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Why Is G-d Not Responding to My Friend’s Prayers?


Dear Rabbi,

My friend’s family is going through a very rough time. She stays home most of the time praying to G‑d that her situation change, but it does not. She is trying very hard to be faithful, but the more she prays to G‑d the angrier she gets.

Should I advise her to stop praying so that she won’t be so angry at G‑d? Or should I encourage her to continue, even if that means she’ll keep getting angrier?

Answer:

Thanks for your question. Your friend is lucky to have a friend like you who cares and takes an interest in her wellbeing.

Prayer: Part of the Picture

Your question relates to a common misconception many people have about how a relationship with G‑d works. Some believe that one should pray to G‑d, ask for what you need and want, and that’s it. They feel that prayer and faith in G‑d should magically bring changes and blessings.

However, the truth is, we need to be like the faithful farmer: he prays to G‑d for success, and then, full of faith that he’ll succeed, he goes and plows the field. G‑d created this world for us to work and be creative in. Yes, this is difficult, and remaining at home can be much easier, but that is not what G‑d wants from us in this world.

We need to make a receptacle in which to receive blessing. In addition to creating a physical receptacle, we also need to create a spiritual receptacle. We can do that by adding in our Jewish observance. Through these channels, G‑d bestows His blessings on us.

The effect of prayer on us should be that we should feel closer to G‑d and joyfully accepting of what He wants us to do in this world. After your friend prays in this way, she can determine what’s in her power to do, and then do it.

What Is Prayer?

Prayer brings G‑d closer to us, and reminds us that He is with us during difficult times, just as during good times, and that the awesome G‑d may do things that we do not understand. It helps us recognize that everything that’s not in our power is G‑d’s department, and that our personal wants are not necessarily what is ultimately in our best interest. The same way a parent may not fulfill all of a child’s wants because they have a better understanding of a situation, so too, we rely on G‑d’s judgment to do what is best for us.

Prayer is our connection to G‑d as our Creator. Standard Jewish prayers discuss the greatness of the infinite G‑d who created all of reality, and who still chooses to be involved in every detail of a finite human being’s daily life.

Prayer also gives us the time to contemplate and recognize the blessings that are literally raining down on us and drenching us. Often, we do not even extend a cup to catch the drops. We do not spend time contemplating G‑d’s creation and the good fortune we have to be alive, functioning, with family and good friends. When our focus is on what we want and are not receiving, nothing but frustration and a suspicion that G‑d doesn’t like us (G‑d forbid) will build up.

One of the greatest forms of charity is assisting another in finding an occupation so that they can be self-sufficient. By helping your friend focus on the areas where she can take control or do something, and by gently helping her highlight the positive aspects of her life, you are doing a great charitable deed.

Please see Why Do We Pray? from our Jewish Prayer section.

Rabbi Zalman Nelson, LMSW
for The Judaism WebsiteChabad.org

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By Zalman Nelson   More articles...  |   RSS Listing of Newest Articles by this Author
Zalman Nelson is a licensed therapist, online counselor, and freelance writer/editor. His private practice fuses modern therapeutic techniques with the ancient Jewish wisdom of Kabbalah and Chassidic thought. He lives in Israel with his wife and five children. Connect with him here.

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Reader Comments
Latest Comments:
Posted: Sep 28, 2011
To your friend
Do you think your friend can start with thanking G-d, praising and worshipping the Great I AM? I am sure there is much that she is thankful for?
It is more beneficial to us to seek G-d's face instead of His hands. In other words worship Him for Who He Is not for what He can give you.
G-d Is Awesome!
Posted By Irene Esparza, Lubbock, Tx/USA

Posted: Sep 28, 2011
Prayer
Thanks for an excellent article on prayer. My mother was Jewish but was adopted, so sadly, I was not brought up in the Jewish faith. My philosphy is to pray, do good and learn.
Posted By Mary Young, Yeovil, UK

