Matthew 6:5-15 · Prayer
The Lord's Prayer: A Surplus of Meaning
Matthew 6:5-15
Sermon
by Eric Ritz
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Some years ago a group of 25 Biblical scholars formed a group called, "The Jesus Seminar." About five years ago, they used a color code to vote on what words of The Lord''s Prayer they actually believed came directly from the lips of our Lord, Jesus Christ and not the editorial revisions of the Gospel writers, Matthew and Luke, and those who came after them.

The color code was as follows:

RED - direct words from Jesus PINK - not directly from Jesus, but close to what he might have said. GRAY - indirectly connected to Jesus'' thought patterns. WHITE - no connection at all.

Only one word, "Father", received the "red card" majority vote of the panel. All the other words received the voting colors of pink, gray, or white.

I agree with Dr. John Killinger of Samford University that The Lord''s Prayer is directly from the lips of our Lord, Jesus Christ. This prayer bears his signature. It is a direct teaching of Jesus, firmly and forever stamped upon the disciples and all other believers who have come to faith in Christ.

I am not going to tear apart what the liberal think tank, "The Jesus Seminar," determined. They are entitled to their thoughts and conclusions. I am going to take a much more positive and wholesome approach these weeks in our summer worship schedule. I will be sharing with you why I trust The Lord''s Prayer and how it has inspired and shaped the church and its people from the moment it was shared by Jesus.

I have always been impressed that the request from the disciples to teach and instruct them how to pray was the only such request in the word of God.

They never asked how to conduct an evangelistic mission. They never asked how to conduct an every member canvas. They never asked how to conduct a stewardship campaign. They never asked how to conduct a meeting.

But their deepest desire was to learn how to pray like Jesus. They had spent much time with him. They came to know that the power of Jesus'' life came from the time he spent in prayer.

There is no obvious way to break The Lord''s Prayer into various preaching segments. Some of the Bible scholars suggest six main thoughts; some eight. This summer we will examine each thought and phrase of this marvelous prayer.

The first item I want to share with you today is that The Lord''s Prayer is not really The Lord''s Prayer. It is the prayer that Jesus gave to his disciples to use as a model for their prayer life and spiritual edification. It is most often known as the Disciple''s Prayer, the Perfect Pattern Prayer, or the Model Prayer. It is a prayer that Jesus did not pray himself. The prayer calls for the forgiveness of sins and, of course, Jesus Christ was sinless. He was tempted to sin--he had the ability to sin--but he did not. Jesus also would have said, "My Father," rather than "Our Father." However, it is The Lord''s Prayer in the sense that he is the author and designer of its words. The real Lord''s Prayer as known in the Christian Community is found in John 17:1-26. However, for our work and witness, we will use the traditional title for the words found in Matthew 6:9-13 today and for the rest of this sermon series.

An old preacher story is told about a "cleric" in South Dakota who went bear hunting in the Black Hills early one November morning. About 4:30 in the afternoon he knew he had to get back to the car before darkness covered the landscape. Unfortunately, he forgot to mark his trail and he got hopelessly lost. In desperation, he fired a shot from his high-powered rifle into the dark sky hoping someone would hear the sound. No sooner had he fired his rifle when a South Dakota Game Warden jumped out of the bushes and arrested the cleric for hunting after sundown. The cleric pleaded for mercy--after all, he had''not planned to get lost. The Game Warden had a smile on his face, because he knew the cleric was only 50 feet away from his car. The preacher pleaded again. The Game Warden gave an unusual test to the cleric. He said, "If you are a famous cleric, then repeat The Lord''s Prayer." The preacher, being so frightened about being arrested, forgot himself and said:

"God is great.

God is good.

And we thank Him

for this our food.

Through Jesus Christ Our Lord. Amen."

And the Game Warden said, "Okay, you can go now."

Unlike the Game Warden, almost everyone here today knows The Lord''s Prayer. It has been an important part of your religious training and faith journey. Our worship service is incomplete without its affirming presence each Sunday.

In Herman Melville''s marvelous masterpiece, MOBY DICK, there is a moving moment when the Captain tightens a vice on his hand. With a pain-filled expression on his face he exclaims, "A man has to feel something that holds in this slippery world." That is exactly what The Lord''s Prayer has meant to me. Many of you shared that same thought with me as your pastor. From the hospital room to bedroom, from the Sanctuary to the Board Room, The Lord''s Prayer has guided us. The real miracle is not that we hold on to The Lord''s Prayer, but the God which The Lord''s Prayer depicts HOLDS ON TO US.

During the 1980s, it was popular to say that if a particular piece of poetry, music, or art could portray and reflect different levels of meaning and new insight each time the particular art form was experienced it had "A SURPLUS OF MEANING." To say that a work of art has a "a surplus of meaning" means that the work or its words and its meaning can never be exhausted in one lesson or sitting. It is eternal in the sense that as long as it is read or experienced, it will give meaning and inspiration. I believe this prayer given by Jesus to His disciples (of which we are included today) has a "a surplus of meaning." The meaning of this prayer can never be exhausted--only experienced. This prayer contains the essential priorities that address the totality of the believer''s sacred journey and life''s experiences.

This is a prayer not only to be repeated but to be lived out. However, I have learned from the fields of social behavior and educational methods that we never live out this prayer unless we REPEAT it. We do learn from repetition. A weight-lifter grows stronger only because he or she has the discipline to do many sets of repetitions. Michael Jordon, the premier basketball player, will practice the same jump shot 500 times in one day. Chris Evert, when she was in training, would hit the same back-hand for hours upon hours, until it became second nature. When repeated this prayer truly empowers us to live out the truth that Jesus wanted to share with us.

