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 1401 to 1425 of 4877 results

Genesis 1:1-2:3, Genesis 2:4-25, Leviticus 25:8-55, Acts 2:1-13
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... , lives and church. Praise the Lord! For you are God’s favored among God’s people. It’s a day of celebration! A day of utmost joy! I invite you to take a moment…. Put your cares aside. Give your whole heart and mind and presence in this time in prayer and praise to Jesus Christ, the risen Lord, who has sent the Holy Spirit among us, and whom we celebrate this day. Amen? And the great people of God said –Amen! We have so much to celebrate in this time and place. Take a moment and shout out the joys ...

Luke 1:39-45, Luke 1:46-56
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... you prepare for a Love Feast.] Based on the Story Lectionary Major Text From Nazareth to Judea: Mary Visits Elizabeth (Luke 1:39-56) Minor Text The Lord Blesses Abraham with Children (Genesis 15) I Will Raise Up a Prophet from Among You (Deuteronomy 18:14-22) Hannah’s Prayer (1 Samuel 2:1-10) Psalm 33: We Put Our Hope in You Psalm 47: God Reigns Over the Nations and He is Greatly Exalted Psalm 110: Sit At My Right Hand Until I Make Your Enemies a Footstool At Your Feet Psalm 113: The Lord is Exalted / He ...

Luke 24:36-49, Acts 1:1-11
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... a matter of identifying our best skills. It’s even more important to allow those skills to be enhanced by the superhuman power of God. For we believe that we are God-powered. That our ministries and our purpose-driven missions are God-powered. That our prayer, our praise, our sacraments, our baptisms are God-powered. That there is more to being a Christian than finding our best individual gift or seeking the best teams. In fact, if you look at the scriptures, most of God’s best teams were made up of ...

Matthew 18:21-35
Sermon
King Duncan
... brother. Is it because you are old and dying?” The man said, “No, I’m not dying, but my brother is, and he’s worth $60 million.” (1) No wonder that man wanted his brother’s forgiveness. There’s a story about a little boy who was saying his prayers one night. As he went down the list of his family, asking God to bless each one of them, he omitted his brother’s name. His mother asked, “Why didn’t you pray for Danny?” He said, “I’m not going to ask God to bless Danny because he hit ...

Sermon
Lori Wagner
... beam in your own eye? Forgive and you will be forgiven. This concept was so important to Jesus that he placed it into the very prayer he taught his disciples. Say it with me now (silently or out loud): Our Father, who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom ... but deliver us from evil. For thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory, forever. Amen. Every time you pray that prayer, you are asking God to treat you the way you treat others, to judge you based on your judgments of others, to bestow ...

Sermon
Albert G. Butzer III
... .” I was surprised to discover that! He spoke about hypocrisy twelve times in Matthew, six of them in Matthew 23 alone. By way of contrast, Jesus spoke about prayer in Matthew a mere nine times. This is not to minimize the importance of prayer. It merely suggests that hypocrisy was a huge issue in Jesus’ day, just as it is today. Do you know what hypocrites are? Originally the word was a term from the ancient Greek theater. An actor would appear on stage wearing a large grinning mask and would quote ...

Sermon
Albert G. Butzer III
... . We wait for God’s kingdom to come on earth as it is in heaven, as we pray in the words of the Lord’s Prayer. When we celebrate Holy Communion we say that we proclaim the Lord’s death until he comes again… and we are waiting for that day ... discouraged, and give up hope. We may pray, “Thy kingdom come, on earth as it is in heaven,” but in spite of our well-meaning prayers, God’s kingdom seems no closer today than it did yesterday or last month or last year. No wonder we are tempted to toss in ...

