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If you watch some award show, person will stand on stage with a list of people to thank after they have received a reward. Paul says here, if you receive an answered prayer, there is no list of names, only one name. The glory is not to go to them, it is to go to him.
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Let me begin by asking a question. Why do you pray and ask God to change your circumst? Do you believe he can do that? Hello and welcome to Renewing youg Mind. On this Tuesday. God can change our circumstances. He has the ability. And that's our theme today. We're pleased to present a series by H.B. charles, Jr. It's titled Blessing and Praise, Benedictions and Doxologies in Scripture. So let's join Dr. Charles. Now
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in this session, I wanted to share with you my favorite doxology from Ephesians, chapter 3, verses 20 and 21. It reads now to him who is able to do far more abundantly than all that we ask or think according to the power at work within us, to him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus throughout all generations, forever and ever. Amen. The late Donald Gray Barnhouse once stood in the pulpit of the 10th Presbyterian Church in Philadelphia and shocked his congregation by announcing, prayer changes nothing. But he didn't make this statement for shock value. Barnhorse was trying to communicate the truth that God changes things, not prayer. That is, prayer works not because of the words we say, the promises we claim, or the faith we demonstrate. Prayer works because of the sovereign power, the omnipotent power of Almighty God. Christian living must always flow from Christian truth. And so if one is to learn to pray, one does not best learn to pray by studying prayer. One best learns to pray by studying the God who answers prayer In Ephesians, chapter 3, verses 20 and 21 declare great truths about this God who answers prayer. There are two prayer reports in Paul's letter to the church at Ephesus. There is a prayer for understanding in Ephesians 1, verses 15 through 23. And then there is a prayer for strength in Ephesians 3, verses 14 through 21. The prayer begins in verses 14 and 15 with an invocation. For this reason I bow my knees before the Father, from whom every family in heaven and on earth is named. Verse 16 is the main petition of the prayer that according to the riches of his glory, he may grant you to be strengthened with power through His Spirit in your inner being. Verses 17, 18 and 19 give the intended results of the prayer so that Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith that you being rooted and grounded in love, may have strength to comprehend with all the saints what is the breadth and length and height and depth, and to know the love of Christ that surpasses knowledge that you may be filled with all of the fullness of God. Then this prayer ends in verses 20 and 21 with a closing doxology. Now to him who is able to do far more abundantly than all that you could ask or think, consider that the petitions of this prayer are sandwiched in between big statements about God. Verses 14 and 15. Paul addresses God as the one Father from whom every family in heaven and on earth is named. And then in verse 20, he refers to God as Him who is able to do far more abundantly than all that we could ask or think. The very structure of the prayer teaches us something about prayer, that all effective prayer is God centered. You won't be able to pray right until you first recognize that God is willing to hear and able to answer prayer. Sometimes we short circuit our own prayers because we say Amen too soon. But prayer is not over after you have given God your laundry list of personal requests. Prayer should not end until you give praise to the God who answers prayer. In Psalm 50, verse 15, the Psalmist writes there as God speaks, call to me and I will deliver you and you will glorify me. That's the purpose of prayer, not merely the answers you receive. The purpose of prayer is the glory of God. Here we see in this doxology that you shouldn't wait till after you get an answer to glorify God before you get the answer. In fact, as Paul shows us here, before you have finished the prayer, you should give praise to the God who answers prayer. In these two verses of this wonderful doxology, Paul declares two statements about the God who who answers prayer. He first says that God is able to answer your biggest request. God is able to answer your biggest request. Verse 20 says now to him who is able to do far more abundantly than all that we ask or think according to the power at work within us. This is a wonderful statement about the nature of God, the power of God, the character of God. But notice that he does not call God by his name. He identifies God here by the outworking of his divine omnipotence and sovereign authority. He is the God who is able. In a word, God is omnipotent. Jeremiah, chapter 32, verse 17 O Lord God, it is you who has made the heaven and the earth with your mighty power and your outstretched hand. Is there anything too hard for you and in Jeremiah 32, verse 27, God answers, behold, I am the Lord, the God of all flesh. There is nothing too hard for for me. In Luke, chapter one, verse 37, the angel explains to Mary how she will give birth to a son, even though she has not known a man. The answer is simple. With God, all things are possible. And in Luke 18, verse 27, the Lord Jesus Christ himself declares that the things that are impossible with man are possible with God. God is able, and his divine omnipotence is at work on the behalf of those who are in Christ in two ways. God's power is at work in a way that is infinitely beyond us. He is able to do far more abundantly than all that we could ask or think. God is able, that is, he has the ability to get things done. He has the