In the Bible the Lord Jesus gives us a pattern of prayer in the Our Father, but after this, in the Gospel of Luke and chapter 11, He gives us a parable about the man who goes to his friend at midnight to ask him for some Breads, to serve a friend of his who came to visit. And in verse 8 he says: "I tell you, although he does not rise to give them to be his friend, nevertheless because of his importunity he will rise up and give him everything he needs".
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That word "Importune" in the original is "Anaidea", and it is a unique word in the New Testament, and it translates: Being insolent and shameless. And this is the attitude that God expects in our prayer when he says: "Ask, and it will be given to you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you. Because everyone who asks receives; and he who seeks finds; and to the one who calls, it will be opened to him ". Smith Wigglesworth said: "If God does not move, I move to God."
At this time God is making a call to His church, it is necessary to return to * "Anaidea" * we need to importune heaven for our blessings, to the point that enemies are afraid of our prayers.
Although this word is unique in the New Testament, throughout the Bible there are many examples of people who made "Anaidea" prayers.