Arminian Complaint: Calvinism ruins Prayer
The underlying Calvinist objection is that God wouldn’t and couldn’t be truly “sovereign” unless He had, in fact, made all choices for every human being, including the highest angels and the lowest animals, from one end of eternity to the other, and if God didn’t inalterably cause and unchangeably decree whatsoever comes to pass, then He would be rendered incapable of knowing the future.
Essentially, this kind of Calvinism is Open Theism with a decree, and it leaves no defense against the familiar, Author of Sin charge. Moreover, 1st Corinthians 10:13 shows that God gives men choices, and provides a way of escape, and God is still sovereign over whether a person goes left or right. God even states what will happen whether a person goes left or right (Middle Knowledge), which is evident in the reign of king Zedekiah. (Jeremiah 38:17-23)
John Calvin comments: “In case anyone should think that there is no benefit gained by others praying for us, he sets out the usefulness and the effect of prayer.” (Calvin’s New Testament Commentaries: Matthew, Mark and Luke Vol. III, and James and Jude, p.316, emphasis mine)
Arminians know this, but what effect does Calvinistic determinism have on prayer? James 5:16 indeed affirms: “Therefore, confess your sins to one another, and pray for one another so that you may be healed. The effective prayer of a righteous man can accomplish much.” Often the response of Calvinists is: “Prayer does not change God; prayer changes man.” So prayer does not change God’s mind, ever? What about king Hezekiah? He prayed, and God said that He saw his tears and added fifteen years on to the end of his life. (Isaiah 38:1-5)
So according to deterministic Calvinism, is all of this simply predetermined too? And the answer from deterministic Calvinists is yes, that prayer is the predetermined “means.”
Calvinist, Spiros Zodhiates comments: “Hasn’t God already determined everything, however? Yes, He has. If so, then how can prayer produce results? After all, His decrees are immutable. It is true that God has foreknown and predestinated everything that happens in Heaven above and in earth beneath. Why pray then? But that’s like asking, if God has predestined the air, why should we breathe? The answer is, because He has ordained it so. Yes, it could have been possible that we didn’t need to breathe to live, but God who has put oxygen here in the exact amount needed to sustain life has also ordained that we should breathe; and He who has set His plans ahead of time has also told us that we should ask and pray. It’s all there waiting for us to appropriate it, but He says, ask for it. Prayer simply releases what God wants to give us. He also predestined His people’s prayers. When we pray we produce links in the chain of ordained facts. It gives us a sense of bringing to pass that which God in eternity predetermined. That’s a tremendous thing to contemplate -- that when we pray God does something. It proves that we are in tune with God, and what we have asked has been in such agreement with God’s purposes that it has been accomplished and we are co-workers with God. The privilege of prayer is tremendous. What joy to know that we have adjusted our will with the plan of God. Destiny decrees that we should pray; therefore we pray. Destiny decrees that we shall be answered, and the answer comes. The Lord Jesus says the decrees of God need not trouble us. They are His business. He has also determined that our business is to pray.” (Why Pray?, pp.91-92, emphasis mine)
One member of The Society of Evangelical Arminians states: “While God knowing everything is consistent with prayer, God planning everything in the Calvinistic sense of unconditionally decreeing it is not. Calvinism cannot account for the Bible’s portrayal of prayer as a cause of God’s answers to prayer because it holds that God unconditionally decides all that he wants to happen and then irresistibly causes it to come to pass, including the prayer that supposedly causes him to respond to it with action that grants the request. It would be like saying that with putting a sock puppet on your hand and having the puppet ask you to do something, that the request made by the sock puppet is a cause of you doing what you had the sock puppet ask you to do.” (SEA)