Pastor Tom Rietveld tells an interesting true story about prayer. He says that when he was pastoring in Missouri his church needed approximately $10,000 beyond what they were able to give to close out the year. And so, Pastor Rietveld asked the church family and their church leaders to pray for that amount, specifically—$10,000. Unexpectantly, a few weeks before the end of the year, a gift came in the mail. It was for several shares of stock worth $5,000. Pastor Rietveld put out the word that God had supplied half of what they needed, and they now needed to pray for $5,000 more to meet their need.
Their church board was to meet the next week regarding the gift of the stock as they were the only ones who could give approval to sell the stock. But a snow storm hit, and snowed them all in, and delayed their meeting for a week. When they finally met they approved the sale of the stock. So the next day Pastor Tom went to a broker to sell the stock. But in the meantime, says Pastor Tom, God did His work. During the delay from when they were given the stock and when they finally could sell the stock, it had doubled in value, and was worth $10,000. Says Pastor Tom, “God had specifically taken care of the specific need we brought to Him.” (1)
Now it’s an interesting question whether God manipulates the stock market. I can see some of you writing down, “Start praying.” Or maybe God controls the weather to bring snow on groups that are making difficult decisions. The point is, there is nothing simple about prayer.
Why do some people pray and live what seems to be charmed lives while other people, just as righteous as they are, pray and can’t seem to get a break? Even more importantly, with as many people praying for our world, why does it seem sometimes that things are getting worse, not better?
That profound theologian and country singer, Dolly Parton, sings a song titled “Hello God.” It goes, in part, like this:
“Hello God, are you out there . . . can you hear me? Are you listening anymore?
“Hello God, if we’re still on speaking terms, can you help me like before?
“I’ve questioned your existence, my resistance leaves me cold . . .
Can you help me go the distance, hello God, hello, hello.”
She continues:
“This whole world has gone to pieces. Can we fix it? Is there time?
“Hate and violence just increases. We’re so selfish, cruel and blind.
“We fight and kill each other in your name defending you
“Do you love some more than others, we’re so lost and confused?
“Hello God, are you out there, can you hear us?” (2)
Speculation about prayer often leaves us with more questions than answers. No wonder the disciples came to Jesus one day and asked, “Teach us to pray.”
“Teach us to pray.” Does that mean that there is a right way and a wrong way to pray? There have been persons who have forsaken the faith because they prayed and did not receive what they expected. Others have prayed with the same result and it has drawn them closer to the Lord than ever. They may have had to alter their expectations, but they did not alter their faith in God. What is the difference? Is there an art—maybe even a science to prayer? “Teach us to pray.” Does that not say to you and to me that prayer is both a crucial and yet mysterious process?
Now don’t expect me to answer the question this morning of why some prayers are answered and others are not. Such questions are above my pay grade. The best answer I can give you is to trust God whatever occurs because God loves you and is working to make all things work to your good. In other words, pray, knowing that God hears your prayers and loves you, and leave the results to God.
I once read about a woman named Barbara Bartocci who was searching for the perfect birthday card for her husband a few years ago. She came across a promising one. On the outside it read: “Sweetheart, you’re the answer to my prayers.” Then she turned to the inside, which was inscribed like this, “You’re not what I prayed for exactly, but apparently you’re the answer.” The message on that funny little birthday card became the Bartocci family motto over the years. Whenever a family member struggled with a setback or disappointment, someone would remark, “Well, it’s not what you prayed for, but apparently it’s the answer.” The Bartoccis learned to find comfort and wisdom in accepting whatever answer God sent them. (3) That’s a wise philosophy of life. Make your requests of God and then trust that whatever God sends you is within His perfect will because He loves you and wants only the best for you.
The disciples weren’t asking Jesus to tell them everything about prayer. They were simply asking him how to go about praying. He answered their request with a model prayer—one which we know, of course, as the Lord’s Prayer. He began like this: “When you pray, say, ‘Our Father.”
Such a simple beginning, and yet how dramatic in its impact on the world of religion. Never before in history had a spiritual leader referred to God in the familiar form of the word Father before Jesus did it. As you already know, we really could start off our prayer with another term, “Our Daddy . . . hallowed be your name.” In the past, even in the Old Testament, religious people feared God. How do you fear someone you call “Daddy?”
