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Let’s Keep Praying!
For hundreds of years, the Israelites prayed for the Messiah to come. At times, they received specific answers to their prayers — though the Messiah still had not come. At other times, the Israelites seemed to hear nothing at all – especially during the centuries between the end of the Old Testament and the beginning of the New Testament.
Now, 2000 years after the New Testament was written, it may be hard for us to understand the seemingly endless waiting and praying. Though we are also praying for our Messiah to come, we already know who He is, and it’ll be a return trip.
We can learn something about how hopeless things felt for the Israelites as well as how much hope Jesus brought by making connections between the Old and New Testaments. We find just such a connection between the O.T. book of Hosea and the N.T. book of 1 Peter.
In the book of Hosea, the prophet Hosea was instructed to take a prostitute as his wife. When she had their children, God instructed Hosea to give them names that were not only depressing but would definitely get the kids teased on the playground.
The Lord told Hosea and Gomer (his wife) to name their second child,
“No Mercy, for I will no more have mercy on the house of Israel, to forgive them at all.”
(Hosea 1:6)
Soon after, Gomer had another child, and the Lord said,
“Call his name Not My People, for you are not my people, and I am not your God.”
(Hosea 1:9)
I’m sure the Israelites felt hopeless—after all their years of prayer, this is the answer they got? But what they didn’t know—but what we get to know by reading the word of God—was that hope was coming.
Fast-forward hundreds of years to the birth, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ. Answered prayers! Peter is writing a letter to persecuted Christians:
“Once you were not a people, but now you are God’s people; once you had not received mercy, but now you have received mercy.”
(1 Peter 2:10)
What a sweet answer to prayers! The daughter and son of a prostitute, born in some of the darkest days in Israel, could not have imagined that the Messiah would one day come and heal the heartbreak behind their names.
Doesn’t this encourage us to pray without ceasing, as 1 Thessalonians 5:17 encourages us to do? Even when our prayers seem to go unheard, or when what we hear isn’t what we want, we can rest in the hope that God’s plan is already in motion, and His answer will be far better than anything we can imagine.
by Bailey Vandiver
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