What is Prayer

The Biblical Words for “Prayer” (Hebrew & Greek)

HEBREW TERMS (Old Testament)

The OT uses several different words for prayer, each revealing a different dimension of what prayer is.

A. תְּפִלָּה — tefillah

Meaning: prayer, intercession, supplication, a request made to God. This is the most common Hebrew noun for prayer.

Key uses:

  • 1 Kings 8 — Solomon’s great prayer at the Temple dedication
  • Psalm 17:1 — “Hear my prayer, O LORD”
  • Psalm 102:1 — “A prayer of the afflicted…”

Tefillah emphasizes intentional, verbal prayer — speaking to God with purpose.

B. פָּלַל — palal

Meaning: to intercede, to intervene, to judge, to pray. This is the main Hebrew verb for “to pray.”

Key uses:

  • Genesis 20:7 — Abraham “will pray” for Abimelech
  • 1 Samuel 1:10 — Hannah “prayed to the LORD”
  • Psalm 4:1 — “Hear me when I call”

The root idea is intervening — stepping into God’s presence to seek His action.

C. קָרָא — qara’

Meaning: to call, cry out, proclaim.

Key uses:

  • Genesis 4:26 — “People began to call on the name of the LORD.”
  • Psalm 18:6 — “In my distress I called upon the LORD.”

This is prayer as crying out — urgent, emotional, raw.

D. שָׁוַע / זָעַק — shava‘ / za‘aq

Meaning: to cry for help, to scream, to shout in distress.

Key uses:

  • Exodus 2:23 — Israel “cried out” under slavery
  • Judges 3:9 — Israel “cried out to the LORD”

This is prayer born from desperation.

E. בָּקַשׁ — baqash

Meaning: to seek, request, desire.

Key uses:

  • Jeremiah 29:13 — “You will seek Me and find Me…”
  • Psalm 27:4 — “One thing I ask of the LORD…”

This is prayer as seeking God Himself.

F. חָנַן — chanan

Meaning: to plead for grace, to ask for favor.

Key uses:

  • Psalm 51:1 — “Have mercy on me, O God…”
  • Psalm 86:3 — “Be gracious to me, O Lord…”

This is prayer as appeal to God’s mercy.

GREEK TERMS (New Testament)

A. προσευχή — proseuchē

Meaning: prayer, worshipful petition. This is the main NT noun for prayer.

Key uses:

  • Acts 2:42 — the early church devoted themselves to prayer
  • Philippians 4:6 — “in everything by prayer…”

This word combines pros (“toward”) + euchē (“a vow, a desire”). Prayer is moving toward God with desire.

B. προσεύχομαι — proseuchomai

Meaning: to pray, to speak to God, to worship through prayer.

Key uses:

  • Matthew 6:5–9 — Jesus’ teaching on prayer
  • Luke 22:41 — Jesus prayed in Gethsemane

This is the standard NT verb for “to pray.”

C. δέησις — deēsis

Meaning: supplication, earnest request, pleading.

Key uses:

  • Luke 1:13 — Zechariah’s prayer was heard
  • Philippians 4:6 — “prayer and supplication”

This is prayer with urgency.

D. ἔντευξις — enteuxis

Meaning: intercession, petition on behalf of another.

Key uses:

  • 1 Timothy 2:1 — “prayers, intercessions…”

This is prayer as standing in the gap for someone else.

E. αἰτέω — aiteō

Meaning: to ask, request, petition.

Key uses:

  • Matthew 7:7 — “Ask, and it will be given to you.”
  • James 1:5 — “If any of you lacks wisdom, let him ask God…”

This is prayer as asking boldly.

Timeline of Prayer from Genesis to Revelation

Stage 1: Calling on God’s Name (Genesis)

Prayer begins as calling out to God:

  • Genesis 4:26 — first mention of prayer
  • Abraham, Isaac, Jacob build altars and call on God

Prayer = relationship.

Stage 2: Crying Out in Need (Exodus–Judges)

Israel cries out under oppression. God hears and delivers.

Prayer = desperate appeal.

Stage 3: Covenant Prayer (Samuel–Kings)

Prayer becomes formalized:

  • Hannah’s prayer
  • David’s psalms
  • Solomon’s temple prayer

Prayer = worship + intercession.

Stage 4: Prophetic Prayer (Psalms–Prophets)

Prayer becomes:

  • lament
  • confession
  • praise
  • longing for restoration

Prayer = honest dialogue with God.

Stage 5: Jesus’ Teaching on Prayer (Gospels)

Jesus transforms prayer:

  • God is “Father”
  • Prayer is intimate
  • Prayer is persistent
  • Prayer is kingdom-centered
  • The Lord’s Prayer becomes the model

Prayer = childlike trust + kingdom desire.

Stage 6: Prayer in the Early Church (Acts–Epistles)

Prayer becomes:

  • communal
  • Spirit-empowered
  • constant
  • intercessory
  • missional

Prayer = the engine of the church.

Stage 7: Prayer in Heaven (Revelation)

Prayer becomes:

  • worship
  • incense before God
  • the cry “Come, Lord Jesus”

Prayer = joining heaven’s worship.

Comparison of Prayer in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam

Judaism

Prayer is:

  • structured (three daily prayers)
  • rooted in Scripture (Psalms)
  • communal and personal
  • covenantal
  • often sung or chanted

Jewish prayer emphasizes God’s faithfulness, remembrance, and obedience.

Christianity

Prayer is:

  • relational (God as Father)
  • centered on Jesus’ name
  • empowered by the Holy Spirit
  • both spontaneous and liturgical
  • intercessory
  • worshipful

Christian prayer emphasizes intimacy, grace, and union with Christ.

Islam

Prayer (salat) is:

  • ritualized
  • performed five times daily
  • oriented toward Mecca
  • physical (bowing, prostration)
  • communal

There is also du‘ā’, personal supplication.

Islamic prayer emphasizes submission, discipline, and remembrance of God.

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