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Why Pray if Everything G-d does is Good?



Question:

We trust that G‑d knows what's best for us and does only good for us. Why, then, do we pray? Even if we don't see the good, it's good, right? So why are we trying to change what G‑d gives? Aren't we lacking in our trust and faith if we pray to G‑d to change what is?

Answer:

This is a question with which philosophers have struggled time immemorial. Many answers have been given to this question, and I will attempt to give you some of the answers offered:

Prayer is G‑d's way of allowing us to explain to Him how things look like from OUR perspective. From G‑d's perspective--seeing the whole picture, of past and future, physical and spiritual words, etc.--everything is good and perfect and accomplishing exactly what is necessary. But prayer is G‑d's way of saying to us, "tell me how things look like from your perspective in your world, and I will try to accommodate your perspective, by alleviating what seems like negative and showering you with more of what looks like positive." G‑d, being infinite and omnipotent, can obviously accomplish the "good" of His plan while still doing it in a way that looks positive to us and that is openly revealed good. (See my essay Baby Talk for more elucidation on this subject.)

Furthermore, prayer serves many different purposes.

The Hebrew word for prayer, tefillah, means self-judgment and introspection. Prayer is meant to be an introspective process. The reason why we pray is not always to change what G‑d had intended for us, but for us to get a better picture of true reality. We might enter the prayers thinking about all that WE need and want, but we are meant to finish the prayers with a new realization of all that G‑d does for us and how little we may actually deserve.

A person who experiences prayer as it is intended to be experienced, will finish off his prayers as a very different person than he began. The person who began the prayers (as a selfish, self-oriented individual) might not have really deserved what he was asking for, but the new person who concluded the prayers (as a thankful, grateful and more spiritual being) might now deserve it. In this way our prayers are actually answered, because WE change in the process and any negative decrees are then naturally averted.

Check out our Prayer Anthology for more insight on this crucial component in our service to G‑d.


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By Chana Weisberg   More articles...  |   RSS Listing of Newest Articles by this Author
Chana Weisberg is a noted educator and columnist and lectures worldwide on issues relating to women, faith, relationships and the Jewish soul.

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Reader Comments
Latest Comments:
Posted: May 12, 2009
Re: why pray?
I love this explanation! It's genius!
Posted By drew, hollywood, fl

Posted: Apr 24, 2009
Why pray if everything G_d does is good?
I love the answers given in this article. It seems some see prayer as asking God for what you want. Prayer is much much more. It is an opportunity to make a conscious connection to G_d.. It is an opportunity to put one's life into perspective and to experience the peace that comes with true gratitude. In respone to the first two comments about G_d needing our prayers, perhaps G_d does not "need" our prayers but knows how much WE benefit when we do. In other words, it is OUR need. G_d gives us the OPPORTUNITY to pray. Many times I have begun my prayers full of anxiety only to find it gone and replaced with a increasing sense of serenity.as I prayed. How foolish I would be to abstain from prayer for any reason!
Posted By Cheryl Q, Orange County, CA

Posted: Apr 20, 2009
I've asked too, and but still...
I've thought about the same question before,why pray when/ God's will (if there is a God) will be his will and there's no amount of praying that's going to change that. So what is the point when/if things will be the way they will be, why pray. God isn't going to change his mind, cause afterall, he is God and he doesn't change for us. And if things aren't going to change by our prayers, seems a pointless thing. Many have said that prayer is what God wants, but really, is he that self righteous that he needs us to thank him for what he gave us. Shouldn't a supreme being just give for the sake of giving and not to have us thank him daily for it? I do for my kids because I love them without bounds, and I don't expect them to thank me daily for anything, as it's out of pure love, so how is it that a supreme being needs that constant reassurance?
Posted By Daniel, Coppell, TX



 


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