“Ask, and it will be given to you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you. For everyone who asks receives, and he who seeks finds, and to him who knocks it will be opened.”
7:7
“Ask,
We ask for what we do not have. The three commands of this verse are present imperatives: ask, seek, knock. The tense of “ask” is keep on asking. The idea is persistence in prayer. Persistent prayer is no indication of God’s unwillingness to answer prayer. It is an issue of God’s sovereign plan in answer to prayer. The imperative is a command. Prayer is not an option.
and it will be given to you;
God will give us an answer. The responses to the first (ask) and third (knock) commands are in the passive voice; it is God who will do something about our action.
Seek,
The grammar of “seek” indicates to keep on seeking. The word “seek” is to look for. We seek for what is valuable. When we seek for something of value, our heart is definitely in it. This is the kind of prayer that Jesus prefers.
And you will find;
In this case we do the finding (active voice). Our volition is active here because God wants us involved in the process—we “find” on purpose, not by accident. But we are still recipients because God will let us obtain what we seek. “Find” here is to find on purpose, not by accident. God will let us obtain what we seek.
Knock,
Again the grammar indicates we should keep on knocking. We knock to be welcomed into an area where we are currently shut out.
And it will be opened to you.
God will open the door (passive voice).
7:8
For everyone who asks receives, and he who seeks finds, and to him who knocks it will be opened.
The grammar of “asks,” “seeks,” and “knocks” here indicates the process of doing what they are doing (present participles).
The three following verbs (“receives,” “finds,” “opened”) emphasize God’s faithful response to prayer. The language is absolute—will receive, find, open.
The piling up of the verbs of verses seven and eight is very forceful. God does not answer grudgingly but gladly. We do not need to coerce Him to answer prayer. All we need to know is that He answers prayer.
PRINCIPLE:
God faithfully answers prayer.
APPLICATION:
The walk with God is in part a walk of prayer. The basic idea of prayer is dependence on God, who is faithful to answer prayer. It is the request of someone talking to God. Prayer is not blind desire but communion with a Person that offers the promise of answered prayer. The way of life of the kingdom requires trust in God. The emphasis is on the certainty that God answers prayer. Prayer brings results.
Prayer is not a blank check for getting whatever we ask. It is a not magical custom whereby God functions as a genie. We see God as a genie if we think rubbing the rabbit’s foot will get us what we want. But remember that the rabbit’s foot did not do the rabbit any good.
Loved it great job
Worthy
God will answer our prayers correct? However if the prayer isn’t His will for our life do we stop praying? I know His Word says he will give us the desires of our heart. So truely how do we pray? He also gave us the story of the widow woman coming to the judge who answered her because she bugged him. I want something from God.
Kathy,
God does some things only in answer to prayer.
God does some things without prayer.
God does some things contrary to prayer.
Reasons why does not answer prayer:
•Lack of faith: Matt. 21:22; Mark 11:24; Rom. 14:23; James 1:5-7
•to take in Bible teaching (lack of edification): Prov. 1:24-31; Prov. 28:9; Zech. 7:11-13
•Selfishness: James 4:2,3
•Carnality: Psalm 66:18; Micah 3:4; Isa. 1:15; 59:1-3
•Lack of compassion: Prov. 21:13
•Lack of harmony in the home: 1 Pe 3:7
•Pride and self-righteousness: Job 35:12,13
•Lack of control of the Holy Spirit: Eph. 6:18
•Lack of obedience: 1 John 3:22; Eph. 5:18; Deut. 1:43-45; 1 Sam. 14:37; 1 Jn 5:14
God answers prayer from four perspectives:
1. He may grant the petition but not the desire (Ps 106:15)
2. He may grant the desire but not the petition (2 Cor. 12:7,8)
3. God may grant both the desire and the petition.
4. God may choose to reject both the desire and the petition (Ps 66:18)
See my study in James 4:3: https://versebyversecommentary.com/james/james-43/
Giving the desires of our heart must be within the will of God.
I love all the scriptures and the study. Do you have some on waiting for prayer? I am waiting for a promise I believe God gave me. But it is hard since God’s time isn’t our time. I really want not to lose faith in this promise. And one more. How do we separate god’s will from our will .
Thank you,
Kathy
Kathy, there is a false idea out there that “if you name it, you can claim it.” This is an unbiblical teaching that has no support in Scripture. Secondly, waiting on the Lord is completely within His sovereignty. Thirdly, God gives promises from Scripture, not from personal experience. Fourth, your point of separating our will and God’s will is crucial. It is very easy for people to inject their will into prayer and expect God to answer it. This makes the believer sovereign over God. Fifth, We should not be discouraged by no-answer or slow answer from God because we have to rest in what God does with our prayer.