ability to work according to his intention. It's one thing to have good intentions, sincere motives, great expectations. It's another thing to be able to accomplish what you intend. This is our God. He is able. The Scriptures declare Second Corinthians, chapter 9, verse 8, that he is able to make all grace abound toward you. The Bible says in Jude 24 that he is able to keep you from stumbling. And in Acts, Paul says to the Ephesian elders that he is able to give you an inheritance among all those who are sick sanctified. Acts 20:32. He's able. This is good news. And his ability is not just theoretical or hypothetical. God is able to do stuff with his power. It's not a ceremonial authority attributed to him that does not accomplish anything. God has real power, says Paul here, to do something with his power. But consider what God does with his sovereign omnipotence. Hold onto your seats. Paul says he is able to do what you ask. This statement in verse 20 is cherished by what it says about the power of God. But here's a statement about the goodness of God. The God that has all power in his hand uses it to answer prayer. The God who is omnipotent is also omniscient. He who has all power knows all, and he is able to meet the needs that we don't even have the words to articulate. David says it this way. Psalm 37, verse 4. He says, Delight yourself in the Lord, and He will give you the desires of your heart. He is able to do what you ask. He's able to do what you think. How much of it? Paul says he is able to do all that you ask or think at. Robinson comments here that our highest aspirations are not beyond his ability to bestow. There is no burden that God cannot lift, no door that God cannot open, no enemy that God cannot defeat, no need that God cannot meet, no problem that God cannot solve, no sickness that God cannot heal, and no sin that God cannot forgive. He is able to to do all that you ask or think. And he doesn't have to stress, strain and struggle to do it. He's able to do far more abundantly than all that you ask or think. He is the God who is infinitely at work beyond us. But God's power is also at work as it is indwelling within us now to him who is able to do far more abundantly than all that you ask or think according to the power at work within us. The power to do far more abundantly than all we ask or think works according to the power of God within us. In fact, the verb able is tied here to the noun power. God Himself, the God who is able, is himself the power that is at work within us. This is good news because we're weak people. We're weak people. The promise here is that power is available to resist temptation, to live obediently, to serve faithfully, to witness boldly, and even to suffer joyfully. And also we are told here that we don't have to wait for God to scoop down from the sky with the power that we need to help us. It is at work within us. Every believer, the moment you trust Christ for salvation, God, the Holy Spirit takes up residence in your heart immediately, permanently, completely. Romans 8, 9. The B part of that verse says that whoever does not have the Spirit of Christ does not belong to him. But when you trust Christ for salvation, God the Holy Spirit immediately takes up residence and he lives within us to give us the strength we need to do God's will. And it's according to power. I like that. It's according to not just out of, but it's according to. Some celebrity goes into a restaurant and leaves a thousand dollar tip and it shows up on a tabloid blog site as something big. But it's no big thing for a millionaire to give a thousand dollar tip out of his or her wealth. There are billionaires that are dedicated to giving away half their wealth for education and medical research. They're not giving out of their riches, they're giving according to their riches. And this is how God provides strength to his children in Christ. Not merely out of, but according to the power that is at work within us. I know it doesn't feel that way. Right. Sometimes you say if this exceedingly, abundantly above. Power is at work within me. I sure don't feel it. To which I say good. The promise here is not that you will feel strong. In fact, I suggest to you that it is a good thing when we feel weak. When we feel strong, we are prone to act as if we are self sufficient. The weaker we feel, the more we lean on him. And even when we don't feel strong, the assurance of God's words that this power is still real and available and sufficient. One writer said, it is as gentle as the development of a dewdrop, as imperceptible as the growth of a tree, but as lasting as the throne of God. Even when you don't feel it, his strength is available. Isn't that what Paul affirms in another place in second Corinthians, when he received this thorn in the flesh, he prayed about it, concluded he could not serve the Lord with this debilitating weakness, only to have God tell him, my grace is sufficient for you, 2 Corinthians 12:9 and my strength is perfected in your weakness. God first thing this passage tells us about the God who answers prayer is that this God is able to answer your biggest request. Then in verse 21 there's the second truth about the God that answers prayer in this doxology. And it is this God is worthy to receive your highest praise. The God who is able to answer your biggest request is the God who is worthy to receive your highest praise. You have not understood this doxology if you stop at verse 20. As wonderful as it is, verse 20 and 21 go together. In fact, they are linked by parallel language. Verse 20 begins to him who is able. Verse 21 begins to him be glory. The purpose of prayer is the glory of God. It's a major truth of this doxology. The purpose of prayer is the glory of God. We speak of God's glory two ways, his intrinsic inherent glory. God is glorious because God is God. It is the shining light of his presence. It is the