... so I will pause to ask whether any of y'all want to take a turn at proposing what can be gleaned from Eph. 1:15-19a.
One thing I notice with Paul's prayers is that he never prays the problem. He never tells God what is wrong with churches or Christians. God already knows the problem in minute detail. When we speak the problem to God we magnify the problem and set ourselves up to have our faith opposed by our own unbelief. Paul always prays for the positive, never affirming the power of the negative. Apart from his prayer to be delivered from his thorn in the flesh, which was a messenger of satan.
Where apostles did mention the problem in prayer, they always ended with positive prayer for the solution that would overpower the problem.
One thing I notice with Paul's prayers is that he never prays the problem. He never tells God what is wrong with churches or Christians. God already knows the problem in minute detail. When we speak the problem to God we magnify the problem and set ourselves up to have our faith opposed by our own unbelief. Paul always prays for the positive, never affirming the power of the negative. Apart from his prayer to be delivered from his thorn in the flesh, which was a messenger of satan.
Where apostles did mention the problem in prayer, they always ended with positive prayer for the solution that would overpower the problem.
I think Paul was praying an inappropriate prayer. for someone of his spiritual maturity.You cited a prayer of Paul that perhaps should not be dismissed without due consideration:
"There was given me a thorn in my flesh, a messenger of Satan, to torment me. Three times I pleaded with the Lord to take it away from me, but He said to me, "My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness" (2Cor. 12:7b-8a).
What are the implications of this ungranted prayer request?
I think Paul was praying an inappropriate prayer. for someone of his spiritual maturity.
Jesus has empowered the saints to wield authority over demons, the messengers of satan. Paul was struggling to overpower this demon, much as the disciples were struggling to cast out the demon from the epileptic boy. and unbelief crept into their hearts so that they gave up the fight and accepted defeat. Jesus stepped into help the boy, because the disciples were failing on the boy's behalf. But in Paul's case, Paul was failing on his own behalf, even though he had already been given by God's grace the weapons that would assure victory and he should have been able to win the victory, by applying what he was already knew to do on behalf of others.
In Paul's case, the Lord was forcing Paul to learn to war effectively by leaving the tormentor in play until Paul worked out what he needed to do to free himself by wielding the power of Christ in Him. Paul was exerting great effort against the demon, rather than accepting his own weakness or strength was irrelevant, and instead resting in trust in the delegated power and wisdom of Christ in Him to neutralise the demon.'s influence.
Yes, Paul's prayer in 2Cor. 12:8 was inappropriate because not in accordance with God's will, which may be the case with our prayers for someone's healing, indicating that the miracle most desired by God is for people to accept Him or have faith without demanding proof or signs (2Cor. 5:7, Matt. 12:39, 1Tim. 2:3-4).
As was the case for Job, God chooses to allow Satan to torment souls on earth for the purpose of teaching them of their need to value salvation to heaven.
"Weakness" is akin to humility (2Cor. 11:23-30, 12:7). God could exercise His power by coercing conversions (as tulipists claim),
but the love of God must be evoked by a gentle whisper (cf. 1Kings 19:12) and even by dying (Romans 5:8, 2Cor. 13:3-4).
Sickness and healing are not mentioned in 2 Cor. 12:8. Biblically, a thorn in the flesh is a person.
Num 33:55
‘But if you do not drive out the inhabitants of the land from before you, then it shall be that those whom you let remain shall be irritants in your eyes and thorns in your sides, and they shall harass you in the land where you dwell.
Jos 23:13
“know for certain that the LORD your God will no longer drive out these nations from before you. But they shall be snares and traps to you, and scourges on your sides and thorns in your eyes, until you perish from this good land which the LORD your God has given you.
Jdg 2:3
“Therefore I also said, ‘I will not drive them out before you; but they shall be thorns in your side,[fn] and their gods shall be a snare to you.' ”
People who think God might sometimes wants them to become or remain sick, will be Big Pharma's cash cow your whole life.
Yes, Paul's prayer in 2Cor. 12:8 was inappropriate because not in accordance with God's will, which may be the case with our prayers for someone's healing, indicating that the miracle most desired by God is for people to accept Him or have faith without demanding proof or signs (2Cor. 5:7, Matt. 12:39, 1Tim. 2:3-4).
As was the case for Job, God chooses to allow Satan to torment souls on earth for the purpose of teaching them of their need to value salvation to heaven.
"Weakness" is akin to humility (2Cor. 11:23-30, 12:7). God could exercise His power by coercing conversions (as tulipists claim),
but the love of God must be evoked by a gentle whisper (cf. 1Kings 19:12) and even by dying (Romans 5:8, 2Cor. 13:3-4).