If you worked in the post office, you would probably run into all kinds of people. One postal worker says she is used to dealing with moody people.
She tells about an irate customer who stormed her desk one day. “What’s the trouble?” the postal employee responded in her calmest voice.
“I went out this morning,” the customer began angrily, “and when I came home I found a card saying the mailman tried to deliver a package but no one was home. I’ll have you know, my husband was in all morning! He never heard a thing!”
After apologizing, the postal employee got the woman’s parcel.
“Oh good!” the woman gushed. “We’ve been waiting for this for ages!”
“What is it?” the postal worker asked.
The woman said with pride, “My husband’s new hearing aid.”
Well, no wonder . . . !
When we speak to one another, there are some people who can’t hear us, others who don’t listen to us. But when we speak to God, we speak to One who hears all and listens to all.
Today I want to deal with the perfect prayer. It is, of course, The Lord’s Prayer. Most of us know it by heart. Our lesson from Luke for the day contains one version of the prayer. Matthew 6 contains another, almost identical. The version we are accustomed to praying in church has been honed and polished over the years, but it is essentially the same prayer Jesus taught his disciples long ago. One message is not enough to do justice to the Lord’s Prayer, of course, but perhaps for just a few moments we can capture the beauty and the significance of this ancient address to God.
The prayer begins with an acknowledgment of who God is. “Our Father, who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name . . .”
God is not merely a detached observer of world affairs, as the Deists believed. God is our Father. This is critical to our understanding of prayer. We know of God’s power. We see it in the wind and in the storm. But does God care? That is what we want to know as we kneel in communion with God. And the answer is, Yes, God cares. The foundation of Christian prayer is God’s love for us. God cares about God’s children like a loving parent cares about his or her children.
A Roman war hero was returning home. Soldiers were lined along the streets to keep the masses from getting in the way of the parade. A little boy tried to break through. A soldier grabbed him and said: “Don’t get in the way of the emperor.”
The boy replied, “He may be the emperor to you, but he is my father.”
God is our Father. That makes all the difference when we pray.
When we approach God, we do so not with fear, but with respect. God is our Father, but God is also “hallowed.” The word “hallowed” means we treat God’s name with holiness. Our Jewish ancestors understood the holiness of God in a way we may not. They steadfastly resisted making images of God. They resisted even describing God because they knew that God was so high above us that no description would be adequate. They considered God’s name too holy to be spoken by human lips. If the name needed to be written, the scribes would take a bath before they wrote it and destroy the pen afterward. God is our Father, but God is also hallowed, holy. The Lord’s Prayer begins with an acknowledgment of who God is.
Then it moves to an acknowledgment of what God wants.
“Thy kingdom come, thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven.”
The theme of Jesus’ ministry was the coming of the kingdom of God, the reign of God in every heart. This is God’s plan for God’s creation, that God’s love, God’s compassion, God’s holiness will permeate the heart of every person on this planet. We are obviously a long way from that, but that is the goal. That is the plan. Jesus taught us to pray for God’s kingdom every time we pray. THUS, THE ULTIMATE PURPOSE OF PRAYER IS TO BRING OUR MIND INTO ALIGNMENT WITH GOD’S MIND TO THE END THAT WE MIGHT BE INSTRUMENTS OF GOD’S WILL IN THE WORLD.
Some of you will remember that wonderful story of the pastor who looked out the window of his home one day and saw a shabbily-dressed man walk up to the doors of the church. This was a concern to the pastor because it was a rough neighborhood. The man looked around to be sure no one was watching him and then slipped into the church. This made the pastor even more uneasy, especially when it happened again the next day, and then again the next day. The pastor finally decided to spy on the man to find out what he was up to.
The next day at his usual hour, the man appeared on the steps of the church, looked around to make sure no one was watching him, and slipped into the church. This time the pastor took up a post where he could watch him.
The first thing the man did was take his hat off reverently and hold it over his heart. He then walked slowly up to the front of the church, put his hand on the communion rail and said, “Jesus, it’s Jim.” That was his whole prayer. He didn’t say anything else out loud. He just wanted to touch base. It turned out he worked in one of the nearby factories and was coming there on his lunch hour to pray for strength to serve God in what was a very rough and coarse environment. He could have poured out his soul before God, but he just said, “Jesus, it’s Jim.”
A few days later, Jim was in an accident at the factory. He was taken to a hospital ward which was full of all the rough and coarse characters who lived and worked in that neighborhood. Apparently, they were so disrespectful that the nurses would sometimes finish their shifts in tears because they had been treated so rudely by the patients. As soon as Jim was admitted to the ward, however, they began to notice a change.
On the third or fourth day, one of the nurses actually heard the men laughing together at a joke good‑naturedly, instead of yelling at each other and cursing each other. She just had to find out what made the difference, so she asked one of them, “Why are things so different here?” Pointing toward Jim’s bed, he said, “Oh, it’s that guy in the bed over there.” So the nurse went over to Jim’s bed and said, “I understand you’ve made quite a difference in this ward. Can you tell me why?”
Jim said, “If I told you, you wouldn’t believe me.” The nurse said, “Try me.” Jim said, “Every day a little after noon, I see a man walking up to my bed. He puts his hand on the bed rail and he says to me, ‘Jim, it’s Jesus.’”
