How to Keep Praying for Something That Seems Impossible

Feeling unheard after years of praying? This episode explores persistent prayer, drawing encouragement from Jesus' parable of the persistent widow. Discover how to trust God's character and keep bringing your impossible requests to Him, knowing He welcomes your faithful asking. Your prayers are not in vain.
Key Takeaways
- When prayers seem unanswered for years, discouragement is natural, but Jesus' parable of the persistent widow teaches us to pray continually and never give up.
- A loving Heavenly Father is infinitely more responsive than an unjust judge; He welcomes your repeated requests and hears every prayer.
- Persistent prayer is an act of taking God at His word, trusting that He welcomes you to keep coming back with the same request.
- Don't abandon prayers for seemingly impossible situations; trust God's timing and methods, even when you don't understand them.
- Your challenge is to pray a prayer you've almost abandoned again, trusting that the One who hears you is good.
How to Keep Praying for Something That Seems Impossible
Have you ever poured your heart out in prayer for something important, only to see years pass with no apparent change? It’s a common, deeply discouraging place to find yourself, leading to the nagging question: Are my prayers even reaching God? This episode delves into the powerful lessons found in Jesus’ parable of the persistent widow, a story told precisely to encourage us to maintain our faith and keep praying, even when facing seemingly impossible situations.
The weight of unanswered prayer can feel crushing. When a struggling marriage remains fractured, a wayward child stays distant, or a significant need goes unmet year after year, it's natural to question the efficacy of our prayers. Do they simply dissipate into the air? Or are we just talking to ourselves? Many seasoned believers have stood in this very spot of doubt and weariness.
Consider the story of Jim Cymbala, pastor of the Brooklyn Tabernacle, a church renowned for its prayer gatherings. Jim and his wife Carol faced a profound grief: their daughter Chrissy had become estranged and was living far away, her whereabouts unknown for an extended period. They prayed faithfully, week after week, year after year, yet saw no breakthrough. Then, one evening, a simple note brought a flicker of hope: "Tonight is Chrissy's night." On that night, over a thousand people interceded for her. Simultaneously, miles away, something shifted within Chrissy, and just a few days later, she returned home. Today, she and her husband are pastoring their own church.
The Parable of the Persistent Widow and Its Divine Contrast
Jesus shared a parable specifically for those in seasons of long waiting. In Luke 18, He tells of a widow with no influence who repeatedly seeks justice from an unjust and uncaring judge. Her relentless persistence eventually compels the judge to act, simply to be rid of her. Luke explains the profound reason Jesus told this story: "so that His followers 'should always pray and never give up.'"
Jesus then draws a beautiful contrast. If even a corrupt judge, who fears no one and cares for no one, will eventually respond to persistent pleas, how much more will our loving Heavenly Father answer His children who cry out to Him day and night?
This is the core encouragement for us: Your Father in heaven is nothing like that reluctant, unjust judge. Your persistence is not an annoyance; it is not wearing Him down. The prayers you’ve repeated hundreds of times are not falling on deaf ears or hitting a celestial ceiling. He hears every iteration. More than that, He invites you to keep coming back with the same request. This is the heart of persistent prayer – trusting God’s character and His promises by continuing to bring your needs before Him, knowing He welcomes you, again and again.
Dr. Bart Leger shares from personal experience, having prayed for years over seemingly impossible situations – marriages on the brink, dire medical diagnoses, and other deeply challenging circumstances. He has witnessed countless answers that defied all expectations. For those prayers still awaiting resolution, the resolve to continue remains, fueled by seeing too many victories to give up now.
Your Invitation to Persistent Prayer
The challenge is straightforward: identify a prayer you feel you've almost abandoned. Commit to praying it again, consistently, for the next week. Place it somewhere visible as a tangible reminder. Remember, the prayer you've prayed a hundred times isn't bouncing off the ceiling. You are communicating with a Father who loves you, hears you, and actively invites you to keep coming. Your persistent prayer is a testament to your faith and a pathway to His powerful intervention.
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Frequently Asked Questions
How do I keep praying when things seem impossible?
