Don: Michael has posted on The Interface a story about an unspoken prayer, in the book The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho. David commented that he found this fictional prayer more meaningful than some of the great prayers we have been studying, from the Old Testament.
I find myself sometimes personally reflected in them. Like Jonah, I am at times inclined to rebellion and am driven to try to flee from God’s commands. Sometimes, I am fearful of the future, like Jacob; sometimes I am like Hannah, pleading for things I think I need; and sometimes I am like Solomon, wishing for more wisdom and insight.
On a number of occasions, we have highlighted Romans 8:26, which tells us that we do not know how to pray, an indictment not just of us but also of Job, Jonah, Jacob and Hannah, whose prayers we have been studying.
If there is one overriding principle in all of the responses of god to these prayers, it is that god has a plan for history, for his people of the kingdom of heaven and for you and me. The prayers that we have discussed, and others we may explore in future, illustrate the message from Romans that neither we know nor the prophets of god knew how to pray. These prayers, which are doubtful, bargaining, self-justifying, fearful and insecure are precisely the kinds of prayer that we tend to pray. The meaning of these prayers—the meaning that god wants us to get out of them—is that prayer is not about us and our plans but about god and his.
We see in these prayers our worst prayers as well, and yet out of each one of them we see that god has a plan—for Job, for Jonah, for Hannah, for Jacob, for Solomon. And presumably he has a plan for you and me. But he does not hold the kind of prayer we pray against us. We can utter our doubts and fears and pleas in our prayers, but in his response he shows us that he puts our prayers into the context of his plan. That’s why his responses often appear to us to be unrelated to the content of our prayer.
Sometimes God’s plan is clear and even becomes operational; often the plan is only to be grasped by faith and cannot be seen clearly. As part of that same passage about not knowing how to pray (Romans 8:26-28) Paul concludes that “god causes all things to work together for good to those who love god.” In other words, he has a plan for us, and that is always his response.
Job asked why was all this bad stuff happening to him, and God’s response was “It’s not about you; it’s about a grand plan that involves the universe.” God’s prophet Jonah never accepted the message: He complained that god would and did mess up his (Jonah’s) plan to punish the Ninehvites, while god told him clearly that he (god) had a different plan, which was to save them. God completely ignored Jacob’s prayer for protection and instead gave him a new identity and made him disabled. Hannah prayed for a son to be her security in old age; god gave her a son but it was his son. It was his plan and his son, not hers. God responded to Paul’s prayer to remove the thorn from his (Paul’s) flesh that he would just have to put up with it and be content with the grace that god gave him.
So I see these prayers as real, authentic, and instructive. They are not good, model prayers like the Our Father from Matthew 6, but they are valuable lessons in showing us how we pray and how god responds, and in demonstrating that only God’s plan matters. They help us see that prayer is a way of centering or aligning or focusing ourselves on the will of god, on his plan, but that seems in conflict with the concept of free will.
The whole of the bible, from beginning to end, is about God’s activity in history, with his people, and with individuals. It cannot be said, in my view, that god does not tamper with man’s free will. Scripture is replete with God’s interventions. God intervenes, for instance, in every aspect of the journey out of Egypt in the Exodus story. Nowhere in the bible, at critical junctures in human history, does he ask Man: What do you want? What is your will?
By definition, prayer is an invitation to god to intervene in the affairs of man. It is an act of surrender of the will. Thy kingdom come, thy will be done. If god governs history, as he appears to do, how can history consist of the events that arise out of the exercise of our free will? God’s grace seems to me the ultimate in tampering with our free will.
But if god is governing history, why do we see so much distress and mayhem in history and in the lives of individuals? It is impossible not to accept that man is also responsible for making significant choices that have significant consequences. How can these two points be reconciled?
Here are some scriptural passages about God’s sovereignty in relation to the will of man:
Psalms 135:6: Whatever the Lord pleases, He does,
In heaven and in earth, in the seas and in all deeps.
Isaiah 46:9-10: “Remember the former things long past,
For I am God, and there is no other;
I am God, and there is no one like Me,
Declaring the end from the beginning,
And from ancient times things which have not been done,
Saying, ‘My purpose will be established,
And I will accomplish all My good pleasure’;
Daniel 4:35: “…All the inhabitants of the earth are accounted as nothing,
But He does according to His will in the host of heaven
And among the inhabitants of earth;
And no one can ward off His hand
Or say to Him, ‘What have You done?’”
