Three Types of Prayer: Ask, Demand, and Worship

Sprid kÀrleken

📘 Three Types of Prayer: Ask, Demand, and Worship

Why Not All “Prayer” Is the Same — and Why It Matters


🔍 Introduction:

The New Testament doesn’t treat all prayer as the same. Whether we are asking for help, interceding boldly, or simply worshiping, the Greek text gives us unique terms — and each carries its own tone, relationship, and level of authority.

By rightly discerning these, we unlock a fuller, more powerful life of prayer.


1. 🙏 ASK – The Humble Petition

Greek: Î±áżÏ„Î­Ï‰ (aiteƍ) – Strong’s G154
This word appears when someone asks from a greater authority, as a supplicant — never as a peer.

📖 John 16:23 (KJV)

“And in that day ye shall ask me nothing. Verily, verily, I say unto you, Whatsoever ye shall ask (G154) the Father in my name, he will give it you.”

📖 Matthew 7:11 (KJV)

“If ye then, being evil, know how to give good gifts unto your children, *how much more shall your Father which is in heaven give good things to them that ask (G154) him?”

🔠 Key Idea:
This is the prayer of the child to the Father — humble, trusting, and fully dependent on grace. Even Christ told us to ask the Father, not Himself, in this mode.


2. đŸ›Ąïž DEMAND – The Confident Declaration or Intercession

Greek: áŒÏÏ‰Ï„ÎŹÏ‰ (erƍtaƍ) – Strong’s G2065
Used when the petitioner is on equal footing — such as a king to a king, or Christ to the Father.

📖 John 17:15 (KJV)

“I pray (G2065) not that thou shouldest take them out of the world, but that thou shouldest keep them from the evil.”

📖 1 John 5:16 (KJV)

“If any man see his brother sin a sin which is not unto death, he shall ask (G2065), and he shall give him life for them that sin not unto death.”

🔠 Key Idea:
This is the language of judicial enforcement and confident intercession, not begging.
It reflects mature sonship and alignment with Divine law — a stance taken not from pride, but from Christ’s finished work and our place in Him.


3. đŸ•Šïž WORSHIP – The Reverent Offering and Communion

Greek: Ï€ÏÎżÏƒÎ”ÏÏ‡ÎżÎŒÎ±Îč (proseuchomai) – Strong’s G4336
This is the general word for devotional, worshipful prayer, used in structured and spontaneous settings alike.

📖 Ephesians 6:18 (KJV)

“Praying (G4336) always with all prayer and supplication in the Spirit, and watching thereunto with all perseverance and supplication for all saints
”

📖 Acts 6:4 (KJV)

“But we will give ourselves continually to prayer (G4335) and to the ministry of the word.”

🔠 Key Idea:
This prayer is liturgical, constant, and intimate.
Early Christians followed structured hours of prayer (like Daniel’s 3x/day or David’s 7x/day – Psalm 119:164) — not legalistically, but to remain continually grounded in God.
(cf. “Evening, and morning, and at noon, will I pray
” – Psalm 55:17)


✅ Summary Chart

Type Greek Strong’s Description Used For
Ask aiteƍ G154 Humble request to a higher authority Child to Father
Demand/Intercede erƍtaƍ G2065 Peer-level or judicial request Christ to Father; mature believer interceding
Worship/Devotion proseuchomai G4336 Reverent communion with God Daily prayer, liturgy, worship settings

✝ Final Word:

A truly mature prayer life knows when to ask, when to enforce, and when to simply abide in worship.
When we learn to walk “in His name” — aligned with His nature — we stop striving and start stewarding the authority already entrusted to us.