Later in this passage, Jesus gives an example of the kind of Father God is: “Which of you fathers, if your son asks for a fish, will give him a snake instead? Or if he asks for an egg, will give him a scorpion? If you then, though you are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father in heaven give the Holy Spirit to those who ask him?”
God’s will is always for His children’s good. That is why we can trust that our prayers will be answered in a way that will be ultimately for our good. That’s who God is. As a popular contemporary Christian song by singer Chris Tomlin says, “You’re a good, good Father, it’s who you are, it’s who you are, it’s who you are . . . And I’m loved by you, it’s who I am, it’s who I am, it’s who I am . . .” (4)
That’s also why we can pray, “Your kingdom come.” Because we know God’s character, we know that His kingdom is something wonderful to anticipate.
Now I’m sure you’ve already noticed that Luke simply says “your kingdom come” while Matthew adds, “your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.” They are saying the same thing. Wherever God’s will is being done, there is God’s kingdom. Why can we pray so earnestly for God’s kingdom to come? It is because we know He is a Good, Good Parent who can be trusted.
Listen as the prayer continues: “Give us each day our daily bread . . .”
This petition reminds me of a little girl named Deborah who sat down to eat dinner with her parents and instinctively reached for her fork. “Please hold on,” her father replied. “We haven’t said grace yet.”
This exasperated the girl, who was tired and hungry. “Daddy,” she said with a sigh, “why can’t we just pray once a week? Why do we have to ask for our daily bread every day?”
Her older brother, wiser and eager to set her straight, weighed in before the dad could answer. “You don’t think we want stale bread, do you?” he said. (5)
For those of us who love warm, fresh bread, I believe that young man is on to something. What I believe Jesus was saying to his disciples was that we should pray that our daily needs are met. That is a reminder of our dependence on God. Of course, most of us have difficulty distinguishing between our daily wants and our daily needs, but that’s another sermon.
Praying that our daily needs be met reminds us of that time in the wilderness when food was scarce and God provided the children of Israel with manna from heaven. Manna was a special kind of food that they had never seen or tasted before. They could not identify it, so they called it “manna,” which means “What is it?” In Exodus 16 God told the people to gather only enough for that day’s needs . . . then He would send a fresh supply each day. They were to gather the manna every morning except on the Sabbath day. Since the Sabbath celebration began on Friday evening, that meant that during the day on Friday, they needed to collect food for two days so that they would not need to go out on the Sabbath to collect food. Other than the Sabbath, however, they were instructed not to gather more than a one-day supply.
Some of the people tried to beat the system, of course, and gather more than they needed. It didn’t work. After one day the manna was spoiled and full of maggots—except on the Sabbath. Then, miraculously, it stayed fresh. But all the rest of the days they were to gather it daily.
Ironically, those who were not able to gather enough for the next day discovered that they still had all they needed. In that way they learned to trust God. That’s something we need to remember. We worry and stress out about so many things. God knows our needs. God will provide. God assures us that our daily needs will be met.
Let me tell you a true story of a family who discovered that quite literally. During the winter of 1940 Josephine Kuntz’s husband, a house painter and textile worker, was temporarily unemployed because of the weather and a seasonal layoff. It was a difficult time for the family. They literally had no money. Their eighteen-month-old daughter, Rachel, was recovering from pneumonia and wasn’t doing well. The doctor insisted Rachel eat a boiled egg each day, but even that was beyond their means.
“Why not pray for an egg?” suggested a young friend. They were a church-going family, but the idea of actually praying for their daily needs was something they had never really considered. Josephine wasted no time. On her knees she prayed that God would provide an egg each morning for her daughter. Later that morning Josephine heard some cackling coming from the hedge fence in front of their home. Among the bare branches sat a fat red hen. Josephine had never seen this hen before and had no idea where it came from. She just watched in amazement as the hen laid an egg and then proceeded down the road. In a moment the hen was gone but an egg sat in her yard.
What do you do under such circumstances but thank God? The next day Josephine was startled once again to hear cackling in the hedge. The red hen came by every day for over a week and repeated this routine. Each day little Rachel had a fresh boiled egg. The little girl got better, the weather improved, and Josephine’s husband went back to work. “The next morning I waited by the window and watched,” Josephine says, “but the red hen did not return.” (6)
God works in mysterious ways, but God always provides for His people.
