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Home/Featured/Why Should I Pray?

Why Should I Pray?

God’s people have been called to prayer from the beginning.

Written by Douglas F. Kelly | Friday, April 5, 2019

In Eden, the Lord walked with and talked to His image bearers. But after they followed Satan’s lies and rebelled against Him, they hid when the Lord showed up. Prayer was, in the most radical way, hindered.mBut God made a promise of grace after He announced judgment on the devil, Adam, and Eve. 

 

Our triune God is a communion of holy love between Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. John 1:1, speaking of the relationship between the Son and the Father, calls the Son “the Word” and says that “the Word was God.” This indicates the sharing of personal communion among the persons of the Trinity, and that sort of sharing involves speaking. The prayers of believers to their heavenly Father through Christ and in the Spirit reflect the eternal speaking within the Godhead, in whose image they were first created and then re-created in regeneration. We pray because we were made to commune with God.

God’s people have been called to prayer from the beginning. In Eden, the Lord walked with and talked to His image bearers. But after they followed Satan’s lies and rebelled against Him, they hid when the Lord showed up. Prayer was, in the most radical way, hindered.

But God made a promise of grace after He announced judgment on the devil, Adam, and Eve. In Genesis 3:15, the Lord promised that the seed of Eve would bruise the head of the serpent. Ultimately, the Lord Jesus Christ, “the Word [made] flesh” (John 1:14), is that seed (Gal. 3:16). All of the Old Testament prepared for His victorious coming to restore the children of Adam to face-to-face fellowship with their Lord, which was the purpose of their creation and could be fulfilled only in their re-creation in and through Christ. After the fall, the Lord did not stop speaking to us.

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Related Posts:

  • Why Should I Pray?
  • How Should We Benefit From Communion?
  • 10 Things You Should Know about the Garden of Eden
  • How Exactly Does True, Lasting, Sanctification Take Place?
  • How Should We Benefit From Communion?

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