I'm working on part 2 of the Hannah 3 part sermon series that started last week and I just asked the question, "Could God have answered Hannah's prayer even if the answer was 'no'?" The question came to me in the writing process, so I went with it, and came up with a clear yes to my own question. God often times answers our prayers by not answering them. That may seem like a paradox, but it isn't. The truth is that we often times have very little perspective about our own lives; we can't see the future, we don't know the consequences of our decisions. As such, how could a loving God who does know these things, give us what we pray for when the result would make things worse?
That may not make your heartache our worry go away as you continue to pray about something that seems like a no-brainer, but perhaps it will comfort you a little to know that God does indeed hear your prayer, even if the answer is "no" or "not now".
This principle has proven itself numerous times in my life. It was God's answer that I needed to wait during several rough years of hoping for the help-mate that I wanted in life; it wasn't until several years later that I met my Nicole. It was God's answer that I needed to wait, again for several years, as I hoped for a ministry opportunity. He first answered that prayer with the people of Palo, and then, in good time, moved us here to Franklin. In both cases, I would have wanted to move faster, God wanted me to be useful when I got where I was going. If I had gotten my way in either case, where would I be now? I don't know, but I'm here now, doing the will of God and continuing to rely upon the power of prayer.
So why did God answer Hannah's prayer? For the same reason that he closed her womb in the first place: to bring glory to him name and to bless his people. You see, Hannah's son, who by her own desperate vow, would spend his life in service to the LORD, would go on to become one of the nation's most important prophets/judges. How did Samuel end up as a hero of the faith? God told his mother "not yet".
The next time you feel like giving up on your prayers, like God isn't listening or just doesn't care, consider this: God knows the end from the beginning, he loves the whole world, and he is answering your prayer even if the answer isn't what you want to hear.
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