Sermon
Albert G. Butzer III
... nor’easter, it came pretty close. The wind was howling and the rain was coming down in sheets. As a result, many people stayed home from worship, while those who braved the elements and came to church wondered what the minister would say. Typically, he filled his prayers with praise and thanksgiving. But how could he be thankful on such a miserable day? Indeed, as he stood up to pray, the ushers at the back of the church were even placing small bets that he couldn’t pull it off. But the minister did not ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... where you can turn for support in your hour of need. In the words of the old hymn: Blest be the tie that binds Our hearts in Christian love; The fellowship of kindred minds Is like to that above. Before our Father’s throne, We pour our ardent prayers; Our fears, our hopes, our aims are one, Our comforts, and our cares. We share our mutual woes, Our mutual burdens bear; And often for each other flows The sympathizing tear. When we asunder part, It gives us inward pain; But we shall still be joined in heart ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... the song, in her own words, “. . . I realized that I had made a tragic mistake. I had tried to fight all my terrible battles alone . . . I jumped up, turned off the gas, opened the door, and raised the windows.” She spent the rest of the day in prayer and in thanking God for the blessings she and her husband had. Mary and her husband still had struggles ahead of them. They lost their house. But they and their children made it through the Depression. Many years later, Mary was able to look back at that ...

Ephesians 5:15-20
Sermon
King Duncan
... . She prayed, “Lord, I pray that all things that are not like You, You take away from Chance. Make sure that he fails at everything that is not like You. Take it away. Turn it into dust.” What would you think if someone you loved prayed that prayer over you? What if I prayed over you today, “Lord, please let my brothers and sisters in Christ fail at any endeavor that is not perfectly within Your will”? Most of you would not come back next week, would you? I have the greatest respect for Chance’s ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... . Finally, the secret to dealing with any challenge is to prepare yourself daily by opening yourself daily to the power and the presence of God. That’s what the armor of God is. Verses 18-20 read, “And pray in the Spirit on all occasions with all kinds of prayers and requests. With this in mind, be alert and always keep on praying for all the Lord’s people. Pray also for me, that whenever I speak, words may be given me so that I will fearlessly make known the mystery of the gospel, for which I am an ...

John 17:20-26
Sermon
Will Willimon
... say good-bye and to pay back Truman at the same time (Old Soldiers never die. They just fade away.") Jesus has spoken farewell words to his disciples. But at the end, at the pinnacle of his farewell, He prays for us. That's what today's scripture is: Jesus' prayer -- for us. I don't know why you've come here today. (Maybe you don't know the real reasons why you've come.) I don't know what burdens you brought in those big oak doors. But I know enough about a congregation to know that you can hardly ...

Luke 18:9-14
Sermon
Will Willimon
... , if he is good, it is only because of God. So he prays, "God, I thank thee that I am not like other people...." Good prayer from a good man. And what does Jesus tell you about this good, very good man? That he was worse off than that cheating, sleazy tax ... into the temple, doesn't sing the hymns because he doesn't know them, and can only get out just a few words of the prayer, "God, er uh, like God, uh, be merciful to me a sinner. Er, uh, like, amen." Jesus said that this sleazy tax collector, staring down ...

Mark 5:21-43
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... woman, whom Jesus calls daughter, has enabled the rising of this other “daughter,” despite the unbelief of the synagogue folk surrounding Jairus’s house. What does this tell us? Intercessory prayer is mysterious. Prayer is powerful, doesn’t have to be focused on a single person, and can empower great healing. Prayer can be initiated even by an unrelated person, even by someone outside of the synagogue, perhaps especially by someone outside of the synagogue. A little bit of faith can, as Jesus ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... say the same thing about our church! So she went back the next Sunday and then the next. Soon, Michelle began reading her Bible in the evenings. And one night as she read the Bible, she felt the urge to pray for her ex-husband, Michael. It was the strangest prayer too—she felt the urge to pray that he would find a godly wife. A woman who was sincere in her faith. A woman who would love Michael and the boys. It’s what he and the boys deserved, she thought. This became Michelle’s sincere and regular ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... good companionship. She longed for the same companionship these couples enjoyed. She had prayed long and hard for a husband, but it had not happened. Out of curiosity, one of the women in the group inquired, “But why is it that in spite of your many prayers that you never got married?” The elderly missionary woman smiled as she answered, “Somewhere there is a 70-year-old man who has been fighting the will of God for 50 years!” (3) We don’t always fulfill our dreams, but having a compelling goal is ...

