Luke 11:1-13 · Jesus’ Teaching on Prayer
Teach Us To Pray
Luke 11:1-13
Sermon
by King Duncan
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A few years ago, Rabbi Wayne Dosick was at the airport when he witnessed an unusual scene. A police officer approached a mother and her small daughter. Someone had filed a missing-persons report on a little girl of the same age and appearance as the little girl in the airport. The officer was asking the mother to prove that the child was actually hers.

First, the officer tried questioning the toddler, a technique that proved to be futile. He asked the name of her father. She replied, "Daddy." He asked where she lived, "At home." So the officer then asked the mother to produce some form of identification that would prove that she was really the child's mother. After some time, the police officer was satisfied and left.

But this encounter disturbed Rabbi Dosick. He began to think, "How would I prove that my child is really my child?"

And then Rabbi Dosick decided that he would ask his boys to recite their prayers. Once the officer heard his sons' prayers, he would know that these boys belonged to a father who loved them and raised them to be men of God. (1)

That's good, isn't it? Teach your children to pray so they know they're loved and that they are children of God.

Some of my favorite stories are about children and prayer. Such as the little girl who prayed, "And forgive us our trash baskets as we forgive those who put trash in our baskets." That's not bad.

Or the little girl who was overheard to pray, "And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us some E-mail."

Or the young boy who knelt down beside his bed every night to say his prayers. One night, obviously bored with the same old prayer, this little guy prayed, "Now I lay me down to sleep, I pray the Lord my soul to keep, if I should die before I wake . . . can I have breakfast with you in the morning?" (2) Try to improve on that prayer!

The disciples knew how important prayer was to Jesus, so they asked him to teach them to pray. And you and I can be glad they did. Because of their request you and I have a guide to prayer known, of course, as the Lord's Prayer. Not only that, but Jesus follows this prayer with some commentary to help us understand more fully what prayer can mean in our lives. Entire books have been written about this definitive prayer and Jesus' subsequent teachings. We won't get into the minutia. Let's focus instead on the big picture. We can do that in just three words--three words that are at the heart of everything Jesus taught us about prayer and about faith. The three words are Father, forgiveness, and faithfulness. Let's start with "Father."

Jesus changed religion forever with one simple word: Daddy.

Years ago comedy writer Robert Orben made what he considered a little joke. He said, "I don't believe in all this popularizing of religion. Somehow I can't ever see myself saying, "˜Our Dad who art in Heaven.'"

Yet that is exactly what Jesus did. As David Buttrick expresses it, "The Lord's Prayer with it's "˜Abba!,' turns all our formal, strained praying into glad amusement, for right in the middle of our stained-glass phrases is that impudent word "˜Daddy!'"

God is Daddy! Said Jesus. No longer would religion be an exercise in attempting to appease an angry god. From now on it would be an exercise in living gratefully and joyously in the knowledge that the one who created us and sustains us is a loving parent whose will is always what is best for us.

For many people religious faith is an attempt to buy God off. That has always been true and is still true today. There is someone in this room who kneels daily to pray to God, not because you love God, but because you are afraid that if one day you forget to pray, God will in some way punish you. The picture of God in your head is all messed up--even though you may not admit it, even to yourself. In your mind God is really a petty being of limited love, limited patience who will, given the proper excuse, strike down the unsuspecting. I hope I don't have to tell you that this is not the faith of Jesus. Jesus prayed out of a heart of gratitude and love.

It's like a story that Cheryl Donaldson tells about her grandfather. Her grandad started every morning on his knees by the side of his bed, praying for those he loved. And according to Cheryl, her grandfather began every prayer the same way, "Father, we thank Thee that we belong to Thee . . ." Over the years, that one thing never changed. No matter what the occasion, no matter who he was praying for, her grandad always began his prayers, "Father, we thank Thee that we belong to Thee . . ." (3)

Why can we be thankful that we belong to God? Because God can be trusted to always act in our best interest. He is our Daddy. God loves us with an everlasting love. Nothing can break the bond between our hearts and His. That is why we can pray, "Our Father who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom come, thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread . . ." If God's will is done, we can't help but win because God is our Daddy. Or our Papa, or whatever name is more comfortable for you. We can pray, "Give us this day our daily bread . . ." because we know our heavenly parent wants what's best for us. Jesus turned religion on its head with one simple word: Daddy. Father is the first word.

The second is forgiveness. Jesus showed us what it means to live in a state of grace. "Forgive us our sins," Jesus prayed, "as we forgive those who have sinned against us . . ."

Jesus never met anybody he couldn't forgive. The people he met were no better or worse than the people you and I meet every day. Some were strong, some were weak. Some were fortunate, some had experienced bad break after bad break.

But Jesus valued them all. He hadn't come into the world to condemn people, but to save them. (John 3:17)

How different Jesus was from many other people. There are some people who delight in keeping a record of other people's wrongs. Their approach to people who have fallen is punitive, not redemptive. They want to make sure that everyone gets what's coming to them--even though they themselves are dependent on the grace of God.

