Luke 11:1-13 · Jesus’ Teaching on Prayer
How Shall We Pray?
Luke 11:1-13
Sermon
by King Duncan
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Mother Teresa appeared this Spring on Robert Schuller’s television program. Schuller reminded her that the show was being carried all over America and in 22 foreign countries including her native Yugoslavia. He asked her if there was one message that she would like to convey to all those viewers. Her response was, "Yes, tell them to pray. And tell them to teach their children to pray." Prayer precedes good works in Mother Teresa’s estimation. We connect with Christ before we can truly connect with our neighbor.

Jesus’ disciples came to him after he had finished a time apart for prayer and they made a request of him: "Lord, teach us to pray." Somehow, I believe that this is a need many of us have. We could get our lives and our communities and even our world in order if only we knew how to pray.

Fortunately, Jesus has given us a pattern. It begins simply: "Father, Hallowed be thy name."

WE BEGIN BY ACKNOWLEDGING WHO GOD IS. For you see, prayer is not for God’s benefit, but ours. We need to know to whom we are making our petitions. What is His nature? "Father." That pretty well sums it up, doesn’t? He is our loving Parent. And yet He is more. "Hallowed (Holy, Revered, Awe-inspiring) be Thy name." He is the Source of Our life. He is our ever-living Hope. Without Him we would not even exist.

When Dwight Eisenhower was being inaugurated president of the United States in January, 1953, he surprised the nation by personally offering up a prayer to Almighty God. Here was a man who had commanded three million troops in the invasion of Normandy, had brought an end to World War II, and now was being inaugurated into the most powerful office in the world. And what did he do in front of all the nations of the world and all the people in America? He acknowledged that he needed help. He needed a Power greater than he was to fulfill the task before him.

Ike explained: "To the best of my knowledge, the men of courage I have known have been men of faith. I’ve never seen any of them who weren’t." (1)

Dwight Eisenhower understood that God was to be hallowed. We begin by acknowledging who God is. God is allimportant in our lives.

One of the most striking moments in the last Democratic convention came during a black clergyman’s benediction. NBC TV’s Connie Chung sought on camera to interview Jesse Jackson on the convention floor. "Excuse me, we’re praying now," Jackson said to Miss Chung. The press would have to wait. Something far more important than an interview on national television was going on. The Democratic Party was acknowledging the power and the presence of God. Prayer is important to our lives because God is important. Hallowed be His name.

"Thy Kingdom come, Thy will be done on earth as it is in Heaven..." WE PRAY, IN THE SECOND PLACE, THAT OUR OWN HEARTS, OUR COMMUNITY, OUR COUNTRY AND OUR WORLD WILL BECOME LIKE THE KINGDOM OF GOD. Luke says simply, "Thy Kingdom come...." Matthew adds, "Thy will be done on Earth as it is in Heaven." Unless you have read the Gospels recently, you might have forgotten Jesus’ passion for the Kingdom of God. He came preaching the Kingdom. It was the Kingdom that He said was the pearl of great price, the treasure hidden in the field, the tiny mustard seed that produces a great tree. Wherever God’s will is done, whether in Heaven or on earth, there is the Kingdom.

You and I need a passion for the Kingdom of God in our time. It is unbelievable that 2,000 years after Christ our world would still have as much hatred, as much violence, as much evil as it does. If we had maintained Christ’s passion for the Kingdom, it would not.

For you see, by teaching us to pray for the Kingdom Christ surely expected us to be working for the Kingdom as well.

A little girl is kneeling beside her bed. She says, "Dear God, if You’re there and You hear my prayer, could You please just touch me?" Just then she feels a touch. She gets so excited! She says, "Thank You, God, for touching me!"

Then she looks up, sees her older sister, and gets a little suspicious. "Did you touch me?"

The sister answers, "Yes, I did."

"What did you do that for?" she asked.

"God told me to," was the reply.

Even as we are asking God to bring His Kingdom to our community, God is showing us things that need to be done if this community is to resemble the Kingdom of God. We are His hands, His feet, His mouth in our world. He is counting on us just as we are counting on Him until that day comes when truly the Kingdoms of the world become the Kingdom of our Christ.

"Give us this day our daily bread. IN THE THIRD PLACE, WE PRAY THAT GOD WILL MEET OUR DAILY NEEDS. With this sentence we know that Christ means for prayer to be a daily exercise.

Someone asked E. Stanley Jones for the secret of his tremendous physical energy. He wrote more than two dozen books and preached three times a day across India, China, and America. This went on for more than forty years. He replied, "I have kept up my prayer life daily. So I do not face life alone."

An occasional nod in God’s direction will not make it. We pray daily. And among the things that are legitimate for us to pray about are our physical needs.

For most of us that part of our prayers will be primarily a prayer of thanksgiving. We have so much.

