Dictionary: Prayer

A distinction needs to be made between the various occurrences of the words “pray” and “prayer” in most translations of the Bible and the modern connotation of the same words. In the OT, the main Hebrew words translated as “to pray” and “prayer” (palal and tepillah) refer to the act of bringing a petition or request before God. They do not normally, if ever, refer to the other elements that we today think of as being included in the act of praying, such as praise or thanksgiving. The same is the case in the NT, where the main Greek words translated “to pray” and “prayer” (proseuchomai and proseuchē) also specifically denote making a petition or request to God. But other words and constructions in both Testaments are also translated “to pray” and “prayer,” and this article will deal with the larger concept, including praise, thanksgiving, petition, and confession, as opposed to the narrower meaning of the particular Hebrew and Greek terms (see also Praise; Thanksgiving; Worship).

Old Testament

In the OT there is no language or understanding comparable to modern ways of talking about prayer as conversational or dialogical. Prayer does not involve mutuality. Prayer is something that humans offer to God, and the situation is never reversed; God does not pray to humans. Understanding this preserves the proper distinction between the sovereign God and the praying subject. Therefore, prayers in the OT are reverential. Some OT prayers have extended introductions, such as that found in Neh. 1:5, that seem to pile up names for God. These should be seen as instances not of stiltedness or ostentation, but rather as setting up a kind of “buffer zone” in recognition of the distance between the Creator and the creature. In the NT, compare the same phenomenon in Eph. 1:17.

Many of the prayers in the OT are explicitly set in a covenantal context. God owes nothing to his creatures, but God has sworn to be faithful to those with whom he has entered into covenant. Thus, many OT prayers specifically appeal to the covenant as a motivation for both those praying and God’s answering (1 Kings 8:23–25; Neh. 1:5–11; 9:32; Pss. 25:10–11; 44:17–26; 74:20; 89:39–49). In postexilic books such as Ezra, Nehemiah, and Daniel, an important feature in the recorded prayers is the use of prior Scripture, praying God’s words (many times covenantal) back to him (in the NT, see Acts 4:24–30). Also, the closeness engendered by the covenant relationship between God and his people was unique in the ancient Near Eastern context. So Moses can marvel, “What other nation is so great as to have their gods near them the way the Lord our God is near us whenever we pray to him?” (Deut. 4:7).

Prayer must be made from a heart that is right toward God. There is no guarantee that God will hear every prayer (Ps. 66:18; Prov. 1:28; Isa. 1:15; 59:2). For the most part, the “rightness” that God requires in prayer is “a broken and contrite heart” (Ps. 51:17; cf. Isa. 66:2).

Although several passages talk about prayer in the context of sacrifice (e.g., Gen. 13:4), there is surprisingly little emphasis on prayer in the legal texts about sacrifice in the Pentateuch, no prescriptions for the kinds of prayer or the words that are to be said in connection with the sacrifices. Interestingly, however, in later, perhaps postexilic contexts, where there is no temple and therefore no sacrifice, we find texts such as Ps. 141:2, where the petitioner asks God to accept prayer as if it were an offering of incense and the evening sacrifice (cf. Prov. 15:8; in the NT, see Rev. 5:8).

A presupposition of prayer in the OT is that God hears prayer and may indeed answer and effect the change being requested. Prayer is not primarily about changing the psychological state or the heart of the one praying, but rather about God changing the circumstances of the one praying.

There is a striking honesty, some would even say brashness, evident in many OT prayers. Jeremiah laments that God has deceived both the people (Jer. 4:10) and Jeremiah himself (20:7) and complains about God’s justice (12:1–4). Job stands, as it were, in God’s face and demands that the Almighty answer his questions (Job 31:35–37). The psalmist accuses God of having broken his covenant promises (Ps. 89:39). While it is true that God does, to some extent, rebuke Jeremiah and Job (Jer. 12:5; Job 38–42), he does not ignore them or cast them aside. This would seem, ultimately, to encourage such honesty and boldness on the part of those who pray.

Literarily, accounts of prayers in narratives serve to provide characterizations of the ones praying. The recorded prayers of people such as Abraham, Moses, Hannah, Ezra, and Nehemiah demonstrate their true piety and humility before God. By contrast, the prayer of Jonah recorded in Jon. 2, in its narrative context, betrays a certain hypocrisy on the part of the reluctant prophet.

New Testament

The depiction of prayer in the NT is largely consistent with that of the OT, but there are important developments.

