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" Un método sencillo Eso es todo. Si estás orando a través de un salmo, solo lee el salmo línea por línea, hablando con Dios de cualquier pensamiento que te despierten las palabras inspiradas que vas leyendo. Si tu mente se aleja del tema del texto, dirige hacia Dios esos pensamientos y luego vuelve al texto. Si te encuentras con un texto que no puedes entender, sáltalo y ve al siguiente. Si tampoco lo entiendes, pasa al siguiente. Si entiendes el texto, pero nada viene a tu mente, pasa al versículo siguiente. Si vienen a tu mente pensamientos pecaminosos, ora por ellos y sigue adelante. Podrías leer entre 20 y 30 versículos en ese salmo, y aun así, en un día cualquiera tener solo cinco o seis cosas que vengan a tu mente. No hay problema. Nadie dice que debes orar sobre cada versículo. Nadie dice que tienes que terminar el salmo. "
― Donald S. Whitney , Praying the Bible
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" Andrew Murray comments boldly, but I think rightly, on Christ’s pledge: “Ask and you shall receive; everyone that asks, receives.” This is the fixed eternal law of the kingdom: if you ask and receive not, it must be because there is something amiss or wanting in the prayer. Hold on; let the Word and Spirit teach you to pray aright, but do not let go the confidence He seeks to waken: Everyone who asks receives. . . . Let every learner in the school of Christ therefore take the Master’s word in all simplicity. . . . Let us beware of weakening the Word with our human wisdom.[18] Because God answers prayer, when we “ask and receive not” we must consider the possibility that there is “something amiss or wanting” in our prayer. Perhaps God has indeed answered, but not in an obvious way. And possibly our prayers show nothing amiss, but we don’t yet see the answer only because God intends for us to persevere in praying about the matter awhile longer. Still, we must learn to examine our prayers. Are we asking for things outside the will of God or that would not glorify Him? Are we praying with selfish motives? Are we failing to deal with the kind of blatant sin that causes God to put all our prayers on hold? Despite what we see in response to our prayers, however, let’s not become so accustomed to our shortcomings in prayer and to the perception of asking without receiving that our faith in the force of Jesus’ promise is diminished. Prayer is answered. "
― Donald S. Whitney , Spiritual Disciplines for the Christian Life