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Mark 11:22-24 - The Prayer of Faith

Mark 11:22-24; The Prayer of Faith 

Mark 11:22 (KJV)  And Jesus answering saith unto them, Have 
faith in God. 
Mark 11:23 (KJV)  For verily I say unto you, That whosoever 
shall say unto this mountain, Be thou removed, and be thou cast into 
the sea; and shall not doubt in his heart, but shall believe that 
those things which he saith shall come to pass; he shall have 
whatsoever he saith. 
Mark 11:24 (KJV)  Therefore I say unto you, What things soever 
ye desire, when ye pray, believe that ye receive them, and ye shall 
have them. 

Mark 11:22 (EAV)  And Jesus, replying, said to them, Have faith 
in God [constantly]. 
Mark 11:23 (EAV)  Truly I tell you, whoever says to this 
mountain, Be lifted up and thrown into the sea! and does not doubt at all 
in his heart but believes that what he says will take place, it 
will be done for him. 
Mark 11:24 (EAV)  For this reason I am telling you, whatever you 
ask for in prayer, believe (trust and be confident) that it is 
granted to you, and you will [get it]. 

Jesus Himself never moved literal mountains, nor did He intend 
His followers to contemplate any necessity of doing so themselves. 
Jesus here is speaking of figurative mountains of difficulty. [SDA 
Commentary] 

There are few spiritual occasions which demand the removal of a 
geographical mountain. Jesus is merely making the point that God in His 
omnipotence is able to do anything. [Believe's SB] 

Faith in God is all-powerful because God is omnipotent. [Quest 
SB] 

Faith that rests in God is unwavering trust in His omnipotent 
power and unfailing goodness. [Bible Knowledge Commentary] 

The 'faith' of Mark 11:23 is a faith that prays.... Prayer is 
the source of its power, and the means of its strength--God's 
omnipotence is its sole assurance, and God's sovereignty its only 
restriction" [Expositors Bible Commentary] 

The first condition to prayer is faith in God. The object of 
faith is God Himself. The critical words are "in God." Faith has to 
have an object. "In God" is where one is to have faith, where one is 
to place his faith. Faith has no value by itself; only the object 
(God) has value. The Bible never says to have faith in faith, yet this 
is the experience of many. Too often, a great difficulty or problem 
arises, and the believer feels he has to arouse his faith. He feels that 
if he can just stir up enough faith, he will whip the problem. But 
in reality he has had faith in faith. His mind, his attention, and 
his heart have been focused upon faith--not upon God.... 
Faith has no power; it is the object that has power. A man's 
faith is not going to remove the mountain. God is going to remove the 
mountain. The strength of faith is not faith, but God. In the Bible 
practically everyone who came to God had weak faith. Only a few had strong 
faith, yet God saved them and granted their requests.....  
Faith requires knowing the object. The more one knows the object 
of faith, the more one believes in the object (cp. Hebrews 11:6).... 
 
One learns to have faith in God as He prays and communes with 
God. And the more he prays and communes with God the more he will 
know God; and the more he knows God, the more he can experience faith 
in God and experience the removal of mountains that slow his 
progress through life. [Preacher's  Outline & Sermon Bible] 

It would seem impossible to move a mountain into the sea, so 
Jesus used that picture to say that God can do anything. God will 
answer your prayers, but not as a result of your positive mental 
attitude. Other conditions must be met: (1) you must be a believer; (2) 
you must not hold a grudge against another person; (3) you must not 
pray with selfish motives; (4) your request must be for the good of 
God's kingdom. To pray effectively, you need faith in God, not faith 
in the object of your request. [Life Application SB] 

Jesus, our example for prayer, prayed, "Everything is possible 
for you.... Yet not what I will, but what you will" (14:36). Our 
prayers are often motivated by our own interests and desires. We like to 
hear that we can have anything. But Jesus prayed with 'God's' 
interests in mind. When we pray, we should express our desires, but want 
his will above ours. Check yourself to see if your prayers focus on 
your interests or God's. [Life Application SB] 

"What things soever ye desire, when ye pray, believe that ye 
receive them, and ye shall have them." Mark 11:24. There is a condition 
to this promise--that we pray according to the will of God. But it 
is the will of God to cleanse us from sin, to make us His children, 
and to enable us to live a holy life. So we may ask for these 
blessings, and believe that we receive them, and thank God that we have 
received them. SC51 

He makes it plain that our asking must be according to God's 
will; we must ask for the things that He has promised, and whatever we 
receive must be used in doing His will. The conditions met, the promise 
is unequivocal.  
For the pardon of sin, for the Holy Spirit, for a Christlike 
temper, for wisdom and strength to do His work, for any gift He has 
promised, we may ask; then we are to believe that we receive, and return 
thanks to God that we have received.  
We need look for no outward evidence of the blessing. The gift 
is in the promise, and we may go about our work assured that what 
God has promised He is able to perform, and that the gift, which we 
already possess, will be realized when we need it most.  ED257,8 

