Luke 10:1-24 · Jesus Sends Out the Seventy-two
In Prayer’s Way
Luke 10:1-24
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
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Who is our newest parent here this morning? . . . How old is your baby? May I hold him/her? Let’s bow our heads and offer a prayer of blessing for this child . . .

This little baby is embarking on a journey. And it’s an awesome journey to be a part of. All new parents here - is there anything as exciting as watching your baby go from a snuggly little lump you cradle in your arms to a roller, then a crawler, then a “cruiser,” and finally a walker?

Babies seem absolutely driven to get on their feet. No matter how many times they tumble and topple, crash and burn, bump and bruise, babies in the “cruiser” stage keep letting go with their hands and start moving their feet. Standing upright, walking and running with a straight back and straight legs — those are the marks of the human being. It is this posture that sets us apart from all other living creatures on earth.

Or is it?

There is another position that reveals even more about the uniqueness of being human. Standing up defines our most remarkable physical gift. Kneeling down reveals our most miraculous spiritual gift.

If you’re a disciple of Jesus, to move up, move down. The future is on our knees. The future is knee-deep. The future is bottoms up. We don’t know when we’re stretching on our tip-toes. We know on our knees. The depths are knee-deep. And we’re weak in the knees . . . . .

Repeat after me: insects crawl [response: insects crawl]; fish swim [response: fish swim]; birds fly [response: birds fly]; humans pray [response: humans pray]. Let’s do that again: . . . . .

Praying, with body, heart, mind, and soul, is the hallmark of humanity. So why is it that although we spend just one year learning how to stand on our own two feet, it can take us a lifetime to learn how to get back down on our knees?

Almost all churches used to hold weekly “prayer meetings” — a time set aside, not for a sermon, not for singing, not for announcements, but a time just for prayer. A time to be down on our knees, head bowed, heart open, listening for the “still, small voice” and sometimes hearing the thunder roll.

What kind of “meetings” do we hold now? We’ve given up our “prayer meetings” for planning meetings and committee meetings: strategic planning meetings, long-range-planning meetings, curriculum meetings, worship planning meetings, budget meetings, mission and outreach meetings.

In the traditional Quaker “meeting,” prayer time was silent — each soul a quietly opened door, each spirit tuned to a frequency that didn’t register in the human ear.

In other traditions prayer time is when “the thunder rolls.” During prayer time in Korean churches, called tongsong kido, the thousands of gathered worshipers pray simultaneously out loud — but not the same prayer. The sound of all those voices, all those prayers, flowing out into the sanctuary seem to physically fill the air with prayer. In those congregations the prayer you breathe out will not be the same prayer you breathe back in. Respiration brings transformation.

Maybe the church today needs a conversion . . . a conversion to prayer. Here in the US, we’ve tried to become every other kind of church imaginable — a planning church, a seeker-sensitive church, a purpose-driven church, an organic church, an Emergent church, an National Church Development church, a house church, a missional church. Isn’t it time we got off our feet and back down on our knees and became first and foremost, a praying church? What was it that made Jesus so angry, at least angry enough to throw a Temple tantrum? We turned God’s house into everything else but what? “My house shall be a house of prayer!” (Mark 11:17; Luke 19:46).

Has anyone ever told you, “You are an answer to prayer!”

As a kid Elizabeth was required to visit a great-great aunt who lived nearby, every Sunday evening. The Rennies would take her a plate of cookies or some other treat. In return Auntie would always exclaim, “Oh, aren’t you just an answer to prayer.” My wife says she didn’t feel like an answer to any prayer. She felt like an impatient kid, still sweaty from playing ball in the yard, and wanting to get back to it as soon as possible. But for her shut-in, ninety year old Auntie, Elizabeth was, in all her imperfection, an answer to prayer. “I now know that her prayer was not for cookies. Her prayer was for family, for fellowship, for the touch of love and compassion to come into her life.”

All of us in attendance here today are an answer to an ancient prayer. That prayer is two thousand years old. It was a prayer uttered and answered in today’s gospel lesson. In that ancient prayer Jesus prayed that his Father would send him workers to “help bring in the harvest:”

The harvest is plentiful, but he laborers are few, therefore ask the Lord of the harvest to send out laborers into his harvest (Luke 10:2)

The fact that we are all here today is God’s answer to that prayer Jesus prayed. Do you get it? You are an answer to a Jesus prayer. Our presence is an answer to his prayer.

Each of us is this generation’s sent “seventy.” Each of us that the Father has “sent” has been given special powers and projects. But our individual gifts are not the answer to prayer. The gift of building or baking, the gift of music or management, the gift of humor or horticulture, those are not answers to prayer. YOU are the answer. Your presence, your response to the call for “laborers” for the harvest, is the answer. All those who “labor” are, with every word and action, announcing that “the kingdom of God has come near.”

That is why whether the prayer is for more rain in a drought-stricken plain, or drying sunshine for a flooded community - we are the answer to prayer.

That is why whether the answer to prayer is for a cooling breeze during a scorching heat wave or for a warm shelter on a frozen winter night - we are the answer to prayer.

That is why whether the answer to prayer is the community of companionship or for the silence of solitude - we are the answer to prayer.

That is why whether the prayer is for a breath of fresh air or for the peace of stillness - we are the answer to prayer.

