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His first
book took readers on a guided tour of heaven. As if that weren’t bold enough, Anthony
DeStefano is now goading people to pray. And it’s working. His Ten
Prayers God Always Says Yes To (Doubleday), a recent Register Book
Pick, was only released in early May but is already selling briskly. DeStefano,
who is executive director of Staten Island-based Priests for Life, spoke with
Register senior writer Tim Drake.
Your new book is quite bold. You make
the case that there are prayers that God says Yes to all the time.
All I’ve done is taken the promises
or commands that God has made in Scripture and put them into prayers. God
doesn’t make a promise unless he intends to keep it. He doesn’t give a command
unless he gives us the power to follow that command. He can only be true to his
word. That’s the basis of the book.
While God wants us to have faith in
some invisible being, he’s not some cosmic joker all about playing hide and
seek with us our whole lives. He can be counted on to act in certain ways at
certain times within certain parameters. I’ve been bold in my language to show
my confidence. I want people who have never prayed before to give it a try.
You argue that many of us get too
caught up in prayers that don’t work. Why is that?
For a few different reasons. As I
say, our society has a very consumer-oriented mentality. We have a tendency to
think of God as a supermarket clerk and our world as a big Wal-Mart. If we’re
all about instantaneous gratification, that’s a distorted way of looking at
prayer.
God is about giving us what we need,
not what we want. He’s about trying to get us to heaven, so he evaluates all
the requests we make in light of that global objective. The point is, a lot of
times, we may ask for something that’s not in our best interest. It may be
something we don’t need, or it’s not in accordance with God’s will. We think
he’s not answering us. There’s a saying that God’s delays are not God’s
denials.
Another reason is we’re not
listening. We live in such a busy culture with so many distractions, sometimes
we just have to turn off the cell phone, the computer, the iPod, and say No to
our families and friends and be still and silent. Jesus very rarely raised his
voice in the Gospels, so there’s no reason for him to do so now. We need to
listen.
Many of us look at
God as some sort of cosmic vending machine, don’t we?
Mother
Angelica used to say that there were too many of these “gimme prayers.” It’s
not wrong to pray to God for little things. It shows a childlike trust. But we
shouldn’t be so disappointed and start doubting God’s existence when he, in his
providence, says No to those requests.
You also say that,
of the 10 prayers, the one that God will answer the fastest is: God, make me an
instrument. Why is that?
Because
it feeds into so many spiritual laws and God’s great commandment to love your
neighbor. When you ask God to make you an instrument to help people, you’re
asking God to do something he has already told us to do. Of course he’s going
to say Yes to you. He doesn’t have to perform any great miracles to say Yes to
this prayer. All he has to do is send a few suffering people our way.
There
are suffering people all around us. The question is: Why should I say this
prayer? If God is going to use you as an instrument, he’s going to fashion you
into the best possible instrument. So, while you’re busy helping other people,
he’s going to be busy helping you in your life.
I couldn’t help
but notice that the book has nothing on intercessory prayer. Why is that
missing from the book?
Well,
there’s nothing in the book on prayers of praise, thanksgiving or intercession.
It’s a book of petitionary prayer — the first, most basic step. My primary
audience is people who are not against God and religion, but who are not
praying, who may be lukewarm or fallen away. My whole goal is to get people
praying.
At the end of the
book, you make a compelling case that, by nature of our very existence, we have
already overcome overwhelming odds. Therefore, God clearly has a purpose for
us.
Before
I wrote this book, or conceived that chapter, I knew I wanted to put together
that theology and science. For a human being to be born, he or she has to overcome
overwhelming odds, and the odds get more and more overwhelming as you look at
all the different things that had to happen.
First,
there’s the scientific fact of 500 million sperm cells in a race to connect
with that one ovum. Five hundred million potential beings could have been born
other than you, yet youwere born. When you consider all of the other
variables — your parents meeting and conceiving you at a particular time and
place, the odds of you making it through the gestation period and your childhood
— you see that the odds are so stacked against us that all of us really are
champions.
I’ve
seen that in personal-development books, but no one has ever connected it with
God or theology. When you look at Scripture, it’s clear that God knew who we were
before we were born and before the world was created. That all points to the
fact that there is a reason why we were able to overcome such odds. God
obviously has some plan for us.
Tim Drake is based in
St. Joseph, Minnesota.
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