Praying in circles is fast becoming a thing in some Evangelical
churches. People have been taught to draw circles around the things they
want, or even to walk in circles around the things they are sure the
Lord ought to grant them. In either case, they are to pray around those things and in that way to claim them for the Lord.
The inspiration, I suppose, is Mark Batterson and his book The Circle Maker (my review).
Batterson bases his prayer technique on a story from the life of Honi
Ha-Ma’agel, a Jewish scholar who lived in the first century B.C. Jewish
history records him as being a miracle-worker in the tradition of Elijah
and Elisha. Here is a brief account of his greatest miracle:
On one occasion when God did not send rain well into the winter (in the geographic regions of Israel, it rains mainly in the winter), he drew a circle in the dust, stood inside it, and informed God that he would not move until it rained. When it began to drizzle, Honi told God that he was not satisfied and expected more rain; it then began to pour. He explained that he wanted a calm rain, at which point the rain calmed to a normal rain.
Batterson explains, “The prayer that saved a generation was deemed
one of the most significant prayers in the history of Israel. The circle
he drew in the sand became a sacred symbol. And the legend of Honi the
circle maker stands forever as a testament to the power of a single
prayer to change the course of history.”
And it is from Honi that Batterson found the inspiration to begin
praying in circles. In his book he describes many occasions in which he
has prayed in circles and seen the Lord grant what he asked. The promise
of his book is that it “will show you how to claim God-given promises,
pursue God-sized dreams, and seize God-ordained opportunities. You’ll
learn how to draw prayer circles around your family, your job, your
problems, and your goals.”
I want to give you three reasons not to pray in circles in the manner Batterson prescribes.
It’s Extra-Biblical
What I consider most notable about Batterson’s approach to prayer is
that it is extra-biblical. It is not drawn from the New Testament or the
Old Testament but from the Talmud. To the Jew the Talmud is the
authoritative, binding body of religious tradition; to the Christian it
is nothing, no more binding and no more prescriptive than Encyclopedia Britannica.
It may be of historical and academic interest, but it does not
represent the voice of God to his people. When Batterson prays in
circles, he begins with a tradition outside the Bible and then looks
within the Scripture to build a shaky support structure.
It’s Un-Biblical
Praying in circles is extra-biblical, derived from a source apart
from Scripture. But that’s not all, it’s also patently un-biblical,
finding no support in Scripture. It is entirely absent from God’s Word
to us. The Bible is not lacking in explicit and implicit teaching when
it comes to prayer. Jesus’ disciples asked Jesus as simply and clearly
as they could: “Teach us to pray.” When Jesus taught his disciples, he
said nothing about prayer circles; if anything, he said the opposite
when he told them to pray privately and in a quiet place. When Paul
wrote to the people he loved, he often told them how and what he was
praying on their behalf, and he said nothing about prayer circles.
Praying in circles is absent in any and every form.
It’s Anti-Biblical
Praying in circles is extra-biblical and un-biblical, but it is more
than that: it is anti-biblical. It directly violates the principles of
prayer. When Jesus teaches us to pray, he teaches us to approach God as a
child approaches a father, not marching in circles around him, but
simply asking with confidence and humility. To pray in circles is to
elevate technique at the expense of the heart behind it. To pray in
circles is to attempt to manipulate God by action rather than seeking
God by communing with him in his Word and prayer. It is nearly
indistinguishable from a name-it-and-claim-it kind of Christianity where
the things we visualize and demand are the things God must and will
give to us, if only we know how to bend his will to ours.
Pray Boldly
Praying in circles is simply the latest in a long list of techniques
to exploit our deep-rooted dissatisfaction with our prayer lives.
Now listen! We need to pray big prayers and bold prayers. Through
Christ Jesus we can approach God’s throne with boldness and confidence;
we can be like that persistent widow who asks and asks until she
receives. The Lord loves to hear us pray and loves to grant what we ask.
But not if we attempt to manipulate him by technique.
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