Luke 11:1-13 · Jesus’ Teaching on Prayer
Christian Faith in the Holy Spirit
Luke 11:1-13
Sermon
by Thomas Slavens
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•Pentecost • Pentecost • Pentecost • Pentecost •

Christians are baptized in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. They are blessed with the benediction, “The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you all.” (2 Corinthians 13:14) Christians know who God is and who the Christ is, but what of this Holy Spirit?

The doctrine of the Holy Spirit has been among the most neglected of the doctrines of the Christian faith in recent years. However, with the recovery of interest in Biblical theology the doctrine of the Holy Spirit is being recovered.

From the first chapter of Genesis through the twenty-second chapter of the Revelation, the Spirit of God or the Holy Spirit is mentioned. The older form, “Holy Ghost” means the same as “Holy Spirit,” just as a minister in 1611, when the King James Version was made, was called a “ghostly comforter.”

In the Old Testament the word for “spirit” is the same as the word for breath or wind. The Spirit of God was thought of as a power which came upon people to make them strong. Thus the Spirit of God was poured out upon such people as Saul, David, and Elisha to make them strong for the tasks required of them.

The disciples of Jesus attributed his strength to the fact that he was filled with the Holy Spirit. As a part of the impact of his life, his early followers came to believe that the Holy Spirit, which was conceived of as His Spirit, was poured out upon them. They came to believe that this Spirit was a characteristic and permanent power of the Christian life.

In that very human story about the sleepy-eyed husband who was awakened in the night by a friend wanting to borrow bread for a party, a truth is revealed about God. These are the key words to that story:

And I tell you, Ask, and it will be given you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you… If you then, who are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will the heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to those who ask him?(Luke 11:9,13)

It is dangerous to ask for the Holy Spirit. It is easy to fall into the routine, the habitual, the expected, the socially correct. The Spirit breaks out of these molds and replaces these banal forms with creative living.

Jesus did not say that his followers would get what they wanted when they prayed; he did not say that they would receive that for which they asked; he did not say that they would discover beyond the door that which they were expecting. Those who ask for the Spirit of God in their lives may find that that Spirit is quite different from what they expect.

If we ask for the Spirit it may, in fact, tear us loose from our community and send us to India as missionaries. It may take our ability to make money and use it for humanitarian purposes. It may drive us into our own community to make a vital Christian witness. It may gradually chill our tempers and replace them with lives dominated by peace. It may replace hate with love, inner conflicts with peace, cruelty with kindness, irresponsibility with faithfulness, harshness with gentleness, inability to handle oneself with self-control.

We can predict what a machine will do. We can predict that if a stone is thrown into the air it will come down. We can predict that if two parts hydrogen and one part oxygen are combined in the proper way that water will result.

But no one can predict what will happen to an inspired or an inspirited human life.

The really important things in the world are not done by those who do “the expected” but by the inspired. Had Edison done the expected thing, he could not have invented the phonograph. Had Henry Ford done the expected thing, there would have been no automobile bearing his name. Had Charles Lindbergh done the expected thing, he would have never crossed the Atlantic alone. Had the Mayos done the expected thing, there would be no Mayo Clinic. Had Handel done the expected thing, there never would have been a Messiah.

In the same manner one world in which people can live together peacefully will not be built by those who do the “expected thing” but by those inspired by a vision which their contemporaries cannot see. One world-wide church will not be built by those who do the “expected thing” but by those who, although they live with their feet solidly on the ground, have their citizenship in another world.

Each person can take a step upward. Each person can be cleaner, finer, better. Those who would like to have a wider life than the one they are personally living, who would like to be on more friendly terms with the Eternal Spirit of the Universe, who would like the elation and freedom which come from that experience are invited to say, “Yes, God, pour Your Spirit into my life.”

Prayer

Our God, who pour out Your “Spirit on all flesh,” (Joel 2:28a) we praise You who are at our right hand that we may not be shaken, causing our hearts to be glad and our tongues to rejoice. You have made known to us the ways of life and will make us full of gladness with Your presence.

We thank You on this Pentecost for Jesus, whom You have made both Lord and Christ. We thank You for his Gospel and for his church, to which has been entrusted that Gospel. We thank You for Your Holy Spirit, which dwells in the church and within us as members of the church.

We pray for the spirit of Pentecost in our lives. Give to us Your Holy Spirit that our sons and daughters may prophesy, our young people may see visions and our old people shall dream dreams. We pray that the world may catch the vision of the early disciples of our Lord. May that which is contrary to Your will be converted.

For the unity of the church we pray. Break down the rigidity and the prejudice that separate us as Christians and teach us to work and worship together. While holding firmly to that which is basic, help us to be quick to compromise that which is trivial; and in all things, teach us to love.

In glad submission, we offer our lives to You. May Your Kingdom come, Your will be done, in us, as it is in heaven. Through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen

C.S.S. Publishing Company, DOORS TO GOD: SPECIAL OCCASION SERMONS, by Thomas Slavens