You’ve already begun your request with the best possible foundation, the mighty name of Jesus. That name is your admission, your only right to come before the throne at all. No other name carries weight there, and it’s good to remember that the power in prayer isn’t found in the length of our words or the loudness of our cry, but in the One to whom the prayer is directed. So let your heart first settle there: you are calling on your Father, and He hears you.
But prayer was never meant to be a tool for getting our wishes fulfilled. Its deepest purpose, revealed in the prayer Jesus taught, is that God’s will would be done on earth as it is in heaven. So when you lift up your finances and your health, I would encourage you to lift them up not simply to escape hardship, but to invite His purposes into these areas. Ask Him to align your heart with His. Often, He wants to do something for us that we haven’t yet asked for, something far beyond a fixed bank balance or a healed body. Prayer opens the door for Him to work without violating the will He gave us. Keep knocking.
And keep persisting. Paul told the church to continue in prayer, not because God needs to be pestered into kindness, but because our persistence trains us to stay in harmony with what He’s doing. I think of that urgent message Mary and Martha sent when their brother was dying. Jesus delayed, and from their perspective, the prayer seemed ignored. Yet the delay made room for a greater revelation of His glory. Your situation may not resolve on your schedule, but that doesn’t mean nothing is happening. The prayer of faith doesn’t guarantee life will turn out the way we script; it trusts that the Lord is at work even in the silence.
Be cautious about linking prosperity or health too tightly with spiritual standing. There is a greeting in Scripture that wishes someone health even as their soul prospers, but that’s a personal expression of love, not a binding contract from God. I’ve known some of the most devoted saints to walk through severe physical trials. Their faith wasn’t weak; their prayers weren’t unheard. And sometimes, a dry bank account or a bed of sickness becomes the very thing that drives us to our knees with a fervency we’d never know otherwise. It was the weight of troubles that made David a man of prayer, and his psalms are filled with honest cries and renewed trust.
Let your prayer come from that place, from the heart. Not a recitation, but the desperate, honest, effectual cry of someone who knows their need and knows their God. Even a silent, arrow prayer thrown up in a moment has reached the throne just as surely as a night-long vigil. What matters is that you keep your relationship with the Father open, that your will is laid down before His, and that you keep asking, keep seeking, keep watching with thanksgiving. I join with you now in agreement, asking that His kingdom come, His will be done in your finances, in your body, in your whole life, for His glory and your ultimate joy.