Isaiah 64:8: But now, O Lord, You are our Father,
We are the clay, and You our potter;
And all of us are the work of Your hand.
Exodus 4:11: The Lord said to him, “Who has made man’s mouth? Or who makes him mute or deaf, or seeing or blind? Is it not I, the Lord?
Jeremiah 1:4: “Before I formed you in the womb I knew you,
And before you were born I consecrated you;
Lamentations 3:37-38: Who is there who speaks and it comes to pass,
Unless the Lord has commanded it?
Is it not from the mouth of the Most High
That both good and ill go forth?
Proverbs 16:1: The plans of the heart belong to man,
But the answer of the tongue is from the Lord.
Proverbs 16:9: The mind of man plans his way,
But the Lord directs his steps.
Proverbs 16:33: The lot is cast into the lap,
But its every decision is from the Lord.
Jeremiah 10:23: I know, O Lord, that a man’s way is not in himself,
Nor is it in a man who walks to direct his steps.
In Romans 9, Paul asks “Who can resist the will of the Lord?” Is there a difference between the freedom we have to make decisions, and free will? How do we square the moral responsibility we have for the consequential decisions we make, versus the lack of it if we hand over our free will to god?
Harry: The Old Testament was written for the Children of Israel, who had free will up to a point. Nobody else did. Pharaoh had no choices – he was manipulated by god. Psalm 136 is Israel’s celebration of god’s intervention with Pharaoh. Free will started to evolve in the latter part of Israel’s existence…
David: …except in the very beginning of the bible, where we were thrown out of Paradise precisely because we wanted, and got, free will. I hate to be heretical this early in a class session, but I must question the many biblical references to god’s intervening in human affairs. The bible may assert as often as it likes that god intervenes in history and in individuals’ lives, but the historical record does not resoundingly support that hypothesis. Similarly, science does not support biblical references to the manner in which god is said to have intervened in some cases. Thunder and lightning, we know now, are not divine weapons for use against the ungodly: They are natural events with rational, tested, and proven explanation that strike indiscriminately. Stories from scripture may (arguably) have been intended to be taken metaphorically, but they are misleading under the kindest interpretation.
I also would dispute that god ever imposes his will upon us, except in the sense that we have no choice but to be born with the Inner Light, or we could call it the Inner Voice, of god. But from at least the moment of birth onward, we have the absolute free will to snuff out the light, to wear earplugs that tune out the frequencies of the Inner Voice. Or we can choose to argue with the voice; to tell it that it is wrong! I’m not sure any of us can ever totally succeed in shutting out the Light/Voice for all time. It can and does try to influence us through conscience. But we can and too often do reject the voice of our conscience. We have free will.
So does god have a plan? He knows the beginning and the end of time and everything in between, but did he plan every trajectory of every subatomic particle that was and will ever exist? If he did, our lives are predetermined and free will is a myth.
What do Buddhist anchorites who lead the bleakest of existences in forbidding caves in the Himalayas—and there are many of them, by one eyewitness account I read—pray for? Surely not for the sorts of thing that Job, Jonah, Jacob and Hannah prayed for. The notion that such prayer is not the best kind of prayer is hardly a deep insight from the Old Testament, it seems to me. Perhaps we have something to learn from the Buddhist monks, and indeed from other religions.
Harry: If the Old Testament were all we had to go by, I think there would be far fewer faithful than there are. Luckily, we have Jesus, who came and gave us a completely different message, and a completely different kind of god of from the god of Psalms 136 whose “everlasting loving-kindness” did not extend to the Egyptians whose firstborn he massacred to help the Israelites leave. There are bits of value in the Old Testament, but in general its god is not the god of Jesus.
Michael: Maybe we need better definitions of free will and freedom. If we are talking about freedom of thought, I think I have it, but I am not sure I have complete freedom of action.
David: Malay farmers nonchalantly cross busy roads with their water buffaloes because they believe that fate is pre-determined—that god has a plan, and if that means they are going to be hit by a truck today, so be it. There’s nothing they can do about it.
