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Boomerang Prayers

by Philip Yancey

| 26 Comments

Because I wrote a book with the title Prayer: Does It Make Any Difference? I receive letters and emails from readers who give wrenching accounts of unanswered prayers.  A man quit his job at a printing plant when it began printing pornography and, despite his urgent prayers, never landed another job.  A couple desperately wanted a child and found themselves infertile.  Another woman got her wish for a child, only to have her daughter die of a rare disease before reaching the age of two.

I wrote two chapters on unanswered prayer, but frankly, all words seem impotent against the mystery of why such prayers go unanswered.  When prayer seems more like struggle than relationship, when I find myself repeating the same requests over and over and wonder, “Is anyone really listening?” I take some comfort in remembering that Jesus, too, had unanswered prayers.  Four come to mind.

Numeral1As Luke records, Jesus spent an entire night in prayer before choosing the inner core of twelve disciples.  Yet if you read the Gospels, you marvel that this dodgy dozen could represent an answer to prayer.  They included, Luke pointedly notes, “Judas Iscariot, who became a traitor,” not to mention the pettily ambitious Sons of Thunder and the hothead Simon, whom Jesus would later rebuke as “Satan.”

“O unbelieving generation,” Jesus once sighed about these twelve, “how long shall I stay with you?  How long shall I put up with you?”  I wonder if, in that moment of exasperation, Jesus questioned the Father’s response to his night of prayer.

The particular makeup of the twelve may not truly qualify as an unanswered prayer, for we have no reason to believe that any other choices might have served Jesus better.  Even so, I find it comforting that while on earth Jesus faced the same limitations as does anyone in leadership.  The Son of God himself could only draw from the talent pool available.

Numeral2 A clearer instance of unanswered prayer occurred in the Garden of Gethsemane when, as Luther put it, “God struggled with God.”  While Jesus lay prostrate on the ground, sweat falling from him like drops of blood, his prayers took on an uncharacteristic tone of pleading.  He “offered up prayers and petitions with loud cries and tears to the one who could save him from death,” the Book of Hebrews says—but of course Jesus was not saved from death.  As that awareness grew, Jesus felt distress.  His community of support had all fallen asleep.  “Could you not keep watch for one hour?” he chided.

We have few details about the content of Jesus’ prayers, since any potential witnesses were dozing.  Perhaps he reviewed his entire ministry on earth.  The weight of all that went undone may have borne down upon him: his disciples were unstable, irresponsible; the movement seemed in peril; God’s chosen people had rejected him; the world still harbored evil and much suffering.

In Gethsemane Jesus seemed at the very edge of human endurance.  He no more relished the idea of pain and death than you or I do.  “Everything is possible for you,” Jesus pleaded to the Father; “Take this cup from me.”

Numeral3 The third unanswered prayer appears in an intimate scene recorded by John, the disciples’ last supper with their master.  Jesus expanded the scope of his prayer far beyond the walls of the Upper Room, to encompass even those of us who live today:

My prayer is not for them (the disciples) alone.  I pray also for those who will believe in me through their message, that all of them may be one, Father, just as you are in me and I am in you.  May they also be in us so that the world may believe that you have sent me.  I have given them the glory that you gave me, that they may be one as we are one: I in them and you in me.  May they be brought to complete unity to let the world know that you sent me.

Disunity virtually defines the history of the church.  Pick at random any year of history—pick now, with 45,000 Christian denominations—and you will see how far short we fall of Jesus’ final request.  The church, and the watching world, still await an answer.

Numeral4 The fourth unanswered prayer appears in what has become known as the Lord’s Prayer, which Jesus taught as a model.  It includes the sweeping request that “your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.”  Surely that prayer remains unanswered today.

On television I watch the long lines of migrants fleeing war—some 42,000 displaced every day—and think of their prayers for peace and the simple yearning to return to their homes someday.  I am haunted by the image of twenty-one Egyptian Christians kneeling in orange jumpsuits by the Libyan surf, their heads bowed in prayer as, one by one, each is beheaded by ISIS.  God’s will is not being done on earth as it is in heaven—not yet, at least.

I sense a partial clue into the mystery of unanswered prayer in what I call boomerang prayers.  Often when we pray, we want God to intervene in spectacular fashion: to heal miraculously, to change evil hearts, to quash injustice.  More commonly, God works through us.  Like a boomerang, the prayers we toss at God come swishing back toward us, testing our response.

