Answer Me, O God
Elijah’s cry on Mount Carmel — “Answer me, O God!” — was not a desperate attempt to twist heaven’s arm, but a bold appeal to the covenant-keeping God who reveals Himself through sovereign power.
The prophets of Baal bled, shouted, danced, and exhausted themselves. Elijah prayed a single prayer — simple, confident, God-centered — and fire fell from heaven. The contrast could not be more decisive: true prayer rests in the God who acts, not the worshiper who strives.
The believer’s hope is not in emotional intensity but in the character of God. He answers according to His will, His purpose, and His glory. And when He answers, no one can doubt it was the hand of the Lord.
➤ Also see: Prayer and Free Will
➤ Also see: I Will Heal Your Faithlessness
➤ Also see: What Real Repentance Sounds Like