesus Christ. God has a plan and purpose in this beyond what we can imagine. Everything that He allows in this world is for the benefit of glorifying Him. To believe that if people only have enough faith, they can accomplish their own will flies in the face of Christianity. It discounts the sacrificial work of Jesus Christ and puts man on par with God almighty. And it makes a judgment against those believers who have died even though they prayed for life.

I’ve often thought about Susan’s family since her death. I pray they have discovered true faith in Jesus Christ apart from this harmful belief system. We do not control our sovereign God, and I can’t imagine facing the end of my life doubting that my faith was “good” enough to please Him. I pray the same for you.

 

Comments 7

  1. I fully agree with you. Yes there are some people who achieve great things through faith, but they do so only by the will of God. Thank you, Jennifer for writing this blog.

  2. Thank you for sharing this. I needed to hear this today. You are so eloquent with your words but there is so much truth in what you write! Faith and prayer go hand and hand, but the Lord is not some genie in a bottle! Thank you again for sharing with us!

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  3. Thank you for your words of truth, Jennifer! God’s will is sovereign! He IS GOD, after all! We must believe that He knows and sees what we cannot, and that HE is ALWAYS right! He loves us so much, even as we lie dying on our death beds. We are all going to die, unless He comes back before then! Oh, how I pray He comes quickly, and the Bible says the reason He doesn’t is because of the sake of one more soul who might be gathered in to the fold! His lovingkindness is what holds Him back!

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