Jesus' parable of the persistent widow teaches that we should always pray and never give up, even when situations seem impossible. Trust that God hears you and welcomes your persistence.
Why do my prayers feel unanswered after years of praying?
It's easy to feel discouraged when prayers go unanswered for a long time. This episode encourages you to remember that God hears every repetition, and your persistence matters.
What does the parable of the persistent widow teach about God?
The parable shows that if an unjust judge responds to persistence, a loving Heavenly Father will even more readily answer His children who cry out to Him day and night.
Does God get tired of hearing the same prayer over and over?
No, God does not get tired. The episode emphasizes that God hears every repetition and invites you to keep coming back with the same requests, as persistence in prayer means taking God at His word.
Every Sunday for years, Jim Cimbala walked into
Bart Leger:the same office before church, shut the door, and cried. He
Bart Leger:pastored the Brooklyn Tabernacle, a church known around the world
Bart Leger:for its choir and its prayer meetings. People fought through
Bart Leger:New York City traffic after work just to get to the Tuesday night
Bart Leger:prayer gathering. And the whole time, the pastor leading them
Bart Leger:had a hole in his own family he couldn't fix. His daughter
Bart Leger:Chrissy, raised in that church, singing in that world, had
Bart Leger:walked away. She'd gotten ejected from Bible college and
Bart Leger:ended up far from home, a young single mother whose life was
Bart Leger:coming apart. For a long stretch, Jim and Carol didn't even know
Bart Leger:where she or whether she was safe. So they did the only thing
Bart Leger:left to do. They Sunday after Sunday, Tuesday after Tuesday,
Bart Leger:year after year, with nothing changing. If you'd been in that
Bart Leger:church, you might have wondered how long a person can keep
Bart Leger:praying the same prayer into what feels like silence. Then
Bart Leger:came a Tuesday night in February. We'll come back to what happened.
Bart Leger:But first...
Bart Leger:Welcome to Daily Devotions for Busy Lives. I'm Bart Leger. If
Bart Leger:you've been praying for the same thing for years and you're worn
Bart Leger:out, I want to put some fight back into your prayers. And I'll
Bart Leger:be honest, I can't point to one impossible thing in my own life
Bart Leger:that I prayed for over years. I've prayed for some pretty big
Bart Leger:things that have finally come true and some things that
Bart Leger:haven't. But I've stood in the gap for plenty of other people
Bart Leger:facing situations that looked completely shut. Marriages
Bart Leger:everyone had written off and diagnoses that had left no room
Bart Leger:for hope. And here's what I've watched happen. A lot of those
Bart Leger:prayers got answered, sometimes in ways nobody saw coming. A few
Bart Leger:were still praying, and I haven't given up because I've
Bart Leger:seen too many of the others finally get answered. But it can
Bart Leger:be discouraging. You've been praying for the same thing for
Bart Leger:years, and nothing has moved. The marriage that's falling
Bart Leger:apart still hasn't healed. The child still hasn't come home.
Bart Leger:After enough time, you wonder whether your prayers are doing
Bart Leger:anything at all. Whether they're bouncing off the ceiling or
Bart Leger:whether you're just talking to yourself. Most people who've
Bart Leger:prayed a long time know what I'm talking about. And Jesus knew
Bart Leger:we'd feel that. So he told a story about it to keep us from
Bart Leger:losing heart and giving up. Listen to Luke 18, verses 1
Bart Leger:through 8. One day, Jesus told his disciples a story to show
Bart Leger:that they should always pray and never give up. There was a judge
Bart Leger:in a certain city, he said, who neither feared God nor cared
Bart Leger:about people. A widow of that city came to him repeatedly,
Bart Leger:saying, Give me justice in this dispute with my enemy. The judge
Bart Leger:ignored her for a while, but he finally said to himself, I don't
Bart Leger:fear God or care about people, but this woman is driving me
Bart Leger:crazy. I'm going to see that she gets justice, because she is
Bart Leger:wearing me out with her constant request. Then the Lord said,
Bart Leger:learn a lesson from this unjust judge. Even he rendered a just
Bart Leger:decision in the end. So don't you think God will surely give
Bart Leger:you justice to his chosen people who cry out to him day and night?
