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Welcome to the Im4God.org
/ Songbook.ManuelAdam.com September 8th, 2005 Newsletter!
You can email Webservant Peter J. Louie by replying to this message.
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1 Timothy 2 - Pray for All People
1First of all, then, I
urge that supplications, prayers, intercessions, and thanksgivings be
made for all people, 2for kings and all
who are in high positions, that we may lead a peaceful and quiet life,
godly and dignified in every way. 3This
is good, and it is pleasing in the sight of God our Savior,
4who desires all people to be saved and
to come to the knowledge of the truth. 5For
there is one God, and there is one mediator between God and men, the
man Christ Jesus, 6who gave
himself as a ransom for all, which is the testimony given at the
proper time. 7For this I was appointed a
preacher and an apostle (I am telling the truth, I am not lying), a
teacher of the Gentiles in faith and truth.
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Our Sovereign God
by Pastor Dodds (Covenant
OPC, PA)
Either God was in control when Katrina hit or he was not in
control. Pastor Dodds teaches us that God is sovereign and the
resulting implications of this truth.
Stream with Media Player
(41:19)
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Miss the "Sex and the Supremacy of Christ" conference? This
Desiring God conference featured speakers such as David Powlison, Al
Mohler, and Mark Dever. You can catch what you missed here -->
Sex and the Supremacy of Christ.
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The Sovereignty of God and Prayer
by John Piper
I am often asked, "If you believe God works all
things according to the counsel of his will (Ephesians 1:11)
and that his knowledge of all things past, present, and future is
infallible, then what is the point of praying that anything happen?"
Usually this question is asked in relation to human decision: "If God
has predestined some to be his sons and chosen them before the
foundation of the world (Ephesians 1:4,5), then what's the point in
praying for anyone's conversion?"
The implicit argument here is that if prayer is to
be possible at all man must have the power of self-determination. That
is, all man's decisions must ultimately belong to himself, not
God. For otherwise he is determined by God and all his decisions are
really fixed in God's eternal counsel. Let's examine the
reasonableness of this argument by reflecting on the example cited
above.
1. "Why pray for anyone's conversion if God has
chosen before the foundation of the world who will be his sons?" A
person in need of conversion is "dead in trespasses and sins"
(Ephesians 2:1); he is "enslaved to sin" (Romans 6:17; John 8:34);
"the god of this world has blinded his mind that he might not see the
light of the gospel of the glory of Christ" (II Corinthians. 4:4); his
heart is hardened against God (Ephesians 4:18) so that he is hostile
to God and in rebellion against God's will (Romans 8:7).
Now I would like to turn the question back to my
questioner: If you insist that this man must have the power of
ultimate self-determination, what is the point of praying for him?
What do you want God to do for Him? You can't ask that God overcome
the man's rebellion, for rebellion is precisely what the man is now
choosing, so that would mean God overcame his choice and took away his
power of self-determination. But how can God save this man unless he
act so as to change the man's heart from hard hostility to tender
trust?
Will you pray that God enlighten his mind so that
he truly see the beauty of Christ and believe? If you pray this, you
are in effect asking God no longer to leave the determination of the
man's will in his own power. You are asking God to do something within
the man's mind (or heart) so that he will surely see and believe. That
is, you are conceding that the ultimate determination of the
man's decision to trust Christ is God's, not merely his.
What I am saying is that it is not the doctrine of
God's sovereignty which thwarts prayer for the conversion of sinners.
On the contrary, it is the unbiblical notion of self-determination
which would consistently put an end to all prayers for the lost.
Prayer is a request that God do something. But the only thing
God can do to save a lost sinner is to overcome his resistance to God.
If you insist that he retain his self-determination, then you are
insisting that he remain without Christ. For "no one can come to
Christ unless it is given him from the Father" (John 6:65,44).
Only the person who rejects human
self-determination can consistently pray for God to save the lost. My
prayer for unbelievers is that God will do for them what He did
for Lydia: He opened her heart so that she gave heed to what Paul said
(Acts 16:14). I will pray that God, who once said, "Let there
be light!", will by that same creative power "shine in their hearts to
give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of
Christ" (II Corinthians 4:6). I will pray that He will "take
out their heart of stone and give them a heart of flesh" (Ezekiel
36:26). I will pray that they be born not of the will of the flesh nor
of the will of man but of God (John 1:13). And with all my
praying I will try to "be kind and to teach and correct with
gentleness and patience, if perhaps God may grant them
repentance and freedom from Satan's snare" (II Timothy 2:24-26).
In short, I do not ask God to sit back and wait for
my neighbor to decide to change. I do not suggest to God that He keep
his distance lest his beauty become irresistible and violate my
neighbor's power of self-determination. No! I pray that he ravish my
unbelieving neighbor with his beauty, that he unshackle the enslaved
will, that he make the dead alive and that he suffer no resistance to
stop him lest my neighbor perish.
2. If someone now says, "O.K., granted that a
person's conversion is ultimately determined by God' I still don't see
the point of your prayer. If God chose before the foundation of the
world who would be converted, what function does your prayer have?" My
answer is that it has a function like that of preaching: How shall the
lost believe in whom they have not heard, and how shall they hear
without a preacher, and how shall they preach unless they are sent
(Romans 10:14f.)? Belief in Christ is a gift of God (John 6:65; II
Timothy 2:25; Ephesians 2:8), but God has ordained that the means by
which men believe on Jesus is through the preaching of men. It is
simply naive to say that if no one spread the gospel all those
predestined to be sons of God (Ephesians 1:5) would be converted
anyway. The reason this is naive is because it overlooks the fact that
the preaching of the gospel is just as predestined as is the
believing of the gospel: Paul was set apart for his preaching
ministry before he was born (Galatians 1:15), as was Jeremiah
(Jeremiah 1:5). Therefore, to ask, "If we don't evangelize, will the
elect be saved?" is like asking, "If there is no predestination, will
the predestined be saved?" God knows those who are his and he will
raise up messengers to win them. If someone refuses to be a part of
that plan, because he dislikes the idea of being tampered with before
he was born, then he will be the loser, not God and not the elect.
"You will certainly carry out God's purpose however you act but it
makes a difference to you whether you serve like Judas or like John."
(Problem of Pain chapter 7, Anthology, p 910, cf. p 80)
Prayer is like preaching in that it is a human act
also. It is a human act that God has ordained and which he delights in
because it reflects the dependence of his creatures upon Him. He has
promised to respond to prayer, and his response is just as contingent
upon our prayer as our prayer is in accordance with his will. "And
this is the confidence which we have before Him, that if we ask
anything according to His will, He hears us" (I John 5:14).
When we don't know how to pray according to God's will but desire it
earnestly, "the Spirit of God intercedes for us according to the
will of God" (Romans 8:27).
In other words, just as God will see to it that His
Word is proclaimed as a means to saving the elect, so He will see to
it that all those prayers are prayed which He has promised to respond
to. I think Paul's words in Romans 15:18 would apply equally well to
his preaching and his praying ministry: "I will not presume to speak
of anything except what Christ has accomplished through me, resulting
in the obedience of the Gentiles." Even our prayers are a gift from
the one who "works in us that which is pleasing in his sight" (Hebrews
13:21). Oh, how grateful we should be that He has chosen us to be
employed in this high service! How eager we should be to spend much
time in prayer!
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This excerpt is from
http://desiringgod.org/library/topics/prayer/sovereignty_and_prayer.html
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