Harry: We participate in this class because we are searching for truth, understanding, meaning, enlightenment. We all have an inkling that there is a god in charge, and that he is good and merciful, and while I cannot prove it, I draw comfort from it, as the Malays evidently draw comfort from their predestination. The important thing is the quest for god. Insight from other faiths would be valuable; to defend god with just the bible is problematic.
David: I agree it is good and important that we pray that god’s will be done. But I’d have doubts about the efficacy of “O god, they will be done, but let thy will be that I win the lottery today!” The key is to empty the mind of our own desires, leaving an empty vessel for god to fill. Jesus gave us a succinct and simple lesson in how to pray. The other stories only serve to complicate and obfuscate that simple message, in my opinion.
Robin: Why did god strike the firstborn of Egypt? Why did innocent children have to die? We don’t and can’t know. For all we know, god might have been merciful in striking them. How many chances was Pharaoh given before that final punishment was delivered? The kings that god took action against were those that were harassing and harming the Children of Israel. We often do wrong things and then have to have god rescue us from our mistakes. So we need to be careful of judging god, even when things don’t make sense. Even Jesus talked about the destruction of the wicked. But god has allowed time for the wicked to repent. Not everyone will choose to do so. That’s free will.
Kiran: If the Old Testament is not important, why would Jesus quote from it a lot? And Paul? Are the facts of the stories wrong but Jesus used them for teaching purposes? How should I approach and understand the Old Testament?
David: Jesus was well-versed in the religion of his time and culture. He had no other context to work in. We live in a different time, a different culture. Of course Jesus would have reference the Old Testament in his teaching, and his references would have been much better understood by his contemporaries than they could possibly be understood by your average Christian today. It’s a miracle that the core messages of the New Testament (the Beatitudes, for instance) have stood the test of time without requiring OT props to back them up, explain them, or justify them; and will stand that test until the end of time.
Jay: For me, the Old Testament is like history: If you don’t study and learn from it, you’re bound to repeat it. One sees a lot of repeating of OT history in other world religions today: They try to impose a definition on god, they try to decide who he will spite and who he will love, and so on. So by studying the OT, we can void repeating the mistakes made in it. Unfortunately, mankind has not transitioned very well from the Old to the New Testament philosophy, the philosophy of Jesus. Jesus himself tries to build comparisons, and not just contrasts, between the Old and the New.
The problem with god’s will is that he does a lot of things that we do not like. So we don’t want to leave it up to god’s will, because we know that if we do, nothing will change: Children will still suffer. If it were my will being done, there would be global peace and happiness; god’s will must be different from that.
David: That assumes that god’s will is in fact being done, and I don’t think for a minute that it is, in terms of human history and behavior. Where god’s will is invariably done is in the granting of grace to those who need it. The Old Testament message, or at least the implied message, that we can get from prayer what Job and Jonah et al. got, which was by no means bad even if it was not what they expected or hoped or asked for. They all came out OK in the end. But that is not Jesus’ message, which to Jonah would have been something like: “You are going to die a hideous death by drowning or being eaten alive by a fish, or some combination thereof. But don’t be afraid: God’s grace will be there for you, and that is as good as it can get.” None of this is evident in the OT prayers. They are not good examples of what to expect.
Jay: The problem is that most of the world chooses to believe in the OT examples.
David: That’s precisely the problem, and why I am so against the teaching of these Old Testament stories.
Michael: How would I believe that grace is coming when I am hanging in agony on the cross?
David: Faith. There is no other way. If you are in the gas chamber at Auschwitz, you know you are going to die. There is nothing left for you but faith and god’s grace. [On reflection, I would say that not even faith is necessary; that god will provide grace freely out of his compassion and love and mercy.]
Robin: According to scripture, the pain and suffering we experience on Earth is temporary. Grace is what gives us eternity.
Ada: Sometimes our egos get in the way of our relationship with god. We just need to be careful with what we do with our free will. The more we align it with god’s will, the easier life will be.
Michael: But it sounds somehow unsatisfactory to say that people in misery can expect nothing but grace. It sounds like we don’t need to worry about doing anything to relieve their misery—let god take care of it with his grace.
Harry: Good point. But again, it hinges partly on our definition of grace. We want an immutable truth that offers security and peace. But we observe historically that truth evolves. So the truth of the Old Testament has evolved.
* * *
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.