Kent Crockett tells about an elderly woman who died several years ago who had a difficult time with forgiveness. Family members were cleaning out her house when they found a scrapbook filled with obituaries from the local newspaper. Many of the death notices pertained to people she had detested. As bizarre as it may sound, she kept a scrapbook of the obituaries of her dead enemies.

Apparently this woman gained some kind of strange satisfaction in learning of the death of someone she disliked. She even had five different clippings of the obituary of the one person she despised the most. (4)

Jesus would not have us be caught in that trap of resentment and hate. The first word that helps us in today's lesson is Father. The second is forgiveness. We forgive others as God has forgiven us.

The last word is faithfulness. God is always faithful.

Linda Washington was going through a particularly frustrating time in her life, and she felt like her prayers were going unheard by God. Her anger toward God was interfering with her ability to pray.

On Election Day of that year, Linda showed up at the polling place early. As she was waiting, a man came up and asked Linda, "Are you saved?"

Somewhat taken aback by the stranger's directness, Linda replied, "Yes."

The stranger continued, "Do you think God doesn't hear your prayers."

Hesitantly, Linda replied, "Sometimes."

The stranger responded, "Well, God's got big ears."

Linda stared as the man turned abruptly, walked into the polling place, and wandered off into the crowd. But his words stayed with her: "God's got big ears." (5)

Well, God does have big ears--big enough to hear all the prayers of all the world's people, rich or poor, young or old, deserving or undeserving. Nobody is too insignificant to be beyond His concern.

Pastor Robert Shannon has made an interesting observation about people in Ghana, Africa. Many people in Ghana are very devout. "They express it in the names they give to their business enterprises," says Shannon. "There is a Hail Mary Plumbing Shop. You can go to the I Love Jesus Dry Cleaner. You can refuel your car at the God is Great Gas Station.

"Personal names also reflect this unusual custom. One American visitor said that his guide was named God Knows Setordzi. "˜God Knows' really was his first name!

"What a reminder that must have been for that man," says Shannon. "If he were tempted to do evil he would remember that God knows. If he felt unappreciated, he would recall that God knows. If he were in pain or grief or despair, he would be comforted by thinking, "˜God Knows!' Whatever your legal name, it is good always to remember that God knows!" (6)

Of course, God knows. God has big ears. God is faithful. Jesus illustrates his point that God is faithful with a fascinating example. "Suppose," he says, "one of you has a friend, and you go to this friend at midnight and say to him, 'Friend, lend me three loaves of bread; for a friend of mine has arrived, and I have nothing to set before him.' But this friend answers, 'Don't bother me; the door has already been locked, and my children are with me in bed; I cannot get up and give you anything.'" Jesus said that even though this buddy may not get up and give you anything because he is your friend, at least he will accede to your wishes if you keep bothering him. Then he adds these memorable words: "So I say to you, Ask, and it will be given you; search, and you will find; knock, and the door will be opened for you. For everyone who asks receives, and everyone who searches finds, and for everyone who knocks, the door will be opened. Is there anyone among you who, if your child asks for a fish, will give a snake instead of a fish? Or if the child asks for an egg, will give a scorpion? 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!"

It seems like a strange way to make a point. But Jesus is saying that God is faithful. If we ask, we will receive; if we seek, we will find; if we knock, the door will open. Don't get discouraged. Don't decide that God doesn't hear your prayers. God is faithful, and He has big ears.

We started off this message talking about children and their prayers. All his life, which is nine years, Jamie Patterson has wanted to be a preacher. The youngster was telling his grandfather, J.D. Patterson of Fort Smith, what his first sermon was going to be about. "It's God's umbrella," said the lad. The elder Patterson asked for details.

Jamie said, "That's all there is to it. God has this big umbrella and everybody is protected underneath it. See?"

Granddad Patterson said he saw, and he liked the idea. "What's your second sermon going to be about?"

The youngster's patience was tried. "I told you, Granddad, once you know about the umbrella that's all you need to know."

Patterson said, "But what are you going to tell the folks who come to church the next week?"

Jamie said, "I'm going to say let's all go outside and play baseball." (7)

I like that. It's about time for us to go out and play baseball. We live under God's umbrella. God is faithful.

So, when you pray, remember these three words: Father--forgiveness--faithful. Really, that's about all you need to know.


1. Rabbi Wayne Dosick, The Business Bible (New York: William Morrow and Company, Inc., 1993), pp. 180-182.

2. tim@cybersalt.org (Tim Davis)

3. Cheryl Donaldson, Finding God Between a Rock and a Hard Place, compiled by Lil Copan and Elisa Fryling (Wheaton, IL: Harold Shaw Publishers, 1999), pp. 64-65.

4. Kent Crockett, I Once Was Blind, But Now I Squint, Chattanooga, TN: AMG Publishers, 2004, pp. 102-103.

5. Linda Washington, Finding God Between a Rock and a Hard Place, compiled by Lil Copan and Elisa Fryling (Wheaton, IL: Harold Shaw Publishers, 1999), pp. 72-73.

6. Preaching, Nov./Dec. 2000, p. 63.

7. Charles Allbright, Gravely The Mules Stopped Dancing (Little Rock: August House Publishers, 1988).

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan