Why Pray if God Is Sovereign? (Part 4)
January 27th, 2009
(By Matt Waymeyer)
Today’s post concludes our series on this important topic, with a fifth and final reason why believers should pray in light of God’s sovereignty.
5. God has ordained prayer as a means by which He accomplishes His eternal purposes.
At this point, some may wonder how it is that Scripture can teach both that God providentially brings all things to pass in conformity with His eternal purpose and that the prayers of men can have a significant affect in the unfolding of world history. The seeming contradiction between these two truths vanishes, however, when one realizes that “the same God who has decreed the end has also decreed that His end shall be reached through His appointed means, and one of these is prayer” (The Sovereignty of God, 167). In other words, God in His infinite wisdom was pleased to ordain prayer to be a means through which He accomplishes His good pleasure in and through His creation. As A.W. Pink writes,
God has decreed that certain events shall come to pass, but He has also decreed that these events shall come to pass through the means He has appointed for their accomplishment. God has elected certain ones to be saved, but He has also decreed that these ones shall be saved through the preaching of the Gospel. The Gospel, then, is one of the appointed means for the working out of the eternal counsel of the Lord; and prayer is another. God has decreed the means as well as the end, and among the means is prayer (Ibid., 171).
Understanding this relationship between the sovereignty of God and the prayers of men begins with recognizing the comprehensive nature of God’s eternal purpose. Richard Pratt writes,
God’s plan is so comprehensive that it not only includes the final destinies of things but also includes the secondary, creaturely processes that work together to accomplish these ends. For instance, God does not simply ordain light to shine on the earth each day; He also employs the sun, the moon, the stars, and countless other things to accomplish that end. God does not merely determine that someone will recover from a disease; He uses doctors and medicine to accomplish the healing. As the playwright of history, God did not simply write an ending for the book of time. He wrote every word on every page so that all events lead to the grand finale (Pray With Your Eyes Open, 109-10).
In other words, the “all things” which God works out “according to the counsel of His will” (Eph 1:11) includes the means that He uses to bring about His ultimate ends. God uses the sun to bring light to the earth, He uses doctors to restore people to health, and He uses prayer to bring about many things He has purposed in eternity past.
When one wants to cross the street safely, he uses the crosswalk and looks both ways before doing so; when one desires his family members to turn to Christ for salvation, he seeks to proclaim the gospel to them; when one desires to provide for his family, he works hard at his place of employment. And in the same way, when one desires such-and-such to happen, he prays to God to bring it about, recognizing that prayer is one of the means through which God brings about His purposes here on earth.
Several examples in Scripture indicate that God has ordained prayer as a means to accomplish His eternal plans. First, when Abraham sojourned in Gerar in Genesis 20, he lied and told King Abimelech that Sarah was his sister, at which time Abimelech took Sarah into his harem of wives (v. 2). In response, God closed all the wombs of the household of Abimelech and threatened the king with further judgment if he did not restore Sarah to Abraham (vv. 7, 17). However, at the same time that God warned Abimelech of this judgment, He also told him, “[Abraham] is a prophet, and he will pray for you, and you will live” (v. 7). In other words, God revealed to the king that His plan was for Abraham to pray and intercede for the King so that divine judgment would be withdrawn. Then, in verse 17, God’s preordained plan came to fruition: “And Abraham prayed to God; and God healed Abimelech and his wife and his maids, so that they bore children.”
A second example can be found at the end of the book of Job. God addressed Job’s friend, Eliphaz the Temanite, saying,
I am angry with you and your two friends, because you have not spoken of me what is right, as my servant Job has. So now take seven bulls and seven rams and go to my servant Job and sacrifice a burnt offering for yourselves. My servant Job will pray for you, and I will accept his prayer and not deal with you according to your folly (Job 42:7b-8a; NIV)
Then, as verse 9 reveals, Eliphaz “did what the Lord told them; and the Lord accepted Job’s prayer” (NIV). From this it is clear that God not only ordained that His wrath toward Eliphaz would be turned aside, but He also ordained that the means He would use to accomplish that end would include the intercessory prayer of His servant Job.
