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Found 143 results matching "prayer" (Verses: 130 · Topics: 1 · Articles: 12)
Bible Verses
130Yet have thou respect unto the prayer of thy servant, and to his supplication, O LORD my God, to hearken unto the cry and to the prayer, which thy servant prayeth before thee to day:
What prayer and supplication soever be by any man, by all thy people Israel, which shall know every man the plague of his own heart, and spread forth his hands toward this house:
Then hear thou in heaven their prayer and their supplication, and maintain their cause.
Then hear thou their prayer and their supplication in heaven thy dwelling place, and maintain their cause,
Have respect therefore to the prayer of thy servant, and to his supplication, O LORD my God, to hearken unto the cry and the prayer which thy servant prayeth before thee:
what prayer what supplication soever shall be made of any man, or of all thy people Israel, when every one shall know his own sore and his own grief, and shall spread forth his hands in this house:
Then hear thou from the heavens their prayer and their supplication, and maintain their cause.
His prayer also, and was intreated of him, and all his sin, and his trespass, and the places wherein he built high places, and set up groves and graven images, before he was humbled: behold, they written among the sayings of the seers.
Nevertheless we made our prayer unto our God, and set a watch against them day and night, because of them.
Thou shalt make thy prayer unto him, and he shall hear thee, and thou shalt pay thy vows.
Topics
1Articles
12A single prayer and a prayer life are not the same thing. This guide examines seven biblical principles that sustain prayer as a living, ongoing practice rather than an occasional resort — drawing on the rhythms, disciplines, and honest address that Scripture models.
Spiritual discipline is not the earning of God's favor through religious effort — it is the deliberate structuring of the life to increase the person's capacity to receive and respond to what God is doing. These seven principles from Scripture describe the architecture of a disciplined spiritual life.
Spiritual doubt is not the terminal condition it often feels like during its most acute seasons — it is frequently the precondition of a deeper and more tested faith. These seven biblical principles address doubt with the same honesty and engagement that Scripture itself models.
The apparent silence of God in the face of sustained, earnest prayer is one of the most testing experiences of the Christian life. This article examines the biblical framework for understanding delayed answers and the faithfulness that holds through them.
Trials have a specific tendency to create distance from God — not because God withdraws, but because the trial produces conditions that make sustained engagement with Him genuinely difficult. This article examines the biblical practices for maintaining closeness to God in exactly those conditions.
The big decisions of life — vocation, relationship, location, commitment — are where trust in God is most practically tested. This article examines the biblical framework for decision-making that genuinely involves God rather than seeking His endorsement of what has already been decided.
A verse-centered biblical study showing that healing from illness in Scripture belongs to God’s restoring mercy, reaches deeper than the body alone, and points toward final wholeness in Christ.
Living by faith is not a posture of spiritual optimism or confident claiming — it is a daily, deliberate orientation of life toward God that shapes decisions, responses, and identity at every level. This article examines seven biblical principles that define what it actually means to live by faith according to Scripture.
Humility in Scripture is not weakness or self-erasure — it is a rightly ordered understanding of who God is and who we are before Him. This article examines seven distinct biblical principles that define what genuine humility looks like in character, conduct, and relationship with God.
When Jesus says "narrow is the way," the word He uses describes constriction, not merely difficulty. This article examines what the narrowness actually refers to — and why the Sermon on the Mount's portrait of the disciple is the key to understanding what kind of person the gate is wide enough to admit.
Worry about the future is not simply a habit to break — it is a theological displacement, a transfer of trust from God to circumstance. This article examines what Scripture reveals about anxiety, sovereignty, and the practice of returning to God what belongs to Him.
Loneliness can make even prayer feel like speaking into an empty room. This article explores the biblical and theological grounds for trusting God in seasons of deep isolation — not through optimism, but through covenant truth.
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