K
Kevan
Guest
To pray for me is not to save me. I’ve prayed for all kinds of people, but I haven’t saved them, healed them, or protected them.Excuse me. I fail to see the difference. You don’t want Peter to save you, just pray for you. What is is you want Peter to pray for, if not to save you?
If God heals me of a malady, I don’t say to my friend, “thank you for healing me.” I don’t ask my friend to protect me as I travel.
This use of language in speaking to departed saints would be unique in human discourse. Can you offer any examples of such talk when speaking to folks who aren’t in Heaven?
Consider your earlier example of the boss’s boss: is it correct to say that Peter has the power to give you things as long as he gets permission from God first? It seems that what you said later, that the saints have power with God, is more defensible. It is God who has the power to help us. Others may join us in prayer, but they cannot bestow favors like demigods.