That is why whether the answer to prayer is a purpose and a project or for the fullness of fallow time - we are the answer to prayer.

We can always be “the answer to prayer” as long as we realize the real “prayer” we are answering is Jesus’ call for “laborers to bring in the harvest.” We are answers to prayer whenever we are working to reveal to the world that “the kingdom of God has come close.” We are not called to “build” the kingdom of God. As laborers enter the field to gather the crop, we are called to enter into the kingdom that is already here, to receive that kingdom, and to reveal its presence to others. And what is the kingdom? The kingdom is Jesus the Christ.

Almost every evening the news reports harrowing and heart-warming stories of soldiers who willingly put themselves into “harm’s way” for you and for me. This is the Fourth of July, when we honor those who put their lives “in harms way” that we may be safe in our armchairs and lawn chairs. We are only able to enjoy this summer’s beaches and barbecues because a long line of soldiers swore to “protect and defend,” and in doing so to put themselves in “harm’s way.”

As the answers to Jesus’ prayer, we this morning need to commit ourselves to putting ourselves ‘in prayer’s way.’ When we kneel down, when we open ourselves to the power of all prayer, we are enabling ourselves to be available to the presence of the kingdom and the miracles and wonders Jesus brings wherever he goes. And when we’re “In Prayer’s Way,” we get “In His Way.” Without getting “In Prayer’s Way,” we can get the wrong way “in his way.”

We usually think of miracles as a unique infusion of power and glory into the ordinary everyday world. But miracles are really the revealing of what is already present in unseen and unrevealed form. Real miracles are making manifest and igniting what is already there. Like lightening in the sky. Like fruit on a tree. Like love in the heart.

After a long, hurry-up-and-wait plane trip, I finally checked into my hotel. Entering the elevator I pressed the button for my floor. But the lift didn’t go there. It went a floor above. It went a floor below. It stopped and started perfectly for a half dozen other passengers who came and went as I rode aimlessly up and down. Finally I returned to the front desk and demanded to know why the elevator refused all my commands to take me to my floor.

The check-in person patiently explained that all I had to do was insert my key, the key that I had already been given. Once I inserted my key into a slot in the elevator panel, it would take me where I wanted to go. I already possessed the key to open the doorway to my floor. I just didn’t know it.

You already have the key to be the answer to prayer, to be the miracle, for everyone you encounter.

Eric Clapton has written an amazing autobiography (Clapton: An Autobiography [2008]). You all know who Clapton is. Some would place Clapton in the top 10 or even top 5 guitarists of all time. He was ranked #53 on the Rolling Stones magazine list of the "Immortals: 100 Greatest Artists of All Time". He is the only person ever to be inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame three times. In his 2008 autobiography he tells of the time in his life when his drinking problem was so severe that, as he put it, “I’d reached the point where I couldn’t live without a drink and I couldn’t live with one.” Because of his love for his son Conor, he knew, in his words, “I had to break the chain and give him what I had never really had — a father.” Clapton had been raised by his grandparents, and he didn’t want his son Conor to have the absent father that he grew up with.

In rehab, Clapton came to a point where he knew he could not do this by himself. These are his words:

At that moment, almost of their own accord, my legs gave way and I fell to my knees. In the privacy of my room I begged for help. I had no notion who I thought I was talking to, I just knew that I had come to the end of my tether. I had nothing left to fight with. Then I remembered what I had heard about surrender, something I thought I could never do, my pride just wouldn’t allow it, but I knew that on my own I wasn’t going to make it, so I asked for help, and, getting down on my knees, I surrendered.

As Steve Beard puts it, and he’s the one who tells this story in a powerful recent essay called “The Crossroads, Sobriety, and the Grave,” “That epiphany took place in 1987. Eric Clapton just recently turned 65 years old, but more importantly, he has now celebrated 23 years of sobriety.” (Steve Beard, Good News, 43 [May/June 2010], 33)

But let us let Clapton tell the rest of the story:

From that day until this, I have never failed to pray in the morning, on my knees, asking for help, and at night, to express gratitude for my life and, most of all, for my sobriety. I choose to kneel because I feel I need to humble myself when I pray, and with my ego, this is the most I can do. . . .In some ways, in some form, my God was always there, but now I have learned to talk to him.

Most of you know that in 1991, Clapton’s four-year-old son Conor, the child he loved so much he went to rehab for, died from an accidental fall from a Manhattan highrise. But even this did not drive Clapton back to the bottle. Only deeper on his knees.

Will you get on your knees this morning. Will you put yourself “In Prayer’s Way?”

I’m going to ask those of you who are able, to join me in closing our time together on our knees. We’re going to have a nano-prayer-meeting to end this sermon. We’re going to drop down to move up. And on our knees I want to begin our prayer time with remembering this: someone somewhere has been praying for you. This moment, right now, someone somewhere is praying for you. . . You and I are at the receiving end of prayer. Even when we’re praying for someone else, we are always at the receiving end. And the first person who prayed for you was Jesus himself.

Will you place yourself “In Prayer’s Way” right now?

[If at all possible, move to the front of the church, in front of your people, get down on your knees, and led them in prayer. You might even want to try the “praying out loud” tradition of the holiness movement, as it is continued in the Korean church.]

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Leonard Sweet Commentary, by Leonard Sweet