P1848:1, 168:4.1
On the way from Bethany to Pella the apostles asked Jesus many questions,
all of which the Master freely answered except those involving the details
of the resurrection of the dead. Such problems were beyond the comprehension
capacity of his apostles; therefore did the Master decline to discuss these
questions with them. Since they had departed from Bethany in secret, they
were alone. Jesus therefore embraced the opportunity to say many things to
the ten which he thought would prepare them for the trying days just ahead.
P1848:2, 168:4.2
The apostles were much stirred up in their minds and spent considerable time
discussing their recent experiences as they were related to prayer and its
answering. They all recalled Jesus' statement to the Bethany messenger at
Philadelphia, when he said plainly, "This sickness is not really to the death."
And yet, in spite of this promise, Lazarus actually died. All that day, again
and again, they reverted to the discussion of this question of the answer
to prayer.
P1848:3, 168:4.3
Jesus' answers to their many questions may be summarized as follows:
P1848:4, 168:4.4
1. Prayer is an expression of the finite mind in an effort to approach the
Infinite. The making of a prayer must, therefore, be limited by the knowledge,
wisdom, and attributes of the finite; likewise must the answer be conditioned
by the vision, aims, ideals, and prerogatives of the Infinite. There never
can be observed an unbroken continuity of material phenomena between the making
of a prayer and the reception of the full spiritual answer thereto.
P1848:5, 168:4.5
2. When a prayer is apparently unanswered, the delay often betokens a better
answer, although one which is for some good reason greatly delayed. When Jesus
said that Lazarus's sickness was really not to the death, he had already been
dead eleven hours. No sincere prayer is denied an answer except when the superior
viewpoint of the spiritual world has devised a better answer, an answer which
meets the petition of the spirit of man as contrasted with the prayer of the
mere mind of man.
P1848:6, 168:4.6
3. The prayers of time, when indited by the spirit and expressed in faith,
are often so vast and all-encompassing that they can be answered only in eternity;
the finite petition is sometimes so fraught with the grasp of the Infinite
that the answer must long be postponed to await the creation of adequate capacity
for receptivity; the prayer of faith may be so all-embracing that the answer
can be received only on Paradise.
P1848:7, 168:4.7
4. The answers to the prayer of the mortal mind are often of such a nature
that they can be received and recognized only after that same praying mind
has attained the immortal state. The prayer of the material being can many
times be answered only when such an individual has progressed to the spirit
level.
P1848:8, 168:4.8
5. The prayer of a God-knowing person may be so distorted by ignorance and
so deformed by superstition that the answer thereto would be highly undesirable.
Then must the intervening spirit beings so translate such a prayer that, when
the answer arrives, the petitioner wholly fails to recognize it as the answer
to his prayer.
P1848:9, 168:4.9
6. All true prayers are addressed to spiritual beings, and all such petitions
must be answered in spiritual terms, and all such answers must consist in
spiritual realities. Spirit beings cannot bestow material answers to the spirit
petitions of even material beings. Material beings can pray effectively only
when they "pray in the spirit."
P1849:1, 168:4.10
7. No prayer can hope for an answer unless it is born of the spirit and nurtured
by faith. Your sincere faith implies that you have in advance virtually granted
your prayer hearers the full right to answer your petitions in accordance
with that supreme wisdom and that divine love which your faith depicts as
always actuating those beings to whom you pray.
P1849:2, 168:4.11
8. The child is always within his rights when he presumes to petition the
parent; and the parent is always within his parental obligations to the immature
child when his superior wisdom dictates that the answer to the child's prayer
be delayed, modified, segregated, transcended, or postponed to another stage
of spiritual ascension.
P1849:3, 168:4.12
9. Do not hesitate to pray the prayers of spirit longing; doubt not that you
shall receive the answer to your petitions. These answers will be on deposit,
awaiting your achievement of those future spiritual levels of actual cosmic
attainment, on this world or on others, whereon it will become possible for
you to recognize and appropriate the
long-waiting answers to your earlier
but
ill-timed petitions.
P1849:4, 168:4.13
10. All genuine spirit-born petitions are certain of an answer. Ask and you
shall receive. But you should remember that you are progressive creatures
of time and space; therefore must you constantly reckon with the time-space
factor in the experience of your personal reception of the full answers to
your manifold prayers and petitions.