Recently one of my colleagues shared with me that repeating this same prayer week after week could lead to what is called "cold storage religion." In other words, you go through the motions but the truths of the faith are, for all practical purposes, tucked away in the deepest parts of our conscious being; so in effect, they provide no real instruction, improvement, or inspiration for our sacred pilgrimage. I smiled and said, "That is exactly the reason I do share in this prayer every day of my life." If this "Prayer" is part of God''s infallible word (actually found twice in God''s Word), then I trust the power of God and the Holy Spirit to use it in such a way that I can never forget the truths and insights it shares for all believers. The Bible tells us that God''s "Word" never returns void. As the television commercial says: "Just do it!" Just pray it!

Dr. Joe Harding of Richland, Washington, once shared a story about a cartoon that caught his attention. The cartoon showed a psychiatrist''s office. There were shelves of books, floor to ceiling on each wall, along with the display of diplomas and credentials. A rather adequate-looking psychiatrist was there listening to a patient who was on the couch. Something, however, has startled the patient. His eyes are fastened on a corner of the room. There is a look of horror and surprise. The man is stunned! He can hardly believe it! The wallpaper is coming unglued. It is rolling up, revealing that the books and diplomas are just clever pictures on the wallpaper. He is there on the couch desperately needing help, opening his life to this man who is revealed as a fraud! There are no words to the cartoon. You simply see the man''s expression and you understand his predicament.

It is a predicament faced by millions. What do you do when your world just rolls up and reveals the bare sheetrock? What do you do when the trusted answers are revealed as no answers at all?

The words of The Lord''s Prayer are more than words. They are words that will never roll-up and be empty, void and null. They are sacred words that lead us into the Holy presence of God. They come from Jesus, not a mere person.

St. Theresa of Avila was right on target when she wrote, "The life of prayer is just a love of God and a liking to be with Him." However, since prayer is such a powerfull force as demonstrated in the life of Our Lord Jesus Christ, Satan the Devil will do everything to prevent us from praying.

C. S. Lewis, in his brilliantly written book THE SCREWTAPE LETTERS, shares how the Devil''s chief assistant, named Screwtape, can be successful in discouraging Christians to pray. He is to make them "feel" like they don''t need to pray: "The Devil declares to Screwtape that the simplest (way of preventing them from doing so) is to turn their gaze away from Him towards themselves. Keep them watching their own minds and trying to produce feelings there by the action of their own wills...When they meant to pray for courage, let them really be trying to feel brave. When they say they are praying for forgiveness, let them be trying to feel forgiven. Teach each of them to estimate the value of prayer by their success in producing the desired feeling." (C. S. Lewis, THE SCREWTAPE LETTERS, New York: The MacMillian Company, 1943, p. 29.) We do not pray when we feel like it. We pray because we need to have communication and relationship with our God. It does not depend on our emotions or feelings.

St. Augustine, who certainly is one of the most colorful characters in God''s redemptive work, shared with a widow named, "Proba," who asked the famous Bishop for instructions on how to pray: "If you were to run over all the words of Holy Prayers, you would find nothing, according to my way of thinking, which is not contained and included in The Lord''s Prayer. Hence, when we pray, it is allowable to say the same things in different words--but it is not allowable to say different things." (The Father of the Church, St. Augustine Letters, 83-130, New York, 1953, p. 394.)

The great church father, Tertullian, whose thoughts on the Trinity are superb, said about The Lord''s Prayer, "In this prayer is comprised the 'epitome'' of the whole entire gospel." Tertullian said, "The Lord''s Prayer was a breathe of fresh air." Yes, it is obvious the old legalism was dismantled--a greater way of prayer was ushered into the Divine-human encounter.

I no longer get upset when I read and examine the vote on The Lord''s Prayer by the "Jesus Seminar." Now, I simply go back to the original "seminar" Jesus held by request some 2,000 years ago. Then I trace the prayer as it weaves it way through 2,000 years of usage by Christian believers.

I have learned anew that: The Words are trustworthy. The Words are true. The Words are Jesus. They came from His lips to Our Soul. They have "a surplus of meaning." They are something we can hold on to.

Athanasius, the well-known Bishop of Alexandria, shared these words which I close with today on the power of The Lord''s Prayer and prayer in general:

"They have conquered kingdoms,
enforced justice, received promises,
stopped the mouth of a lion,
quenched raging fires,
produced strength out of weakness,
put foreign armies to flight."

Yes, God has blessed the use of the prayer in a mighty way. If you want God''s attention, just pray these words. This prayer could convert and change everything and everybody here at this church. I hope you feel my enthusiasm for this great prayer. We have only completed the introduction today. I cannot wait to see what the Holy Spirit will bring forth from your pastor to share with you next week.

If you ever feel you are hopelessly lost or that you are slipping in your Christian walk and witness, I plead with you to let the words of The Lord''s Prayer flow from your lips into the deepest part of your soul and spirit. Sing it, shout it, say it--just pray it. If you feel the sun has gone down and it is dark out there and the wolves are biting, just pray this prayer over and over, and soon you will be basking in the warm light of the presence of God. Could you expect anything less from such a powerful prayer as this?

Dynamic Preaching, The Ritz Collection, by Eric Ritz