Bart Leger:Will he keep putting them off? I tell you, he will grant justice
Bart Leger:to them quickly. But when the Son of Man returns, how many
Bart Leger:will he find on earth who have faith? tells us up front why
Bart Leger:he's telling the story. So we'd always pray and never give up.
Bart Leger:Then he paints a powerless widow going back to a judge who
Bart Leger:doesn't care, asking again and again until he gives her justice
Bart Leger:just to be rid of her. I find that a bit amusing, but here's
Bart Leger:what I believe God's trying to teach us. Even if a corrupt
Bart Leger:judge will eventually answer someone who refuses to quit, how
Bart Leger:much more will a good and loving father answer the children who
Bart Leger:cry out to him day and night? Your father is nothing like that
Bart Leger:reluctant judge, and he's not being worn down. He's inviting
Bart Leger:you to keep coming. But we don't know what's going on behind the
Bart Leger:scenes that need to happen, or why it's taking so long, or even
Bart Leger:why it may not get answered in the way we would like. So hear
Bart Leger:this before we go back to Brooklyn. The prayers you've
Bart Leger:prayed a hundred times are not bouncing off the ceiling. Keep
Bart Leger:coming back. Someone at the prayer meeting slipped a note
Bart Leger:into Jim's hand. It read, Tonight is Chrissy's night. He
Bart Leger:felt he was supposed to read it aloud, and when he did, more
Bart Leger:than a thousand people began to cry out for her at once. One
Bart Leger:person there later called it a labor room of prayer. That same
Bart Leger:night, miles away, Chrissy was putting her baby to bed when
Bart Leger:something broke open in her. She describes being startled awake
Bart Leger:to a sense that God was right there, that she was seen, that
Bart Leger:the life she'd been running was killing her. A few days later,
Bart Leger:she walked back through her parents' door. The girl who had
Bart Leger:been gone came home, and today she and her husband pastor a
Bart Leger:church of their own. That's the promise hiding inside the story
Bart Leger:Jesus told. A widow kept going back to a judge who didn't care,
Bart Leger:asking for justice, refusing to quit until the answer came. And
Bart Leger:Jesus said, If even a corrupt judge eventually responds to
Bart Leger:that kind of persistence, how much more will a loving father
Bart Leger:answer the people who cry out to him day and night? The prayers
Bart Leger:you've prayed a hundred times aren't bouncing off the ceiling.
Bart Leger:He hears them, and he invites you to keep coming. Here's
Bart Leger:today's challenge. Take the prayer you've almost given up on
Bart Leger:and pray it again today, out loud. Then put it where you'll
Bart Leger:see it, on the mirror or your phone, and pray it every day
Bart Leger:this week, the way the widow kept coming. You're not wearing
Bart Leger:God down. You're taking him up on his invitation. And if it
Bart Leger:helps, ask one other person to pray it with you.
Bart Leger:Father, you see the people listening who have prayed the
Bart Leger:same prayer for years and are tired. Thank you that you are
Bart Leger:nothing like the reluctant judge, that you welcome our prayers and
Bart Leger:you invite us to keep coming. Give them strength to keep
Bart Leger:asking and confidence that you hear every word. Where they
Bart Leger:can't see anything moving, help them trust that you're at work
Bart Leger:and let them keep crying out to you day and night. In Jesus'
Bart Leger:name, amen. If you need prayer today, I'd love to hear from you.
Bart Leger:You can leave me a voicemail at dailydevotionsforbusylives.com
Bart Leger:slash voicemail. I listen to everyone, and it would be an
Bart Leger:honor to bring your name before the Lord. Thanks for joining me
Bart Leger:on Daily Devotions for Busy Lives. Remember, the prayer
Bart Leger:you've prayed a hundred times isn't bouncing off the ceiling.
Bart Leger:You're praying to a father who welcomes you back and tells you
Bart Leger:to keep coming. Come back next time for more encouragement to
Bart Leger:help you live grounded in God's truth. Until then, God bless and
Bart Leger:have a great day.