I think back to Jesus’ unanswered prayers.  The disciples?  Eventually, except for Judas, the twelve submitted to a slow but steady transformation, providing a kind of long-term answer to Jesus’ petition.  John, a Son of Thunder, softened into “the apostle of Love.”  Peter, who earned Jesus’ rebuke by recoiling from the idea of Messiah suffering, later urged his followers to “follow in his steps” by suffering as Christ did.

In Gethsemane, Jesus did not receive what he requested, removal of the cup of suffering.   His plea for intervention looped back like a boomerang.  Hebrews affirms that, though Jesus was not saved from death, nevertheless “he was heard because of his reverent submission.  Although he was a son, he learned obedience from what he suffered.”  It was God’s will that Jesus had come to do, after all, and his plea resolved into these words: “Yet not what I will, but what you will.”  Not many hours later he would cry out, in profound summation, “It is finished.”

How many times have I prayed for one thing only to receive another?  I long for the sense of detachment, of trust, that I see in Gethsemane.  God and God alone is qualified to answer my prayers, even if it means transmuting them from my own self-protective will into God’s perfect will.  When Jesus prayed to the one who could save him from death, he did not get that salvation; he got instead the salvation of the world.

The final two prayers, for unity and for seeing God’s will done on earth as it is in heaven, put Jesus’ followers in the spotlight.  “It is for your good that I am going away,” Jesus assured the disciples.  “As the Father has sent me, I am sending you.”  He turned over the mission to us, as ill-equipped and undependable as that original band of twelve.

Bono bestIn Vanishing Grace I wrote about hearing the musician Bono of the band U2 describe his short-term mission to an orphanage in Ethiopia.  For a month he and his wife Ali held babies, helped nurse them back to health, and then donated money to equip the orphanage.  Bono said that after his return to Ireland his prayers changed, taking on an angry, defiant tone.  “God, don’t you care about those children in Africa?  They did nothing wrong and yet because of AIDS there may soon be fifteen million parentless babies on that continent.  Don’t you care?!”

Gradually Bono heard in reply that, yes, God cares.  Where did he think his idea of a mission trip to Africa came from?  The questions he had hurled at God came sailing back to him, boomerang-like, as a prod to action.  Get moving.  Do something.  The role of leading a global campaign against AIDS held little appeal for Bono at first—“I’m a rock star, not a social worker!”—but eventually he could not ignore what felt unmistakably like a calling.

Over the next years politicians as varied as President Bill Clinton and Senator Strom Thurmond, and then Tony Blair and Kofi Annan and George W. Bush, found a musician dressed all in black and wearing his signature sunglasses camped outside their offices waiting to see them.  In a time of economic cutbacks, somehow Bono managed to persuade those leaders to ante up fifteen billion dollars to combat AIDS.

With government support assured, Bono went on a bus tour of the United States, speaking to large churches and Christian colleges because he believed that Christians were key to addressing the global problem of AIDS.  He invited others to participate in what God wanted accomplished in the world, and many did.

My understanding of prayer has changed.  I now see it less as trying to convince God to do what I want done and more as a way of discerning what God wants done in the world, and how I can be a part of it.  Mystery endures, but a different kind of mystery: What tiny role can I play in answering Jesus’ prayer for unity, and in doing God’s will on earth as it is in heaven?  The boomerang circles back.

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Discussion

  1. Philip Yancey Avatar
    Philip Yancey

    You are very kind, Cynthia. Trust me, I read this, and it gave me a boost and courage as I head out to the mountains to spend another week writing. If I don’t hurry up, you might run out of my words at this rate! –Philip

  2. Joseph Avatar

    You’ve written a very insightful and timeless article, Mr. Yancey.

    We know that Jesus is both God and Man but sometimes it’s hard to really accept that He had limitations during the 33 years He spent on earth. Paul said that Jesus emptied Himself and that He was subject to what we mere mortals are subject to – hunger, disease, anxiety, etc.

    I think that although Jesus’s mortal body prayed for deliverance from the sacrifice during that long night in the garden of Gethsemane, His Spirit knew that without the sacrifice, humanity would have come to a screeching halt right then and there.

