Intercession

Who prays for us — and whom may we ask to pray?

“And the smoke of the incense, with the prayers of the saints, rose before God from the hand of the angel.”
Revelation 8:4

Scripture is thick with intercession — one standing before God on behalf of another. Abraham bargains for Sodom; Moses stands in the breach for Israel; Amos pleads and the Lord relents; Job prays for his friends and is heard. At the center stands Christ himself, the one mediator who “always lives to make intercession” for his own, and the Spirit who intercedes with groanings too deep for words. And at the edges of the canon, in the Revelation, the prayers of the saints rise like incense before the throne.

From that shared ground the traditions divide over a further question: do the saints in heaven intercede for the church on earth — and may we ask them to? Rome and the Christian East answer yes, and gather Mary and the martyrs into one praying family; the Reformation answered no, guarding the sufficiency of the one Mediator. This study gathers the texts and the strongest voices of each answer — primary sources first, heard whole before they are weighed — in the same discipline as the rest of this desk: neither defense nor demolition, and no verdict before the evidence.

Jay Dyer on the Intercession of the Saintstranscript

An Eastern Orthodox apologist, pressed on the Jesse Lee Peterson show: why ask Mary to pray — and why call her the Ark of the Covenant? Transcribed in full, with a summary and the key claims indexed.

The QuestionDo the saints in heaven pray for the church on earth — and is Mary the Ark the Old Testament foreshadowed?

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The sources are being gathered; the studies will be written from them.