“When you pray, say: ‘Father, hallowed be your name, your kingdom come. Give us each day our daily bread.” Then, says Jesus, we should pray, “Forgive us our sins, for we also forgive everyone who sins against us.”
This is a recognition of our weakness as human beings. We sin. So do other people. We need forgiveness. So do people who sin against us.
William Gaventa serves as a chaplain at a school for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities. In such a setting he has heard many unique prayers. Members of this special community have helped him understand faith in new ways.
One young man who came to see him was worried about his height. He was worried that he wasn’t as tall as he should be. He told Gaventa that he prayed for God to stretch him out and also to help improve his behavior. Gaventa joined him in a prayer.
Before he dealt with his height, the young man dealt with his behavior. He prayed in a halting voice: “Lorda Goda, take away the bad stuff in my heart. Take away the bad stuff in my heart.”
Gaventa says, “Then there was a 15-second pause, followed by the joyful exclamation, ‘It’s gone! It’s gone. Thank you, Lorda Goda, for my prayer.’” (7)
That’s a prayer many of us could pray, “Lord God, take away the bad stuff in my heart.” Do you have any bad stuff in your heart—resentment, anger, lust, fear?
“Forgive us our sins as we forgive those who sin against us.” Can you forgive those who have sinned against you? Doesn’t it sound a little hypocritical, then, to ask God for forgiveness of your sins?
The prayer continues, “And lead us not into temptation.” Plato once said that the wise man will always choose to suffer wrong rather than to do wrong.
I came across the story of a family at breakfast. Each repeated a verse from the Bible as they went around the table. Then, joining hands, they said the Lord’s Prayer together, and the father closed the time with a brief prayer of his own. A guest was much impressed with what he saw.
Several months later, he met up with the oldest son who was away at college. He asked the boy what he missed most from home. The boy hesitated a moment, then answered, “I miss most the hand clasp at the breakfast table. If I could feel the close clasp of my father’s hand and hear the Lord’s Prayer being said by my entire family, the day always began well. Whatever happened after that, was okay.”
He halted a moment, then lowering his voice he added, “Those breakfasts at home stand between me and more than one temptation. It’s what keeps me going straight.” (8)
If our families followed a similar practice, do you think it might help our young at some point in their lives avoid a destructive temptation?
And that brings us to the words that we use to close our prayer to our good, good Father: “For thine is the kingdom and the power and glory forever.” Notice that these last words do not appear in most translations of Luke’s Gospel. The church added these words as the prayer became formalized, but it is hard to imagine praying the prayer without them. It is because God is in control of this universe that we have the confidence to pray, believing that he hears our prayers and is sympathetic to our concerns. We trust that whatever answer we receive is in our best interest.
Indeed, the entire foundation of this prayer is trust—trust in the Father’s love and trust in His ability to provide for His children. “He’s a good, good Father, it’s who He is, it’s who He is, it’s who He is . . . And we’re loved by Him, it’s who we are, it’s who we are, it’s who we are . . .” Amen.
1. http://www.pastortom.org/parables10.htm.
2. Found at Drema’s Sermon, http://www.fairlingtonumc.org/sermons_2003/sermon08242003.htm.
3. “The Unexpected Answer,” by Barbara Bartocci, Reader’s Digest, Sept. 1984, pp. 87-88.
4. Good Good Father, Writer(s): Pat Barrett, Tony Brown, © 2014 by WorshipTogether.com Songs.
5. Jim Daly, https://www.crosswalk.com/blogs/jim-daly/two-stories-about-prayer.html.
6. Josephine M. Kuntz, “The Little Red Hen,” Snowflakes in September (Nashville: Dimensions for Living, 1992), pp. 29-30. Cited by Dave Redick, http://preacherstudy.com/eagle.html.
7. “6 Powerful Prayer Stories for the National Day of Prayer” by Kelsey Dallas,
https://www.deseretnews.com/article/865653573/6-powerful-prayer-stories-for-the-National-Day-of-Prayer.html.
8. Walter B. Knight, Knight’s Treasury of Illustrations, (William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1989) p. 297.