This comes across much like the adage that "the lord helps those who help themselves", (which, on one level, means that help is allegedly forthcoming to those who don't need it and, on another level, that one who helps themselves along doesn't need a "lord").
Does it? Because I thought it was more like
"God helps those that CAN'T help themselves".Another example: Two football teams go to the SuperBowl, both sides have some players that are Believers. Those believers and all their fans (that are Believers) are praying that their team win the SuperBowl. Since God doesn't have favorites...who does God let win?
God gave those players (believers and not) their abilities and talents (again, we can argue where their abilities and talents came from: God vs. parents but they were born with their abilities and talents regardless). They are to play their best and one team will win. Usually there are players that will "thank God for the win" but God was probably just enjoying the game. It would make more sense for them to thank God for their abilities, for their strength, for their fans, etc. than "the win". God didn't perform any miracles and let any certain "special team" win.
However, a player that shatters his neck during a game and is pronounced paralyzed (that has many praying for him) and he later begins to walk...that is God helping someone that can't help himself, that is answered prayer, that is something that "glorified God" vs. just benefiting one person.
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2007/magazine/09/12/flashback121492/index.html ***** ***** ***** ***** ***** ***** ***** ***** ******
About praying for "unrealistic " things like winning the lottery:
I recently had a lady tell me she was convinced God lets certain believers that pray...win the lottery. She told me she knew a lady that bought a lottery ticket and put it in her Bible and prayed all night that night that He would let her win because she was in NEED and the next day, her numbers were picked. That is what is "mere coincidence". If she had prayed first BEFORE she bought the ticket, her heart should have told her NOT to buy the ticket. Why? Because the Bible does NOT promote gambling.