When my little son was about ten years old, his grandmother 
promised him a stamp collecting album for Christmas. Christmas came and 
went with no stamp album and no word from Grandma. The matter, 
however, was not mentioned, until his friends came to see his Christmas 
presents. I was astonished, after he had listed all the gifts he had 
received, to hear him add, "And a stamp album from my grandmother." 
After hearing this several times, I called my son to me and 
said, "But George, you didn't get a stamp album from Grandma. Why did 
you say you did?" 
With a puzzled look on his face, as if I had asked a very 
strange question, he replied, "Well, Mom, Grandma said, and that is the 
same as." Not a word from me would sway his faith. 
A month passed and nothing else was said about the album. 
Finally one day, to test his faith and because I wondered in my own 
heart why the album had not been sent, I said, "George, I think 
Grandma has forgotten her promise." 
"Oh no, Mom," he quickly and firmly responded. "She hasn't." 
I watched his sweet, trusting face, which for a while looked 
very serious, as if he were debating the possibility I had suggested. 
Soon his face brightened as he said, "Do you think it would do any 
good for me to write Grandma, thanking her for the album?" 
"I don't know," I said, "but you might try it." A rich spiritual 
truth then began to dawn on me. 
In a few minutes a letter was written and mailed, as George went 
off whistling his confidence in his grandma. Soon a letter from 
Grandma arrived with this message: 
My dear George,
I have not forgotten my promise to you for a stamp album. I 
could not find the one you wanted here, so I ordered one from New 
York. It did not arrive until after Christmas, and it was not the 
right one. I then ordered another, but it still has not arrived. I 
have decided to send you thirty dollars instead so that you may buy 
the one you want in Chicago. 
Your loving Grandma.
As he read the letter, his face was the face of a victor. From 
the depths of a heart that never doubted came the words, "Now, Mom, 
didn't I tell you?" George "against all hope . . . in hope believed" 
(Rom. 4:18) that the stamp album would come. And while he was 
trusting, Grandma was working, and in due time faith became sight. 
It is only human to want to see before we step out on the 
promises of God. Yet our Savior said to Thomas and to a long list of 
doubters who have followed, "Blessed are those who have not seen and yet 
have believed" John 20:29). Mrs. Rounds [Streams In The Desert By 
Cowman] 

Hope and courage are essential to perfect service for God. These 
are the fruit of faith.  
Despondency is sinful and unreasonable. God is able and willing 
"more abundantly" (Hebrews 6:17) to bestow upon His servants the 
strength they need for test and trial. The plans of the enemies of His 
work may seem to be well laid and firmly established, but God can 
overthrow the strongest of these. And this He does in His own time and 
way, when He sees that the faith of His servants has been 
sufficiently tested.  
For the disheartened there is a sure remedy--faith, prayer, 
work. Faith and activity will impart assurance and satisfaction that 
will increase day by day. PK163,4 

When our prayers seem not to be answered, we are to cling to the 
promise; for the time of answering will surely come, and we shall receive 
the blessing we need most. But to claim that prayer will always be 
answered in the very way and for the particular thing that we desire, is 
presumption. God is too wise to err, and too good to withhold any good thing 
from them that walk uprightly.  
If we take counsel with our doubts and fears, or try to solve 
everything that we cannot see clearly, before we have faith, perplexities 
will only increase and deepen. But if we come to God, feeling 
helpless and dependent, as we really are, and in humble, trusting faith 
make known our wants to Him whose knowledge is infinite, who sees 
everything in creation, and who governs everything by His will and word, He 
can and will attend to our cry, and will let light shine into our 
hearts. SC96,7 

How do you pray a prayer so filled with faith that it can move a 
mountain? By shifting the focus from the size of your mountain to the 
sufficiency of the mountain mover, and by stepping forward in obedience.... 
While the children of Israel are perched on the edge of the 
Promised Land, twelve spies go out to survey it. Ten come back saying, 
"You wouldn't believe the size of the cities, the armies, the giants. 
We'd better look somewhere else." Two come back saying, "The God who 
is faithful promised he would give us the land, so let's go in his 
strength." Ten looked at the size of the mountain and fell back; only two 
looked at the sufficiency of the mountain mover and wanted to move 
forward.... 
I challenge you to shift the focus of your prayer. Don't spend a 
lot of time describing your mountain to the Lord. He knows what it 
is. Instead, focus your attention on the mountain mover - his glory, 
power and faithfulness. Then start walking in faith, following his 
leading, and watch that mountain step aside. Bill Hybels [Time With God 
SB] 

When you are confronted with a matter that requires immediate 
prayer, pray until you believe God - until with wholehearted sincerity 
you can thank Him for the answer. If you do not see the external 
answer immediately, do not pray for it in such a way that it is evident 
you are not definitely believing God for it. This type of prayer 
will be a hindrance instead of a help to you. And when you are 
finished praying, you will find that your faith has been weakened or has 
entirely gone. The urgency you felt to offer this kind of prayer is 
clearly from self and Satan. It may not be wrong to mention the matter 
to the Lord again, if He is keeping you waiting for His answer, but 
be sure to do so in a way that shows your faith. 
Never pray in a way that diminishes your faith. You may tell Him 
you are waiting, still believing and therefore praising Him for the 
answer. There is nothing that so fully solidifies faith as being so sure 
of the answer that you can thank God for it. Prayers that empty us 
of faith deny both God's promises from His Word and the "Yes" that 
He whispered to our hearts. Such prayers are only the expression of 
the unrest of our hearts, and unrest implies unbelief that our 
prayers will be answered. "Now we who have believed enter that rest" 
(Heb. 4:3). 
The type of prayer that empties us of faith frequently arises 
from focusing our thoughts on the difficulty rather than on God's 
promise. Abraham, "without weakening in his faith, . . . faced the fact 
that his body was as good as dead.... Yet he did not waver through 
unbelief regarding the promise of God, but was strengthened in his faith 
and gave glory to God" (Mom. 4: 19-20). May we "watch and pray so 
that [we] will not fall into [the] temptation" (Matt. 26:41) of 
praying faith-diminishing prayers. C.H.P. [Streams In The Desert By 
Cowman] 

The beginning of anxiety is the end of faith, and the beginning 
of true faith is the end of anxiety. George Mueller [Streams In The 
Desert By Cowman] 

We must not only pray in Christ's name, but by the inspiration 
of the Holy Spirit. COL146-8