Somehow Jim had reverently brought his mind into alignment with the mind of God. That is what we are seeking for when we pray, “Thy kingdom come, thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven.”
Some of us slip right at this point; we try to bring God’s mind into alignment with our mind, rather than vice versa. And so we push and prod God rather than opening ourselves up to God. That is why we have such a dissatisfying prayer life.
Only after we acknowledge who God is and what God wants do we make our petitions to God. We begin not with our wants and our needs, but with an acknowledgment of God.
Our petitions are twofold. The first is physical: “Give us this day our daily bread.” We pray that God will meet our daily, physical needs. Not our wants, but our needs. If you are praying for a 60" flat-screen television, you are probably on the wrong track. If you are praying for a new Hummer, good luck. However, we can legitimately pray for our needs. All our physical needs. This includes our health. And this includes our concern for those we love.
Quite obviously, God already knows our needs as well as our wants. That’s why we should not spend an inordinate time with this part of our prayer. This is again where many people miss the mark in their prayer life. The prayer is all about them, their wants, their needs. But a satisfying prayer life begins with God and ends with God. We begin with our physical needs, then move to our spiritual needs.
Give us this day our daily bread. And forgive us our sins, as we forgive those who sin against us.
[We say, “Forgive us our trespasses . . .” Our Presbyterian friends say, “Forgive us our ‘debts.’” Some people say that’s because of their Scottish background.] It all comes to the same thing. We are praying, “Forgive us our sins, as we forgive those who sin against us.” That is such an important part of this prayer.
In 1945, Dr. John Muyskens was the pastor of a church in Jenkintown, PA. World War II had just ended. The church had a celebration. Dr. Muyskens delivered a sermon titled “I Pray for Them.” Who did this pastor pray for? He prayed for the enemies of the United States of America--the enemies we had just defeated at an awful cost in human life. What made his sermon remarkable was that these enemies were the very people who had killed his son. Dr. Muyskens knew the pain of war very intimately. His son, Edward, had died on the battlefield that very same year.
Why did he pray for those who had taken from him one of the people he loved most in the world? The outline of his sermon went like this:
1) I Pray for Them Because It is What Jesus Did;
2) [I Pray for Them] Because Prayer Changes the One Who Prays;
3) [I Pray for Them] Because Prayer Lifts Us Above Hate. *
When we pray, “Forgive us our sins as we forgive those who sin against us . . . ,” we are not doing this simply because we don’t want our sin to separate us from God. We pray this because spiritually we need forgiveness and we need to give forgiveness.
Then we pray, “Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil . . .” This may be the most confusing part of the prayer. Does God ever tempt us? No. But God does allow us to be tested. We can draw that inference from the story of Job. Has Job been a righteous man simply and solely because God has blessed him? That is the question this important book asks. What if all Job’s blessings were withdrawn? Would he then curse God? And so God allowed Satan to test him.
Sometimes life tests us. Whether those tests come from Satan or not, I cannot say. Some of those tests are rough. Often they make us stronger, more confident, more content individuals when we complete them. But it is natural to pray, like Jesus in the Garden, “If possible, please let this cup pass from me . . .” It is natural for us to pray, “Please don’t put me to the test . . .”
“Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil . . .” This is one of the most important prayers that some of us will ever pray, “Deliver us from evil . . .” Sometimes temptations come to us. Powerful temptations. Temptations that will overwhelm us if we open the door just a crack. We need, by God’s grace, to completely flee the situation.
Some of you may remember the old TV show “Hee Haw,” with all its corny jokes and country music. In one episode, the doctor, played by Archie “Grandpappy” Campbell, was confronted by a patient who said he broke his arm in two places.
Doc Campbell replied, “Well then, stay out of those places!”
Sometimes that is the best advice. So we pray daily, “Deliver us from evil . . .”
“For thine is the kingdom and the power and the glory forever . . .” These words were probably added later, but they are certainly an appropriate ending to the prayer. We begin with God and we end with God.
The Lord’s Prayer is the perfect prayer. It is not a prayer for the secular person to pray. Prayer for the secular person is an off-and-on thing. He or she gets in a tight spot, where there is no other source of help, and the secular person cries out, “God, help me!” What does such a person know about God’s love? What does such a person know of God’s holiness? They would not have a clue what it means to pray, “Thy kingdom come, thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.” This is a prayer for Christ’s disciples to use. It is a prayer that begins and ends with an acknowledgment of who God is and what God wants. However, it is a prayer that, if you will internalize it and make it the core of your very life, will move heaven and earth.
There is an old Calvin and Hobbes cartoon in which Calvin is getting undressed for bed, and he says to Hobbes, “Any time when you don’t finish the day with grass stains on your knees, you ought to seriously re‑examine your priorities.”
So it is with the follower of Christ. Anytime you don’t finish a day without some time spent on your knees acknowledging who God is and what God wants, making your petitions known and asking his forgiveness and blessing on your life, you ought to seriously examine your priorities.
In fact, let’s approach God’s throne right now as we pray, “Our Father, who art in heaven . . . ”
* Rev. Randolph T. Riggs