Jesus tells his disciples to address God as “Father” (Matt. 6:9; cf. Rom. 8:15; Gal. 4:6). Although recent scholarship has demonstrated that “Abba” is not the equivalent of our “daddy,” it expresses a certain intimacy that goes beyond what was prevalent at the time, but retains an element of reverence as well. God is not just “Father,” but “our Father in heaven” (Matt. 6:9). Even Jesus addresses God as “Holy Father” (John 17:11), “Righteous Father” (John 17:25), and “Father, Lord of heaven and earth” (Matt. 11:25). And Paul, as mentioned earlier, uses a buffer zone, rarely in his epistles using the word “Father” by itself, but instead referring to “God our Father” (e.g., Rom. 1:7) and frequently using the phrase “the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ” (Rom. 15:6; 2 Cor. 1:3; 11:31; Eph. 1:3; cf. Eph. 1:17; Col. 1:3). God is our Father, but still he is a Father before whom one reverently kneels (Eph. 3:14).

Prayer to God is now to be made in the name of Jesus (Matt. 18:19–20; John 14:13; 15:16; 16:23–26). While there is some debate as to the exact nuance of this idea, it seems clear that, at the very least, prayers in Jesus’ name need to be ones that Jesus would affirm and are in accordance with his holy character and expressed will. It is, in essence, saying to God that the prayer being offered is one that Jesus would approve.

Prayer can also be made to Jesus (John 14:14), and such devotion to him in the early church is evidence of his being regarded as deity. The instances of this in the NT are rare, however, and generally either exclamatory or rhetorical (Acts 7:59; 1 Cor. 16:22; Rev. 22:20). The norm would still seem to be that prayer is to be made to the Father, through Jesus’ name.

Unlike anything prior in the OT, Jesus tells his followers to pray for their enemies (Matt. 5:44). Jesus and his followers serve as examples (Luke 23:34; Acts 7:60).

The Holy Spirit plays a vital role in prayers. It is by him that we are able to call out, “Abba, Father” (Rom. 8:15; Gal. 4:6). The Spirit himself intercedes for us (Rom. 8:26). Our praying is to be done in the Spirit (Eph. 6:18; Jude 20; possibly 1 Cor. 14:15).

Jesus encourages fervent and even continual or repeated prayer (Luke 18:1–8), but not showy or repetitive prayer (Matt. 6:5–8).

Jesus becomes the model of prayer. He prays before important decisions (Luke 6:12–13) and in connection with significant crisis points (Matt. 14:23; 26:36–44; Luke 3:21; 9:29; John 12:27). He offers prayers that are not answered (Luke 22:41–44) and prayers that are (Heb. 5:7). Even as he tells his disciples to always pray and not give up (Luke 18:1 [which is also the meaning of the sometimes overly literalized “pray without ceasing” in 1 Thess. 5:17 NRSV]), so he himself wrestles in prayer (Luke 22:41–44; Heb. 5:7). He has prayed for his disciples (John 17; Luke 22:32), and even now, in heaven, he still intercedes for us (Heb. 7:25). Indeed, our intercession before God’s throne is valid because his is (Heb. 4:14–16).

Showing 3776 to 3800 of 4877 results

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... them. Bells are alleged to have special powers: they can repel demons, lift spells, etc. In Roman Catholicism, the bell is the voice of God. Hence bells are consecrated before they are used liturgically or to regulate the canonical hours that structure the daily prayer of monks, nuns, and priests. How many of our bells are ringing? Actually, it used to be that our communities were filled with sounds, not just of bells tolling, but of bells pealing. There is a difference between pealing and tolling. One bell ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... , when we become receivers for God's spirit through Christ. In Jewish culture there's long been a spiritual satellite dish in every household. The practice of setting up a mezzuzah, a small tube-like container that holds a tiny scroll with a traditional prayer recognizing God's eternal power and presence, is affixed to every doorway, or every doorpost in an orthodox home. Upon entering or leaving by a a mezzuzahed doorway, the devout kiss their index and middle fingers and press them to the mezzuzah. Before ...

