The second service on “Prayer From God’s Perspective” will take us deeper by revealing why God chose prayer as the channel through which we receive everything He has prepared for us. Prayer is not about begging for blessings, but about alignment—shaping our desires, strengthening our faith, and positioning our hearts to carry what God wants to entrust to us. What you receive this year will not be determined by effort or intention, but by alignment, and alignment always begins in prayer. These services are not optional; missing them means missing the foundation God is laying for everything He intends to do in your life this year. They are a spiritual reset and divine recalibration, setting the lens through which you will interpret every decision, delay, and door in 2026.

Our world is in chaos because people insist on living by their own understanding, and tragically many believers do the same. Yet God called His people to be peculiar—anchored in His perspective—living from a higher plane where homes, churches, and individuals respond with His wisdom instead of pride, preference, or panic. When we see life through God’s lens, offense loosens, fear quiets, and confusion gives way to clarity—delays become preparation, losses become correction, and interruptions become alignment—because our understanding measures moments, while God’s perspective measures purpose, seeing the end from the beginning and working from the finished product He is forming in us. That shift transforms prayer from controlling outcomes to aligning hearts with God’s wisdom, producing peace, direction, and obedience even without full explanation, redeeming difficulty rather than merely removing it. And after a year marked by hidden pain, strain, loneliness, betrayal, medical fear, and heavy responsibility, this truth stands: God did not dismiss the hurt—He stayed close, carried His people, kept His promises, and now calls us forward, not to explain everything, but to trust and obey—beginning 2026 at the altar in surrender, under His Lordship, resisting the enemy’s schemes, standing in Christ’s authority, and believing God will bring us through again.

GO TO www.belmontbaptistchurch.com/sermons and listen to Sunday’s message.

“Delight thyself also in the Lord; and he shall give thee the desires of thine heart.” — Psalm 37:4

From God’s perspective, answered prayer flows from alignment, not insistence. We often come to prayer focused on outcomes—what we want changed, fixed, removed, or added—while God approaches prayer focused on formation. Heaven is less concerned with granting requests than with shaping hearts, because answers placed into misaligned hands eventually become burdens rather than blessings.

This is why Scripture does not say God gives us everything we ask for, but that He gives us the desires of our heart—after we learn to delight ourselves in Him. Delight precedes desire. As intimacy with God deepens, our wants begin to shift. What once felt urgent loses its grip, and what once seemed insignificant becomes sacred. Alignment changes not only what we ask for, but why we ask for it.

Many believers misinterpret delay as denial, when in reality it is often preparation. God is not slow—He is precise. He knows that premature answers can damage us, derail us, or distort His work in us. What He plans to entrust to your life tomorrow depends greatly on who you are allowing Him to shape today. Prayer is not God bending to our will; it is our will being bent into agreement with His.

Why God Works on the Heart First

God loves you too much to answer prayers that would reinforce immaturity, pride, fear, or self-reliance. From His perspective, the heart is the gatekeeper of every blessing. If the heart is misaligned, even good gifts can become idols. That is why God often answers prayer by addressing you before He addresses your request.

When Scripture says, “Delight thyself also in the Lord,” it reveals a spiritual sequence. Delight produces trust. Trust produces surrender. Surrender produces alignment. And alignment produces answers that do not destroy us. God is not withholding good things; He is guarding us from receiving good things at the wrong time or for the wrong reason.

This explains why two people can pray similar prayers and receive very different outcomes. God answers according to alignment, not urgency. He measures readiness, not volume. He is shaping a vessel, not just granting a wish.

Delay Is Often Capacity Training

From heaven’s viewpoint, delay is not wasted time—it is capacity training. God knows exactly how much weight a soul can carry without collapsing. Some blessings require expanded faith, deeper humility, stronger obedience, and settled trust. Without those things, what we desire today could crush us tomorrow.

In prayer, God often stretches us before He supplies us. He teaches patience before promotion, obedience before influence, and surrender before increase. What feels like silence is often God enlarging the space within us so that when the answer comes, it does not replace Him, but glorifies Him.

This reframes disappointment. Instead of asking, “Why hasn’t God answered yet?” alignment teaches us to ask, “What is God forming in me while I wait?” Waiting seasons are not empty—they are instructional. God never delays without purpose, and He never prepares without intention.

