J
JDaniel
Guest
Spock:They certainly would be. But to pray for rain in a drought-stricken area is not “that” foolish. Or to pray for world peace, or for eliminating leprosy, or HIV does not sound so foolish. Or to pray that God would open the eyes of all the non-believers, by giving them the necessary “grace”. But maybe all these are “foolish”, don’t know.
No question. But, that should not stop us from praying for those things. There are two places in Scripture that talk of women who went to the magistrate of their towns every day to beg for something. We are told that the magistrates, after a time, gave the women what they wanted. These were intended to be examples of why we should pray. It is my belief that God listens. The closer I am as his friend, the more he listens. I become closer through habit and repetition.
Where is that supposition supported? If a parent tells a child to pray for snow, in Winter, either the parent is toying with the child, or the family needs the snow for the melt-off of water in the Spring. But, it is not as simple as you describe. Also, why would one not pray for a departed relative? We want our beloved departed to bypass Purgatory. What’s wrong with that?There is a trick about supplicative prayers. You are supposed to pray for two types of results. One is that will happen anyhow (for example when children are told to pray for snow in the winter, and when the “miracle” happened, then the parent told the child that prayer “works”. This is something I personally saw happen). Two, where the result cannot be ascertained. Like praying that a deceased relative to go to heaven. Those are the sure “bets”.
Yeah: turn it scientific. Do everything possible to draw him out - AT YOUR EXQUISITE BECK AND CALL. Then, if he doesn’t oblige you, on YOUR terms and at YOUR discretion, call him a fake. How sad.It is more risky to pray for something that can be verified, and what is very unlikely to happen. You can, of course, but when the desired result does not materialize, then you must resort to rationalization, like “it was not God’s will”. Of course this rationalization comes easy for believers - which is another thing I am unable to understand…
God bless,
jd