Genesis 3:1-24
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... foreknowledge of what awaits him there. But the shadow of the cross isn't composed only of darkness. It takes the play of light with the darkness to make a shadow. The shadow that the cross casts upon all our readings, all our studies, all our prayers, and all our hopes is lit from behind by the light of the resurrection. The glory-light of the divine is ever present, shining and silhouetting every action, every move that Jesus makes as he moves toward Jerusalem. There's only one shadow that can release ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... . God moans, literally, "I am weary of bearing them" (verse 14). So disgusted is the Lord with the Israelite commitment to the trappings of belief without the fire of faith that the divine declaration is: "I will hide my eyes...Even thought you make many prayers, I will not listen" (verse 15). God rejects the spilled blood of the sacrificial animals. God wants instead the hot blood of vital, viable, disciples. God doesn't want a nation of believers. God would rather have just one disciple. A disciple is a ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... Man March in Washington, but he knew it had to start with him. So he wrote the man who murdered his brother in 1994 and said "I've forgiven you," starting a prison ministry called THUG (True Healing Under God) that pairs up Christians with prisoners for letter - writing and prayers. Do you burn? Even a slow burn at the way the bad guys seem to be always winning? Do you burn? At the way evil has its way and works its way in our world? Do you burn? Has the world ever needed the message of the cross more than ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... in to God's Spirit in every situation, eventually the messages will fly right over your head. When the promptings of the heart and soul are stilled, we no longer even listen for the sound of God's presence. Are you tuning in to the Spirit's ongoing prayer melody? How is this "tuning" best done for you? One thing you can always count on in computer culture . . . the moment you master some facet of it, the technology will advance and leave you outmoded and out-to-lunch. E-mail is actually now quaint and old ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... from us to merit our attention and witness – we rob God. · With every man and woman we reject because their beliefs or lifestyle don't fit comfortably within our church walls – we rob God. · With every aspersion we cast at different faiths and different prayers – we rob God. "For God so loved the church..." Isn't that what it says? "For God so loved America..." Isn't that what it says? "For God so loved Baptists, Lutherans, United Methodists, and Catholics..." Isn't that what it says? NO! "For ...

Amos 8:1-14
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... life meant so far and what can it mean in the time left to me? . . . What have I contributed to the Great Ledger?" What will you contribute to the Great Ledger? In a dodgeGod world right now, let's end our time together by being an Amos. Here's a prayer for peace in the world that comes out of the Iona community in the UK. Whenever I say, "Rise up, O People of God," you respond by saying, "God's peace is for you." Leader: People of Ireland, torn and tired of being torn; RISE UP, O PEOPLE OF GOD ...

Galatians 6:11-18
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... salvation's plan. Oh, the grace that bro't it down to man! Oh, the mighty gulf that God did span at Calvary." On a Hill Too Far Away, Stood an Old Rugged Cross. The first of the so-called comfortable words in Thomas Cranmer's The Book of Common Prayer are these: "Then shall the Priest say, 'Hear what comfortable words our Saviour Christ saith unto all that truly turn to him. Come unto me all that travail and are heavy laden, and I will refresh you.'" And how are we refreshed? By being in the red. I learned ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... ? Even the most pathetically poor free man knew he existed in a whole different realm of possibility than was available to the most educated, elevated slave. Freedom meant everything. Slavery meant death. What, no male or female? Religious Jewish men recited a prayer everyday in which they thanked God for their many blessings prominent among which was the blessing that he was not a woman. Surely this most basic of biological differences could not be discounted in this new post-resurrection world of faith in ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... of joyous energy overflows Truly harmony and effectiveness shall be the fruits of my hours for I shall walk in the Pace of my Lord and dwell in his house for ever. --A version of Psalm 23 from Japan, as reprinted in Mother Teresa, Life in the Spirit: Reflections, Meditations, Prayers, ed. Kathryn Spink (San Francisco, Harper & Row, 1983), 76-77.

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... the calendar of some 2000+ year old religious tradition. Except this year. In this year of 2004, more unchurched, semi-churched, over-churched and supposedly-churched people will know when Lent begins than they have in years. Lent, the season of prayer and fasting, soul-searching and body-denying, has a marker this year of 2004. This coming week, as the season of Lent begins with Ash Wednesday, actor/director/born-again conservative-Catholic Mel Gibson officially opens his self-funded movie "The Passion ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... Mary is pregnant, and that she has been chosen to be "the mother of my Lord" (verse 43). The messiah himself is now before Elizabeth and her unborn child. This awesome proximity immediately fills Zechariah's small home with all the joy, all the hopes, all the prayers for the redeeming messiah that the people of God have been waiting for. Redemption is at hand. No wonder the yet-to-be-born John the Baptist jumps for joy. Every few years some film studio puts out another "life of Christ" movie. Mo matter how ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... to save a city. Jacob kept wrestling with the angel until daybreak, refusing to let go or let up (Genesis 32:24-29). Moses annoyed God for forty days and nights, pleading with him not to destroy the Israelites (Deuteronomy 9:25-27). Paul prayed the same prayer Moses did (Romans 9:3), over and over again. The psalmist cried to the Lord day and night (Psalm 88:1) and wouldn't stop praying. The term saint in the Protestant tradition has two layers of meaning. 1) There is still a recognition of those unique ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... hungers and deep desires within are our true selves. Paul the Apostle said "the good that I would I do not, and the evil that I would not I do." We all stand as lepers, ritually unclean, standing in the need of grace and prayer. Do you remember your first trip to Disney World? Do you remember your biggest disappointment? The centerpiece of Disney World, its most familiar icon, is the beautiful Sleeping Beauty's Castle. Its tall towers, fluttering banners, imposing size, and fairy-tale perfection draw every ...