When Desires Become God-Shaped

One of the greatest evidences of spiritual maturity is when prayer shifts from demanding outcomes to desiring alignment. As the heart is reshaped, prayers change tone. We stop insisting and start yielding. We stop controlling and start trusting. And remarkably, as alignment deepens, our desires begin to mirror God’s desires.

This is the promise of Psalm 37:4. God does not merely give us what we want—He transforms what we want. When that happens, prayer becomes powerful, peaceful, and effective. We are no longer fighting God for answers; we are walking with Him toward purpose.

From God’s perspective, the greatest answered prayer is not a changed circumstance, but a changed heart—because aligned hearts can be trusted with answered prayers.

Prayer — Praying for Alignment and Authority

Father God, in the name of Jesus Christ, I come before You in humility and faith. I acknowledge that You are Lord, and I surrender every desire, motive, and expectation in my heart to Your authority. I repent for any place where I have insisted instead of yielded, demanded instead of trusted, or prayed from impatience rather than alignment. In Jesus’ name, I renounce every strategy of the enemy designed to distort my desires, rush my timing, or manipulate my prayers through fear, frustration, or comparison. I take authority over every lying voice that says delay is denial, silence is rejection, or surrender is loss. I declare that Satan has no authority over my mind, my prayers, or my perception of God’s goodness. Lord, I ask You to realign my heart with Heaven’s desires. Where my will has drifted, bring it back under Your Lordship. Where my expectations have been shaped by pressure, pain, or pride, cleanse them by Your Spirit. Strengthen my faith so that I do not war against Your timing, but agree with Your purpose. I declare that my prayers will not be hindered by misalignment, doubt, or impatience. I choose trust over control, obedience over understanding, and surrender over insistence. I receive Your peace in the waiting, Your wisdom in the process, and Your power to stand firm against every scheme of the enemy. I declare that what You are forming in me will not be aborted by frustration or fear. I will wait, watch, and walk in obedience until Your answer comes forth in fullness. I stand aligned with Your will, anchored in Your truth, and confident in Your faithfulness.

In the mighty and victorious name of Jesus,
Amen.

Challenge: Ask God to search your desires honestly and without defense. Write down one thing you have been asking Him for and pray, “Lord, is my heart ready to steward this?” Be willing to release it if He says no or not yet, trusting that alignment today leads to answered prayer in God’s perfect time.

Joni Oberhage

Linda Mays

Carol Lawhead – Riverside in Conyers

Mandy Martin – Mary May Martin 6 lbs. 7 oz.

Myles Elliott

Rose Fuller – Pruitt-Monroe Nursing Home, Forsyth GA

Amy Garner’s Dad

Brando Echarte

Debbie Foskey 

Don Franklin’s Daughter, Darlene, Son, David

Ed Adkins – Friend of Brian Edwards

Gloria Young

Jake Jenkins

Jenkins son-in-law

June Cronan

Jean Partee’s Sister

Kim McClain’s Daughter, Amanda

Deon Lotter

Doris Loyd

Nancy Brown

Annette Ford

Andrea Nix– Friend of the Shelnutt’s

Angela Bryan’s Sisters

Ann Stanley  

Danny Jarrard   

Darlene Wiggins

Doris Loyd

Dr. and Mrs. Davis

Eric Magnusson’s Mother

Eric Ward

Friend of Linda Hodge

Gayle Sparks

Linda Alexander 

James Burnette

Jessica Headrick  

John McClain’s Mother

June Cronan’s Sister

June Davis

Kailey Bateman

Kim McClain’s Mother 

Kim’s Sisters – Ann & Brenda 

Lee Cronan

Lillianna Magnusson’s Mom

Lonzo Christian 

Lori Blount’s Mother

Mary Williams

Mary Williamson – Dana Jackson’s Mom

Mrs. Franklin 

Nora Allison

Ron And Johnnie Barry – Friends Of Ashton & Glenda Bateman

Scott Lanier 

Scotty Nix

Stephanie Seivers – Friend of the Shelnutt’s

Steve Michaels

Tom Witcher