A few questions to provoke thought and to re-direct attention to the Scriptures, and then I will bow out.
Then be sure to never ever ask anyone to pray for you about anyting.
The subject is praying to God versus praying to someone else...
Not asking fellow believers to join in and pray to God for something, sir.
The pattern we find for prayer is often called "The Lord's Prayer", and it is found in Matthew 6:9-13 and Luke 11:2-4.
The Lord Jesus gave us this pattern when the disciples asked Him to teach them to pray.
Do you know of another passage that gives believers any other pattern to follow?
Your ignorance is astounding.
I have covered this multiple times already.
The prohibition in Deuteronomy is against Necromancy. Necromancy is not about asking a saint in Heaven to pray for you.
Necromancy is seeking oracles/information FROM the dead. That's what "consulting the dead" means.
Regardless, why ask a person
who is no longer with us, to pray
for us, since as believers in Christ we are commanded to pray to the Father on the behalf of the Son ( John 14:13-14, John 16:23 )?
There is no example in Scripture giving believers any other way than that.
It says we are to make our requests known to God.
Outside of that, I cannot even find a warrant for asking
other believers who are still living to pray for us, but it's become commonplace today.
I believe the support for this is here:
" Again I say unto you, That if two of you shall agree on earth as touching any thing that they shall ask, it shall be done for them of my Father which is in heaven." ( Matthew 18:19 ).
So, my question(s) to you ( out of curiosity ) would be, where did the Roman Catholic tradition of making prayer to those
other than God, come from?
Do you see anywhere
in God's word that believers have been given leave to do that, or did it originate from somewhere else?