Prayer: The Chief Exercise of Faith | John Calvin

06/08/2025 51 min

Listen "Prayer: The Chief Exercise of Faith | John Calvin"

Episode Synopsis

Deep Dive into Institutes of the Christian Religion by John Calvin - Prayer, Which Is the Chief Exercise of Faith, and by Which We Daily Receive God's BenefitsFaith is fundamentally intertwined with right prayer, serving as its essential guide, foundation, and the means by which requests are granted. Prayer is seen as a profound exercise of faith, where individuals, recognizing their spiritual destitution and God's abundant fullness in Christ, earnestly seek from Him what their faith has already perceived through the Gospel. True faith is not passive but actively trains the heart to call upon God, instilling confidence and assurance that prayers will be heard and answered. This confidence is rooted in God's explicit commands to pray and His unwavering promises to respond, reinforcing His nature as a benevolent Father.Central to this relationship is Christ's mediation of prayer. Humanity is inherently unworthy to present itself directly to God's dread majesty due to sin and imperfection. Therefore, God has given Jesus Christ as the sole advocate and intermediary, transforming God's "throne of dreadful glory into the throne of grace" and providing confident access for believers. All acceptable prayer must be offered in Christ's name, as nothing can be denied to Him by the Father, and all of God's promises are "yea and amen in him"—confirmed and fulfilled through His work. Christ's intercession is constant and unique, perpetually making our prayers, which would otherwise be "never free of uncleanness," acceptable to God.Conversely, prayer without true faith or reliance on Christ's mediation is futile. Attempts to pray through other supposed intercessors, such as deceased saints, are vehemently rejected as they dishonor Christ, strip Him of His unique title as sole Mediator, and stem from a lack of faith in His complete sufficiency. Such prayers are considered "hateful or even execrable to God" because they lack the sincere desire and confident trust that flows from genuine faith in the one true Mediator. Therefore, sincere prayer is a humble, confident, and persistent act of faith, entirely dependent on Christ for its efficacy and acceptance.Reformed Theologian GPT: https://chat.openai.com/g/g-XXwzX1gnv-reformed-theologianhttps://buymeacoffee.com/edi2730