Posted: Sep 28, 2011
I'm very lucky because..
I don't ascribe to the idea that G-d wants bad things for us or that He punishes us for this or that reason. This way, I can have total faith and trust in Him to even know my needs before I ask. I never have petitioned Him to give me anything or do anything for me. What I expect from Him is to give me the STRENGTH to go through terrible times, and He has never failed me yet. Even when I faced deadly diseases and doctors thought I might die, I never asked for my life. I asked for the wisdom to know how to deal with it, and asked for strength, and then did all I could do to improve the situation. What was not in my hands, was not in my hands. I had to accept. At times, I had to cry. Other times, I was able to say Thank You to G-d when miracles happened. I know that miracles won't always happen, but also I know that they SOMETIMES DO. I look for the good, and thank G-d for it, although I must admit, the waiting is hard. We are humans. Life has ups and downs. Sad, but true.
Posted By Karen Joyce Chaya Fradle Kleinman Bell, Riverside, CA

Posted: Sep 27, 2011
It doesn't work that way; we are not beggars. No matter how worthy the request, it is up to us to make things happen. Prayer may be a way to define the need and develop a solution but remember, the Red Sea didn't part until the Jews stepped into it. HaShem may make things available but we have to know how and do the work to grab them. We have to stop waiting for Moshiach to solve our problems; Israel is there, the Arabs are in place, there is a yellow pimple on top of the Temple Mount and it is up to us to make it disappear. Only then will we have a messianic period of peace. Our prayers are to serve HaShem, not the other way round.
Posted By Marshall Shapiro, Niagara Region, Canada

Posted: Sep 24, 2011
I know that there is no answer to this. But just remember-there's a saying: "nothing happens until it happens to you". In other words, people shouldn't judge other people's reactions until they have experienced what that person has experiened. I don't blame the above person for being angry-sometimes you can have hope for only so long and then you come to think that nothing you do really makes a difference.
Posted By Anonymous, Fairlawn, NJ

Posted: Sep 24, 2011
I have so much to say on this topic that this is a continuation.
We are human beings, made in G-d's image, but we are not G-d. There is a limit to what we can endure without losing faith. If you saw a teacher treating a student unfairly, wouldn't you feel that you have to speak to the teacher and explain that the child is potentially being turned off to the lessons you are trying to teach him/her because of the constant grief the teacher is giving the child? Yes, sometimes G-d says no, and sometimes he says yes, but the operative word is sometimes. Everyone can deal with sometimes. I don't think anyone can deal with no always.
Here it is right before Rosh Hashanah and I have these terrible thoughts and feelings. The past 3 years have been just one long, bad, bad, day of no's. Three years is a long time to hear no. Can a child survive that? If Hashem really cares about me, would He continue to keep saying no, so that my family is destroyed?
Posted By Anonymous, Fairlawn, NJ

Posted: Sep 24, 2011
I think about this all the time as I have so many challenges in my life and G-d is not in any way listening to my prayers. I definitely agree that davening should not be accompanied by magical thinking, i .e., just because I daven things will be fine. But that is where my agreement with the above aritcle ends.
Suppose you were friends with a mother and father who were trying to show their child the right way to be. But you noticed that every single time the child asked for something, even something small, the parents said no. After a while, you might see the child turning away from the parents. But it would make sense to you because you realize that the child must be feeling that if Mommy and Daddy really loved the child, they would say yes at least sometimes, especially when the child was basically a good kid who just needed some direction now and then. So why would Mommy and Daddy keep saying no? The child would just lose faith in them and in his/her life also.
Posted By Anonymous, Fairlawn, NJ

Posted: Sep 20, 2011
G-d always listens, and he always answers...
Sometimes he says, "Yes."
Sometimes he says, "No."
Sometimes he says, "Wait."

But he ALWAYS listens. He ALWAYS answers.

Does your friend listen to him?

You know the expression, "Don't ask a question if you don't want the answer"? Be honest with yourself and with G-d when you talk...and listen. You will get an answer.
Posted By Anonymous, Blacksburg, VA



 


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