John 6:25-59
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... , Jesus blew away all the traditional models. Jesus called disciples . . . to righteousness, not respectability; to actions, not assertions; to justice, not jurisprudence; to trust, not tradition; to sacrifice, not sanctimony; to love, not legalism; to compassion, not convention; to prayer, not profits. To everything that the world holds up and holds onto as the symbols of success, of goodness, of power, Jesus declared . . . DROP IT! I invited some "Bambis" here to church this morning. One of the hardest ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... you rejoiced in someone else's misfortune, or relished a rumor about someone. Maybe even relayed it. Think about all the things that you did that you don't want anyone else to know about. Now confess these things before God and ask for forgiveness. Now offer a prayer of support for Martha Stewart that she won't put herself under such pressure to be so perfect. Pray for Sammy Sosa that he can make peace with the pressures of aging when your body starts to let you down and you are tempted to find shortcuts to ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... we? Many of us are uncomfortable talking about the Holy Spirit. When it comes to the Trinity, we often feels, as Leonard Sweet puts it, "Two's company, three's a crowd!" This is the same Spirit in Romans that Paul tells us interprets our feeble prayers, through groans that words cannot express. To let the Holy Spirit take control of our lives means that we let the Spirit's wind blow away our cobwebs of selfishness and the dust of our insensitivity. The Bible says the Spirit "blows where it wills." Barbara ...

John 15:1-17
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... in the ancient world for this one thing: "Look how they love one another." In a world where we're all living next door to one another, Jesus' words are needed today more than ever. Not long before she died, Mother Teresa spoke to the National Prayer Breakfast in Washington, D.C. She was introduced to that gathering as "the greatest woman in the world." She dismissed that introduction by saying that if she were the greatest woman in the world, you would think that God would have made her tall enough to ...

1 John 3:11-24
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... a right and a wrong way to accomplish tasks and she taught me the right way. Take for instance grapefruit. A very healthy eater herself, Marie often served me the large, lush, ruby-colored fruits after I would join her for early morning prayer. Grapefruit could and would only be served one way by Marie. The fruit was first peeled, then sectioned, then each section would undergo the delicate process of having its thin membrane surgically removed leaving only the crescent of sweet-tart pink fruit to artfully ...

2 Corinthians 1:12--2:4
Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... ? Giving life to neighborhood-friendly businesses? Giving life to schools for the youngest in your community? Giving life to programs for the oldest in your community? Giving life to long-established outreaches in your church the Sunday School, the Prayer Circle, the altar guild, the choir program? Giving life to new, emerging ministries in your church the e-mail visitations, the nontraditional services, the flexible ideas of community? Giving life to support those in need continents away from you ...

Sermon
Leonard Sweet
... psalmist is now clothed in joy. The psalmist is moved to joy and called to dance because he had known himself to be at death's door. He could taste the dust of the Pit in his mouth even as he opened it to cry out to the Lord in prayer and supplication (verse 8). He knew himself to be broken beyond repair by any human abilities. In turning to God at last, the psalmist finally realized that God was all he had. When healing comes, the psalmist knows that God is all he needed. In my favorite words from Larry ...

Sermon
James McCormick
... me, so that when you look for me at Christmas, you will find me with the shepherds, kneeling before the manger in reverence and wonder. There is mystery in life, you know. I can’t fully understand it, but I can name it. The name of it is God. A prayer by Ernest Campbell: Lord, we know the words, Teach us now the music of our faith. We know the forms of celebration, Give us now the fire, the passion, and the joy. Break through the curtain of our dark, And help us to receive You unashamed, With the abandon ...

Sermon
James McCormick
... about it is through the Word made flesh at Christmas. That’s why we sing, “Go, tell it on the mountain, over the hills and everywhere. Go tell it on the mountain that Jesus Christ is born!” We sing that joyfully because the message of Christmas is good news! Prayer: Father, it’s almost too good to be true, this good news of Your love made known to us in Jesus. Help us to believe it, to receive it in faith, to embody it in our lives, and to share it with the entire world. Thank you, Father, for Your ...

Sermon
James McCormick
... of God, I say to you, “In the name of Jesus Christ, we are forgiven…As far as the east is from the west, so far does God remove our transgressions from us.” The future is open, and the future, God’s future will be good! Thanks be to God! Prayer: Loving God, our Father, help us to trust You enough to trust You with our past and with our future. Forgive us and cut us free from the past. Help us to learn needed lessons from it. And, above all, assure us that you accompany us into a grace filled ...