Sermon
Derl G. Keefer
... to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.’” Matthew 14:27 (KJV) “Be of good cheer.” By seeking a life of prayer. Richard Baxter who lived in the 1600s wrote, “Prayer must carry on our work as much as preaching; he preacheth not heartily to his people, that will not pray for them.” Prayer must precede all that ministers and laypersons do in the church. That includes teaching, serving on boards and committees, evangelizing, giving, and more. How do I find Jesus? It ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... part of life. Stories serve the same purpose. Rev. Patricia Gillespie reminds us of the story of little Sadako “dying of leukemia from the radiation at Hiroshima. How she hoped that if she folded a thousand paper cranes the gods would hear her prayer. We remember Sadako, and children still today fold paper cranes and pray for peace.” Rev. Gillespie says that when her daughter Miranda was small, she sat in church and folded dollar bills into paper cranes for the offering. “The money became an offering ...

Matthew 1:18-25
Sermon
Will Willimon
... that we are divine, that we have a higher wisdom that will always operate for the good, that life is meant to be enjoyed.' ''Burnham goes on to declare that we don't have to believe in God in order to pray. Prayer, like gravity, is a law of the universe, and if we do it right our prayers are answered 'instantly, with an abundance of delight; for it is the pleasure of the universe to give us what we need.' In this happy cosmos, there is no need for people to look out for each other, to work for justice ...

Luke 6:27-38 · Genesis 45:3-11, 15
Sermon
Lori Wagner
... ways of thinking.” To get rid of our rigid boxes and start playing outside of the rules. Cause love always, always plays outside the rules. Always. A warning to all of us. When you demand rules instead of giving love, and then pray the Lord’s prayer, you are asking God to grant you forgiveness, “measure for measure.” Don’t believe me? …..forgive me my sins, even as I forgive the sins of others….. Now, if that doesn’t terrify you, ….it should. But here’s the good news! Jesus, knowing how ...

Luke 12:49-53, Luke 12:54-59
Sermon
King Duncan
... Zahnd was pastoring a growing and dynamic church. He was becoming something of a Christian celebrity among other pastors. But as Rev. Zahnd’s church grew, he became concerned that its spiritual life didn’t reflect the spirit of Jesus. Through Bible study and prayer, Rev. Zahnd began to align his life and ministry more closely with the teachings of Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount. He preached a sermon series on Jesus’ blessings for the poor in spirit, for those who mourn, for those who are persecuted. He ...

John 3:16-17
Sermon
Will Willimon
... text for this fourth Sunday in Lent. And we are, during this forty-day season of penitence, self-inspection, preparing to meet our God. Purple is on our altar; purple, the color of penitence and grief. And we begin each Sunday in Lent with a prayer of confession: Lord have mercy, Christ have mercy upon us. We have, in accordance with church tradition, removed all the alleluias from our Lenten services, beginning our service with a somber processional rather than a rousing hymn. Lent is the time to fall on ...

Matthew 24:36-44
Sermon
King Duncan
... high enough to see over the fog. As he said, “They keep going up until they CAN see.” Larson says that this is the point of prayer too. The Bible tells us that our thoughts are not God’s thoughts, and God’s ways are higher than our ways (Isaiah 55: 8-9). ... with enough money to buy diapers for her baby. And now her professor, whom she had tried to avoid, was answering the prayer she prayed to a God she didn’t believe in. Over the years, Thompson Day has stayed in touch with Shatina. Shatina became ...

Sermon
King Duncan
... way you’ve called us to live.” We may be ashamed to admit it, but for many of us faith is a struggle. That’s one of the first insights we get from this Bible passage. Authentic faith is a struggle. That’s why most of us pray this prayer more than once in our lives. In Mark 9, a desperate father comes to Jesus and asks him to heal his son who suffers from seizures. Jesus replies, “If you can believe, all things are possible to him who believes.” And Mark writes, “Immediately the father of the ...

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