Luke 11:1-13 · Jesus’ Teaching on Prayer
When Did Jesus Pray?
Luke 11:1-13
Sermon
by John G. Lynn
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Jesus, at those critical times when he had momentous decisions to make, withdrew to the hills to pray. In the sixth chapter of Luke's gospel, when he had healed that man's withered hand in the synagogue on the sabbath, he threw the gauntlet at the rules and regulations that for so long had choked out the kingdom of God. To the scribes and the Pharisees he offered this challenging question: "I ask you, is it lawful on the sabbath to do good or to do harm, to save life or to destroy it?" Luke tells us these scribes and Pharisees were filled with fury (the word actually means madness). They lost their good sense as they discussed with one another what they might do to Jesus.

Before he made his next move, Jesus withdrew from those scribes and Pharisees with their unbridled, senseless anger and went to the hills to pray. The New Testament word for prayer means to assert our rights before God. The gospels also teach that as creatures we have only one right before God ... our constant and thirsting need for his sovereignty in our lives.

Away for a while in prayer he made his decision. God's sovereignty re-established in his life, he did not go back to the synagogue to tell those scribes and Pharisees where to get off. He did not return for full scale battle in their arena. No, when it was day, directly but quietly he called his disciples and chose from them 12 whom he named apostles: those whom he would send out before him to the places where he himself was to go. It is good strategy to call those loyal to your side when you sense you are under attack. Prayer gave Jesus the courage to do this.

Later, in the ninth chapter of his gospel, Luke tells of another critical prayer time in Jesus' life. King Herod, hearing all that Jesus had done, wanted to know just who this carpenter's son from Nazareth thought he was. He sought to see him. Jesus knew that meant trouble, for Herod had a multitude of motives and a train load of ruthless reasons why he wanted to see Jesus. When they finally did meet, shortly before Pilate put Jesus on the cross, Herod wanted Jesus to work a miracle for him, which Jesus refused to do. So Herod treated him with contempt and mockery and sent him back to Pontius Pilate. Hearing that Herod wanted to see him, Jesus once again withdrew to prayer alone with God, asserting once again his need for God's sovereignty in his life.

After his prayer, Jesus did not go to Herod and say, "Well, here I am. Let me tell you more about myself." No, he stuck to those loyal to him. He told them more about himself, his mission, his destiny, and what was in store for them. "I will suffer many things. I will be rejected by the scribes and elders. I will be killed. But on the third day I will be raised." The lesson from this prayer? "Wait for that third day!"

Then, as he moved toward Jerusalem with his 12 loyal disciples and at least 70 others, too, success came. They healed and cast out demons. God's kingdom began to break into people's lives as it never had before. Yet success has its problems, too. Success makes some people uneasy; it makes others jealous; it makes others resentful. So now those successful, loyal followers of Jesus needed help. They needed God's sovereignty in their lives more than ever.

Once again he went to pray. This time, when he finished his prayer, he did not choose his loyal friends. That was already done. He did not clarify for them what the future would hold. That, too, he had already done. Now he had to give them something to hang onto once he was gone. It was not a badge, a uniform, a slogan, a picture, or a statue. He gave them something to encourage them to move forward with hope and honor and success. He gave them a prayer: the prayer of God's sovereignty in our lives.

"Father, hallowed be thy name." God is father, above and beyond what his creatures are, not subject to their hatreds and jealousies and their discomfort with success.

"Thy kingdom come." Thy kingdom -- that's wherever you act on our behalf, wherever your light burns out our darkness, wherever your hope destroys our despair, wherever your faith enables us to believe in a future and leave behind our fear and terror of success.

"Give us each day our daily bread." Whatever we need to nourish our faith, hope, love, and our talents to serve you. Father in heaven, give us that.

"And forgive us our sins." Because you have first forgiven us, we let our grudges go and forgive those who impede us ... we let them go.

"And lead us not into temptation." Luther says about this part of the Lord's Prayer that no one can escape temptations and allurements so long as we live in the flesh and have the devil prowling about us. But we pray here that we may not fall into them and be overwhelmed by them.

Many times tribulations and entanglements arise in congregations. They come for a multitude of reasons and a multitude of purposes. Today's gospel lesson gives us a clue as how best to deal with them. Church members can vote in meetings; they can argue procedures; they can discuss in forums. This is all helpful. But Martin Luther said, as he ended this part of his commentary on the Lord's Prayer, that at such times of distress our only help or comfort is to take refuge in the Lord's Prayer and appeal to God from our hearts. If we attempt to help ourselves by our own thoughts and counsels we will only make matters worse.

A congregation's hope for peace and unity lies in prayer. The prayer question is this: What decision will most help the advancement of God's kingdom? What decision will most allow God's sovereignty to reign over us and our future? Jesus gives us the key to the kingdom and God when he teaches us to pray.

Luther, when he wrote his great Babylonian Captivity of the Church, said that any obstacle can be removed by the faith of the church and the prayer of faith, just as Stephen converted Paul the apostle by this power. The word of God is powerful enough, when uttered, to change even a godless heart.

Yes, God often sleeps with his children at midnight, just longing to be awakened on our behalf. Often he hides behind the door, just longing to open it for us. Ask and you shall receive; seek and you shall find. Knock and it shall be opened unto you.

In that spirit of renewed trust in God as our future, let us give thanks to him and move forward toward a new day.

CSS Publishing, Lima, Ohio, Trouble Journey, by John G. Lynn