crushing weight of his character. To say that God is glorious is to say that God is God. What you have here, however, is an ascription of glory. It's the believer's word response to God's self revelation of who he is. And in light of this God answering prayer, he is worthy of glory. Da Carson raises an important question related to this doxology. Has God become so central in your thoughts and in your pursuits, and thus in your prayers, that you cannot imagine asking God for anything without sincerely desiring that the answer would bring glory to God. To understand prayer is to pray for things that would bring glory to God. Listen to what Paul says about the glory of God. Here he says, give glory to God alone. If you watch some award show, person will stand on stage with a list of people to thank after they have received a reward. Paul says, here, if you receive an answer prayer, there is no list of names, only one name. The glory is not to go to them, it is to go to him. John Stott says, the power comes from him. The glory must go to him. God alone deserves the glory. Psalm 115, verse 1 declares, not unto us, not unto us, O Lord, but to your name give glory because of your steadfast love and your faithfulness. Give glory to God alone. And then Paul says, give glory to God in the church. Give glory to God in the church. Every New Testament doxology is addressed to the church. This is the only New Testament doxology that includes the church. Here he says, the church is the platform for the glory of God. There are so many today who would almost apologize for the church as if it is some necessary evil. They treat the church as if it somehow gets in the way of the glory of God. But here Paul says that the church is the platform for the glory of God in the world. Psalm 8 says that God made us a little lower than the heavenly beings and has crowned us with with glory and with honor. But the image of God has been marred by sin. Romans 3:23. All have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God. But by the rescuing grace of the Lord Jesus Christ we are made new. We are cleansed from sin. We are adopted into God's family, and we are made trophies of God's amazing grace. And so the text here says that this God who deserves glory alone, has so designed that sinners are testaments of the strength of his grace and that he is to be glorified in the church. And then he says that God is to be glorified in Christ Jesus. Two platforms by which God is to receive glory in the church and in Christ Jesus. Of course this is not saying that they are equal. It is reminding us that the church is the body of Christ and Christ is the head of the church. He is the shepherd and we are his sheep. He's the groom and we are his bride. In other words, friends, you cannot have a high view of Christ and a low view of the church at the time. Same, same time. But the priority must be to Christ. John 1:14 says the word became flesh and dwelt among us. And we beheld his glory, the glory as of the only begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth. Jesus in his incarnation was the walking, talking, breathing glory of God. In John 12, 27 and 28, Jesus says, Now is my soul troubled, and what shall I say? Father, save me from this hour. But for this purpose I have come to this hour. Father, glorify your name. Jesus did not die at the cross merely to fix our problems. He died at the cross to glorify His Father. Second Corinthians, chapter 4, verse 6 says that God, who said, let there be light has caused his light to shine in our hearts so that we might see the light, the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ. God alone deserves the glory. God is to be glorified in his church. God is glorified in His Son, the Lord Jesus Christ. And then finally, Paul says, give God the glory forever. Not just forever. Two time references he mentions. He says, God deserves the glory throughout all generations, in every season, in every circumstance, in every period. And when the generations end, we're to glorify him forever and ever. When We've been there 10,000 years, bright shining as the sun, we've no less days to sing God's praise than when we first begun. God is able to answer your biggest request and as a result, God is worthy to receive your highest praise. Praise. He deserves the glory alone. He deserves the glory in the church. He deserves the glory in Christ Jesus. He deserves the glory throughout all generations and forever. It's as if he said it all. But there is one more thing to be said. Amen. Amen means so be it. It's true. Right on. So aren't you glad he doesn't say now to him who is able? We hope so. Now to him who is able. Maybe now to him who is able. I see how things turn out. He says, no, God is able. Amen. Amen indeed. For the God who answers prayer.
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Answered prayer is such an encouragement along our journey, isn't it? This is the Tuesday edition of Renewing youg Mind. And that was H.B. charles Jr. A pastor in Jacksonville, Florida, and one of the featured speakers at our most recent national conference. If you were encouraged today and would like to own this entire Blessing and Praise series, request your copy on DVD when you give a donation at renewingyourmind.org or when you call us at 800-435-4343. In addition to the DVD, which you might want to donate to your local church. We will be glad to unlock lifetime access to the messages and the study guide in the free Ligonier app. Simply respond now at renewingyourmind.org or by using the link in the podcast shown. Notes thank you for helping encourage Christians around the world through this daily outreach of Renewing youg Mind. We'll continue this series tomorrow with a message titled Equipped by God. So join us Wednesday here on Renewing youg Mind.
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Date: May 19, 2026
Speaker: Dr. H.B. Charles, Jr.