    But what you said about God using us as instruments of prayer is quite remarkable. Christians often rely on grace alone, thinking that it is merely their faith in God that matters. True, there are folks who don’t come to Jesus until they are taking their last breath, and it is the faith that God will forgive their sins that does save them. But for most people, James’s words also apply i.e. “faith without works is dead”. If we have the Spirit of God flowing through us, we will do our Christian duty to help others.

    I guess when it comes down to it, the unanswered prayers are what ground us most deeply to our faith in the love and FAITHFULNESS of our Father who is in heaven. 🙂

  3. Joseph Avatar

    Your sense of outrage about the unfairness of suffering stems from a realization that the world is truly evil and cruel. But what is evil without good? You only know that things are cruel and unjust because you have an in-born sense of right and wrong. Not merely a social construct but a deeper sense that comes from the Moral Compass which is God.

    C.S. Lewis expressed it similarly in his book Mere Christianity.

    So in essence, you prove the very existence of God through your disappointment in His seeming indifference to the ills of this world. May God use your pain to heal not only your sadness but that of others in need.

  4. Rachel Avatar
    Rachel

    Dear Philip,
    I’m not sure if this is still an appropriate email address for reaching you, but I wanted to share some art that was inspired by your books.
    It’s not the first set of paintings that was inspired by you. …I think it’s that when I’m going through a spiritually tough time I reach for books like, “Disappointment With God” and, “Prayer: Does it make Any Difference”, and those tough times inspire the paintings… but they’re nudged on by your words of encouragement.

    Here’s my latest:

    “His Eye is On the Sparrow”
    rachelpeters [dot] com/his-eye-is-on-the-sparrow/3050/

    Thanks again for your artwork!

    Rachel.

  5. Philip Yancey Avatar
    Philip Yancey

    Wow, this shows the gritty reality behind a song that usually conveys the opposite. Radical, Rachel–you cut right to the root.

    Philip

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26 thoughts on “Boomerang Prayers”

  1. You are very kind, Cynthia. Trust me, I read this, and it gave me a boost and courage as I head out to the mountains to spend another week writing. If I don’t hurry up, you might run out of my words at this rate! –Philip

  2. You’ve written a very insightful and timeless article, Mr. Yancey.

    We know that Jesus is both God and Man but sometimes it’s hard to really accept that He had limitations during the 33 years He spent on earth. Paul said that Jesus emptied Himself and that He was subject to what we mere mortals are subject to – hunger, disease, anxiety, etc.

    I think that although Jesus’s mortal body prayed for deliverance from the sacrifice during that long night in the garden of Gethsemane, His Spirit knew that without the sacrifice, humanity would have come to a screeching halt right then and there.

    But what you said about God using us as instruments of prayer is quite remarkable. Christians often rely on grace alone, thinking that it is merely their faith in God that matters. True, there are folks who don’t come to Jesus until they are taking their last breath, and it is the faith that God will forgive their sins that does save them. But for most people, James’s words also apply i.e. “faith without works is dead”. If we have the Spirit of God flowing through us, we will do our Christian duty to help others.

    I guess when it comes down to it, the unanswered prayers are what ground us most deeply to our faith in the love and FAITHFULNESS of our Father who is in heaven. 🙂

  3. Your sense of outrage about the unfairness of suffering stems from a realization that the world is truly evil and cruel. But what is evil without good? You only know that things are cruel and unjust because you have an in-born sense of right and wrong. Not merely a social construct but a deeper sense that comes from the Moral Compass which is God.

    C.S. Lewis expressed it similarly in his book Mere Christianity.

    So in essence, you prove the very existence of God through your disappointment in His seeming indifference to the ills of this world. May God use your pain to heal not only your sadness but that of others in need.

  4. Dear Philip,
    I’m not sure if this is still an appropriate email address for reaching you, but I wanted to share some art that was inspired by your books.
    It’s not the first set of paintings that was inspired by you. …I think it’s that when I’m going through a spiritually tough time I reach for books like, “Disappointment With God” and, “Prayer: Does it make Any Difference”, and those tough times inspire the paintings… but they’re nudged on by your words of encouragement.

    Here’s my latest:

    “His Eye is On the Sparrow”
    rachelpeters [dot] com/his-eye-is-on-the-sparrow/3050/

    Thanks again for your artwork!

    Rachel.

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