A third and final example of God’s ordination of prayer as a means to accomplish His end can be found in God’s promise to Israel of future restoration in Jeremiah 29. In verse 11a, the Lord told Israel that He knew the plans that He had for her. In other words, the God who knew the end from the beginning was not unaware of what He had purposed for Israel’s future. He continued by telling Israel that His plans were “for welfare and not for calamity to give you a future and a hope” (v. 11b). What will happen in the future when God’s plan unfolds and He providentially brings it to pass? He continued:
“Then you will call upon Me and come and pray to Me, and I will listen to you. And you will seek Me and find Me, when you search for Me with all your heart. And I will be found by you,” declares the Lord, “and I will restore your fortunes and will gather you from all the nations and from all the places where I have driven you,” declares the Lord, “and I will bring you back to the place from where I sent you into exile” (vv. 12-14).
God will restore His people in response to their prayers, but these prayers—rather than being an intrusion into God’s eternal plan—are actually part of God’s plan. Both the means and the end—the prayers and the restoration—have been ordained by Him and will be brought to pass by Him (cf. Ezekiel 36:37).
Prayers of petition and intercession, then, should not be thought of as attempts to alter the eternal purposes of God. As Pratt writes, “Trying to alter the eternal decrees of God through prayer is like trying to reach the moon on a trampoline; it is impossible. Our petitions cannot interrupt God’s plan for the universe anymore than a trampoline can break the power of earth’s gravity” (Pray With Your Eyes Open, 109). Instead, prayer should be understood as “one of the many secondary causes through which God fulfills His plan” (Ibid., 110).
It is obvious, then, that one need not deny the sovereignty of God in order to be committed to a life of fervent prayer. For such a life begins in an obedient submission to the command of God and the model of Christ, it flows out of the recognition that God is able and willing to respond to the prayers of His children, and it rests in the assurance that God has sovereignly ordained prayer as a means to accomplish His purposes.
Glory to our God Alone, who uses weak things and vessels of clay into which He places His own glory and ordains these vessels to be the means He commands, by which to bring the Glorious Saving Gospel of grace to otherwise blind and deaf hearts of stone, such as ours where.
I am so humbled and grateful that He has entrusted and given us the joyous responsibilities of: Gospel proclamation from His Prohpetic Scriptures through the power of the Spirit, and of Intercessory prayers of love, as exampled by the Prophets of old and by Messiah, that we may be partakers of the Redemptive mission of Christ Himself enabled by the power of the Spirit to do His will and fulfill His commands by His merciful grace Alone.
Let us fear Him and give him godly reverance for His mighty works in our behalfs. Let us pray for our hearts to be enabled/inclined and made most willing in the commands of Christ, to love YAHWEH with our all and whole being, and secondly like unto the first, to love ourselves as He does and our fellow mankind as we ought to love ourseleves; by the righteousness of Christ given us by His Spirit Alone.
Your servant for the Kingdom of YAHWEH Alone,
W
Richard Pratt said “He wrote every word on every page…”, which leads me to conclude that God is the author of sin.
Am I misunderstanding something?
Jacob,
God can ordain that sin be without being the author of sin. We must recognize a difference between the efficient and ultimate cause of sin. God, as the fountain of all creation, has to be the ultimate cause of everything. “For from Him…are all things” (Rom 11:36). There is no other causative agent in the universe unless there’s another god. But at the same time, God does not effectively cause the existence of sin, nor does He cause men to sin.
The best example of this in Scripture is the crucifixion. Did the Father Himself cause the crucifixion of Jesus? Well, He didn’t put the nails in His hands, but He did “predetermine” it (Ac 2:22-23) and His hand did “predestine” it (Ac 4:27-28). God from all eternity ordained the most evil act in all of history: the murder of God Himself. Yet we can’t say that God is the author of such sin.
A couple of resources to consult are:
John Piper: Is God Less Glorious Because He Ordained that Evil Be?
John Piper: Spectacular Sins and Their Global Purpose in the Glory of Christ