Host: Ligonier Ministries
Theme: The ability of God to answer prayer—reflecting on the doxology from Ephesians 3:20-21 and the true purpose and power of prayer.
This episode focuses on God’s limitless ability to answer prayer, based on the doxology in Ephesians 3:20-21. Dr. H.B. Charles, Jr. unpacks the theological richness found in these verses, emphasizing that prayer’s effectiveness lies not in our words or faith, but in God’s omnipotent power. He also insists that the ultimate goal of prayer is God’s glory, not just the granting of our requests.
“All effective prayer is God centered. You won’t be able to pray right until you first recognize that God is willing to hear and able to answer prayer.” (03:20)
“The purpose of prayer is the glory of God. … You shouldn’t wait till after you get an answer to glorify God… before you get the answer.”
“He is the God who is able. In a word, God is omnipotent.” (06:15)
Beyond articulation: (12:15)
Dr. Charles notes God’s omniscience, quoting Psalm 37:4, and reassures that God understands our needs even when we can’t express them.
“He who has all power knows all, and he is able to meet the needs that we don’t even have the words to articulate.” (13:30)
Specific examples:
“There is no burden that God cannot lift, no door that God cannot open, no enemy that God cannot defeat, no need that God cannot meet, no problem that God cannot solve, no sickness that God cannot heal, and no sin that God cannot forgive.” (14:20)
Not just occasional help: (16:05–18:10)
The power described in Ephesians 3 is “at work within us”—it’s indwelling through the Holy Spirit (Romans 8:9).
When we feel weak:
“The promise here is not that you will feel strong. In fact, I suggest to you that it is a good thing when we feel weak. … The weaker we feel, the more we lean on him.” (18:40)
Memorable description:
“It is as gentle as the development of a dewdrop, as imperceptible as the growth of a tree, but as lasting as the throne of God.” (19:45)
The inseparability of God’s ability and His glory: (21:00–23:00)
“The God who is able to answer your biggest request is the God who is worthy to receive your highest praise.”
God alone deserves the glory—not us, nor any intermediary:
“If you receive an answer to prayer, there is no list of names—only one name. The glory is not to go to them, it is to go to him.” (22:00)
Supports with John Stott’s summary:
“The power comes from him. The glory must go to him.” (22:10)
The Church as the Platform for God’s Glory:
“The church is the platform for the glory of God in the world.” (23:00)
Glory throughout all generations:
The doxology expresses that God’s glory is to be celebrated in every generation and forever.
“Aren’t you glad he doesn’t say, ‘Now to him who is able, we hope so’? ... He says, no, God is able. Amen.”
Dr. Charles drives home the certainty and finality of God’s ability and the believer’s confidence in God’s power.
“Prayer works not because of the words we say, the promises we claim, or the faith we demonstrate. Prayer works because of the sovereign power, the omnipotent power of Almighty God.” (01:10)
“He is able to do far more abundantly than all that we could ask or think.” (06:20)
“The purpose of prayer is the glory of God.” (21:15)
“The weaker we feel, the more we lean on him. … My strength is perfected in your weakness.” (19:05, referencing 2 Corinthians 12:9)
“You cannot have a high view of Christ and a low view of the church at the same time.” (23:35)
| Section | Key Idea | Notable Quote / Timestamp | |--------------------------|--------------------------------------------------------|------------------------------------| | Introduction | Prayer’s effectiveness is in God, not us | “Prayer works because of the sovereign power...of God.” (01:10) | | The Prayer in Ephesians | Structure: Sandwiched with truth about God | “All effective prayer is God-centered.” (03:20) | | Purpose of Prayer | The glory of God, not just answers | “The purpose of prayer is the glory of God.” (04:05)| | God’s Ability | Far beyond what we ask or imagine | “He is able...to do all we ask or think.” (06:20) | | God’s Power in Us | Holy Spirit gives real, indwelling power | “It is at work within us.” (16:05) | | Weakness and Strength | Our weakness leans on God’s strength | “My strength is perfected in your weakness.” (19:05)| | The Church’s Role | Platform for glory, inseparable from Christ | “The church is the platform for the glory of God...” (23:00) | | Certainty in Amen | Assurance in God’s everlasting ability | “God is able. Amen.” (24:20) |
Dr. H.B. Charles, Jr. masterfully ties together the themes of God’s power, prayer, and praise. Listeners are encouraged to see prayer as a God-centered activity aimed at God’s glory, rooted in His proven omnipotence. The doxology in Ephesians 3:20-21 is both a declaration of God’s infinite ability and an invitation to offer Him our highest praise—in every prayer, in every generation, forever.
Memorable Last Word:
“God is able. Amen. Amen indeed. For the God who answers prayer.” (24:50)