Prayer Is Not a Vending Machine — It’s a Commissioning
What the Bible actually teaches about why we pray, and why asking an all-knowing God for things makes more sense than you think
There’s a question that never quite goes away in Christian life, and it usually surfaces around 2 a.m. when everything has gone sideways:
If God already knows what I need — if He’s known since before the foundation of the world — then why am I telling Him?
It’s a fair question. And the answer, buried in the breadth of Scripture’s prayer tradition, is both humbling and galvanizing. Prayer is not a mechanism for informing God. It is the process by which God forms us — and formation, it turns out, has a direction. The entire Law hangs on two commands: love God, love your neighbor (Matthew 22:37–40). Everything in Scripture consistently pushes people outward — past self-concern, toward God and toward the person standing in front of them. Prayer is where that push begins.

