I enjoyed reading about a couples’ club at the First United Church in Hamilton, Canada who sponsored an annual auction sale. Everybody gathered up their accumulated junk and sent it down to the church. They brought in a professional auctioneer for the occasion. He sold all this stuff and the event raised some money for missionaries and the club budget. Well, one couple, Joe, and Mildred, had some old lawn furniture that had been lying about on the veranda. Mildred thought the auction sale a marvelous opportunity to get rid of it. So she sent it all off to be sold. But when the time came for the auction, Mildred was ill and couldn’t go. Joe went instead. You guessed it! Joe saw this lawn furniture and bought it. He thought he had found a terrific bargain. Poor Mildred! She had to wait another year to get rid of the stuff. (2)

We don’t worry about our daily bread. We worry about gaining weight. We don’t worry about life’s essentials. We worry about what to do with all the leftover junk. Rather than praying for our daily bread, which is a legitimate prayer for most of the world’s people, our prayers will be chiefly prayers of thanksgiving. I don’t know about you, but I want the Father to know that I don’t take any of it for granted. I want to thank Him every day for the blessings He has given me.

"Forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors..." OUR NEXT PRAYER IS FOR FORGIVENESS AND THE POWER TO FORGIVE OTHERS. Many persons would make this into a legalistic demand. "If you expect God to forgive you, you must forgive others!" That’s true, of course. But forgiveness is not easy.

I love the story about the elderly lady who was driving a big, new expensive car and was preparing to back into a parallel parking space when suddenly a young man in a small sports car zoomed into the spacebeating her out of it. The lady charged out of her car and angrily demanded to know why he had done that when he could easily tell she was trying to park there and had been there first. His response was simply, "Because I’m young and I’m quick." When he came back out a few minutes later, he found the elderly lady using her big new car as a battering ram, backing up and then ramming it into his parked car. Now he was very angry and asked her why she was wrecking his car. Her response was simply, "Because I’m old and I’m rich."

Anger is easy. Forgiveness requires the grace of God. We are able to forgive because we have experienced forgiveness ourselves.

Edith Bunker, on the television show "ALL IN THE FAMILY," described the confessional boxes in the Roman Catholic Church as "telephone booths to God." Well, maybe they are not quite that. But every prayer must contain an element of confession. We are not all God means for us to be. We are finite creatures in every respect. We need His mercy, His compassion, His amazing grace. So we pray for forgiveness and sometimes we pray for the ability to forgive.

"And lead us not into temptation..." OUR FINAL PRAYER IS FOR GUIDANCE. It’s a tricky world out there. There are many snares.

The year was 1864. A Bowery bum with a slashed throat was brought into Bellevue Hospital in New York city. The man was unable to recover from his injury because of a body weakened by excessive alcoholism. He had a fever. He suffered intense pain from the laceration on his throat. He lost a great deal of blood. He was suffering from malnutrition. He survived for several days until finally he died at the age of thirtyeight. He died with only thirty-eight cents in his pocket. As the story unfolded, however, they discovered that this was not just another Bowery bum. He had been well known all over America, famous for his songs. He had charmed America into singing "De Camptown Races," "Oh! Susanna," "Jeanie with the Light Brown Hair," "My Old Kentucky Home," and hundreds more. His name was Stephen C. Foster. But on that cold wintry night in New York City, in 1864, he died, leaving behind the legacy of a wasted life. (3)

Stephen Foster never intended to have his life end like that. Nobody ever does. It rarely happens in a big gulp, but with tiny nibbles. But the nibbles are deadly. One of the most important prayers many of us could pray is "Lead us not into temptation." Not that God ever does tempt us to do evil. Matthew helps us here again by adding, "And deliver us from evil..." In other words, "don’t even let us near where sin lurks!"

We need God’s guidance in this world. And we pray daily for it. Life is difficult enough even for the most devout of people.

Have you heard the story about the young man who went ice fishing for the first time in his life. He arrived with all his equipment and began to cut a circle in the ice. Suddenly he heard a deep voice say, somberly, "Don’t cut that ice." The young man stopped, looked around, didn’t see anyone, so he moved to a different part of the ice and started to drill another circle. Again the deep voice from nowhere announced, "Don’t cut that ice." Finally the young man yelled, "All right, what’s going on here? What are you bothering me for. Just who the heck do you think you are anyway?" To which the mystery voice replied, "I’m manager of the skating rink!"

I wish God’s voice were that easy to distinguish. I would like to hear it boom out every time I’m about to goof. But that is not the way life works. We walk by faithpraying each step of the way for His guidance.

Mother Teresa says, "Tell them to pray and to teach their children to pray." Our Lord has given us the model. Pray that God’s Kingdom will come to this world. Give Him thanks for daily bread. Ask His forgiveness even as you forgive others. And pray daily for His guidance.


1. Dale E. Galloway, CONFIDENCE WITHOUT CONCEIT, (Old Tappan, N. J.:Fleming H. Revell, 1989).

2. R. Maurice Boyd, A LOVER’S QUARREL WITH THE WORLD, (Philadelphia: The Westminster Press, 1985).

3. Paul Aurandt, MORE OF PAUL HARVEY’S THE REST OF THE STORY (Toronto: Bantam Books, 1980) pp.181182.

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan