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Prieldedi
Guest
What assurance do you have that your prayers to the Great High Priest will be answered? Yes, He will hear your prayers, but IF you’re not in good terms with Him (e.g. showing no respect for His Mother), He might not want to move a finger for you. Have you thought about it?If I can come boldly before the Great High Priest’s throne of grace why would I want to go through Mary? If you ask me to pray for you, you aren’t praying to me. We’re getting into intersession by the dead and this is off point, but these are reasons why Protestants don’t talk about Mary.
Look at 1 Kings 2:
13 Then Adonijah, son of Haggith, came to Bathsheba, mother of Solomon, who asked him, “Do you come in peace?” He answered, “In peace,”
14 and added, “I have something to tell you.” She said, “Speak”
15 and Adonijah said, “You know that the kingdom was mine and that all Israel fully expected me to reign. But the kingdom has slipped from my hands and become my brother’s for it was given him by Yahweh.
16 Now I have one thing to ask of you and I beg you not to refuse me.” She said, “Speak,”
17 and he continued, “Please ask King Solomon to give me Abishag the Shunammite for my wife. I know that he cannot refuse you.”
18 Bathsheba answered, “Very well, I shall speak to the king on your behalf.”
19 So Bathsheba went to King Solomon to speak to him on behalf of Adonijah. The king met her and bowed to her. Then he sat on his throne and had a seat brought for the king’s mother who sat on his right.
20 She said, “I have one small request to make of you. Do not refuse me.” And the king answered her, “Make your request, my mother, for I will not refuse you.”
Adonijah had access to King Solomon, he didn’t have “to go through” Bathsheba, yet he did. Like many who pray directly to God, maybe the King had reasons not to grant Adonijah’s request. How many times our prayers to God go unanswered?
Now move a few hundred years later, look at what the Apostle describes in John 2:
1 Three days later there was a wedding at Cana in Galilee and the mother of Jesus was there.
2 Jesus was also invited to the wedding with his disciples.
3 When all the wine provided for the celebration had been served and they had run out of wine, the mother of Jesus said to him, “They have no wine.”
4 Jesus replied, “Woman, your thoughts are not mine! My hour has not yet come.”
5 However his mother said to the servants, “Do whatever he tells you.”
The family of the newlyweds had invited Jesus, He was already in the company of His disciples. Jesus was there in their home! …and just like Adonijah, they had no need “to go through” Mary… but they did! The family knew Jesus and must’ve known what He could do, they felt He was capable of solving their problem. But they didn’t go “boldly” before Him, they went to His Mother. Why? Was it possible He could refuse them? We know He told His Mother it was not His hour yet, so the chances of Him refusing the family was high, very high. Somehow the family sensed that “going through Mary” Jesus would not refused Her. He didn’t, Mary’s intercession was powerful, Jesus changed His hour.
Now the question is this: was this a frozen moment in time with no further consequences, or was it a lesson for all Christians to follow forever? Knowing Jesus gave meaning to all the things He did and said we now know this is a true lesson not to be taken lightly.