One more thing Darat if you'd care to address...how would God handle situation 1 that I offered, in your opinion? Of course this assumes that God exists.
-Elliot
Let me break down my thoughts
1. If God did answer prayer, the mind absolutely boggles. If I prayed that the most beautiful woman in the world would fall in love with me, and 180982 other guys prayed the same thing, then what? If I prayed that I had all the money in the world, and another person prayed that they had enough money to survive, then what? If I prayed that I would never experience physical death, but my neighbor prays for me to die a painful death, then what?
1.) It could make 180982 women with different appearences for the 180982 men and appear to be the most beautiful woman in the world individually for each man and vice versa for the women. While making it impossible for these people to not meet their counterpart and fall in love.
It could make it so that there would be no need for money to survive and allow each person who prayed to have all the money in the world to obtain it for a brief period of time until they spent it....Or atleast allow every person to have special skills and the proper environment to make a wealthy living if they decided to act upon their desire of wealth.
It could allow you to die a very painful death and then be brought back to life moments after and force you to move locations so the neighbor is rid of you.
2. Given the above, it seems reasonable for God to *detach* himself from the whole prayer situation, dontcha think?
2.) If an omnipotent, omniscient and omnipresent God existed it does not seem reasonable one bit.
When we pray, *we are rejecting power, not embracing it*. Prayer is different from, say, a superstition like the Ghost Dance. Various Indian groups performed the Ghost Dance because they believed in would exert power and control over God, who would then give benefits to them and resurrect their dead warriors and all that. Press the button, and X happens. *BUT CHRISTIANS DO NOT HAVE THIS EXPECTATION IN PRAYER*. Or, rather, they ought not to have that expectation. Christians reject superstition, the belief that God can be controlled if I just do A, B, and C. When we pray, we ask, we question, we praise, we think, we talk, all that. But it is not result orientated! If it was, *IT WOULD HAVE DISAPPEARED COMPELTELY, JUST AS THE GHOST DANCE DISAPPEARED COMPLETELY*.
3.) But in my opinion christians do expect to control their God. If a christian asks for forgiveness do they not expect to be forgiven even when they repeat the offense a second or third time? Do christians not try to "appease" their God by following scripture and expect it not to toss them into a lake of fire? When it comes to control the relationship between God and christians are very similar to that of a whore and a client of a whore. A whore appears to be the controlled and the client the master but in the end the client pays the whore and the whore gets what they wanted all along.
4. The Lord's Prayer, given to us by Jesus, contains all that anyone ought to need to know about the reality of prayer, for the Christian. It is directed to the Father. It is about the Father. It is not about us. It recognizes the relationship, and keeps our reality in perspective. His will be done, not ours. In the kind of prayer I often see ruminated about on this forum, we wonder why *OUR WILL* is not done when we pray. That is out of order. When we pray, we ask that *God's will* be done. Do we ask for things? Of course. Food, forgiveness, strength, all that stuff, culminating in deliverance from evil. Yet those requests are within the framework of God's will. Jesus prayed before the crucifixion, and God's will was done. *That's prayer*.
4.)Our Father, who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name. Thy Kingdom come, thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread.
And forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive those who trespass against us.
And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. For thine is the kingdom, the power and the glory. for ever and ever. Amen
See... 3.)
As for the whole Gods "will" thing then obviously his will is not of good intention at times. What one may judge as good another could just as easily judge as bad as you have stated in 1.) with your prayer scenerio's which were completed by a mere mortal. Explain to me an exact deinifition of God's will. How is a person who has an abortion not God's will? What if the child to be born were to become the next hitler? What if God's will has already been set into place and whatever event or decision already made or about to be made has been forseen and dealt with since the creation of the universe?
Seems like a lot of words to describe something that could easily be described as non existant.
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