Luke 11:1-13 · Jesus’ Teaching on Prayer
You Do Have A Prayer
Luke 11:1-13
Sermon
by James W. Moore
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Some years ago, when Leonard Griffith was pastor of the famous City Temple in London, he wrote a fascinating book entitled Barriers to Christian Belief. In that book he dealt with some problems that have over the years been real obstacles and stumbling blocks for people in their faith pilgrimage… specific problems that hinder people, that burden people, that disturb people… and keep them away from the Christian faith. One of the barriers he listed was…"unanswered prayer." It does seem to be a fact of our experience that many people do get discouraged and they do give up and drop out on the faith because they feel a sense of failure in their prayer life.

This leads us to ask then… "How do you pray?" "Why pray at all?" "When do you pray?" "Is there a special formula or a sacred language that should be used?" One thing is clear. There are many questions and there is much misunderstanding about how you pray and why. In a Peanuts cartoon Charley Brown is kneeling beside his bed for prayer. Suddenly he stops and says to Lucy, "I think I’ve made a new theological discovery, a real breakthrough. If you hold your hands upside down, you get the opposite of what you pray for."

There was a radio preacher in eastern North Carolina who spent most of his air time asking for money. The owners of the station began to receive complaints and consequently they established a new policy and told the minister that he could no longer ask for money over the air. Surprisingly, the preacher took the news rather well and simply asked if there were any limitations on his prayers. "Oh, no," said the manager, "You can pray as you please." That afternoon, during the broadcast, the radio preacher announced prayer time. He prayed for the usual things… and then concluded his prayer with this sentence: "Lord, you know I am not here to ask for money, but my address is Box 296, Piney Bluff, North Carolina!"

Prayer must be more than an emergency magical lamp rubbed in a crisis. The truth is that many people give up on prayer because they never understand what prayer is. Much that passes for prayer is irrational, superstitious, and self-centered, and is therefore unworthy of the pattern of the prayer that Jesus offered to us his disciples.

How do you pray and why? We are not the first to ask. The disciples of Jesus came to Him one day and said, "Lord, teach us. Teach us to pray!" Notice something here. When did the disciples ask for this? When did they make this request? Was it after Jesus gave a lecture on prayer? No! Was it after Jesus led a seminar on prayer? No! Was it after Jesus preached a powerful sermon on prayer? No! None of these. Remember how it is recorded in Luke 11… "Jesus was praying in a certain place and when he finished, they said to him, ‘Lord, teach us to pray.’" They saw the power of prayer in Him. They saw how important prayer was to Him. See the point. Harry Emerson Fosdick stresses it in his book, The Secret of Victorious Living. "Note that this awakened interest in prayer came not at all from new arguments about it, but from a new exhibition of its power. Here, before their very eyes, they saw a personality in whom prayer was vital and influential! The more they lived with him, the more they saw that they could never explain him or understand him unless they understood his praying and so not at all because of new arguments, but because of amazing spiritual power released in him by prayer. They wanted him to tell them how to pray."

The disciples sometimes were slow on the uptake, but at this point they were quickly and precisely on target. They saw in Jesus the answer to this question: how do we pray and why do we pray? And they learned from Him (as we can) what the elements are that lead to a meaningful prayer life.

I. FIRST OF ALL, JESUS PRAYED REGULARLY… AND SO CAN WE.

He took the time to pray. He made it a vital part of His daily schedule. He disciplined himself to pray regularly.

Let me tell you something. I know about busy schedules. I know about deadlines. I know about time pressures and stresses and demands in our frantic lifestyle. I live in that world, too. But I also know that when we feel we are so busy and our schedules are so hectic and the competition is so fierce and the times are so tough and we can’t afford to take the time to pray… then that’s the moment when we need to pray most of all, then that’s the moment when we can’t afford not to take the time to pray!

The noted English missionary, Florence Allshorn, once said something that really rang the bell for me. Allshorn said, "There is really only one test of our prayer life. Do we want God? Do we want Him so much that we will go on if it takes 5, 6, 10 years to find Him? There is only one test really… do we want God?"

Everything worthwhile takes time… regular, disciplined time. Ask any artist. Ask any musician. Ask any athlete. Ask any doctor or lawyer or minister or engineer. It takes time, effort, and determination. You have to plug away at it. It doesn’t come over night… and it doesn’t stay with you unless you stay with it. Maybe the same is true with prayer. Maybe it just takes a lot of practice and you know, I think it’s worth it. If Jesus felt the need to pray regularly, how much more must we need to pray regularly.

II. SECOND, JESUS PRAYED SENSIBLY AND SO CAN WE.

Jesus prayed with intelligent common sense. He did not use prayer as some magical device to get some selfish wishes. Hoover Rupert spoke to this when he said, "How easy it is to blunt out a desperate prayer… ‘O Lord, make the brakes hold,’ when we are going 80 miles an hour and suddenly face a need for a quick stop to avoid hitting another car. Not much intelligence in such a prayer, not much common sense." (H. Rupert. What’s Good About God, p. 155.)

Some years ago I was reading an article in Sports Illustrated about a major league baseball pitcher who prays that God will help him "get ‘em out"… and a player on an opposing team who says he prays that God will help him "get a hit." With tongue firmly in cheek, the sportswriter said, "How confusing this must be to God when they face each other!"

The poet Longfellow said it well: "What discord we should bring into the universe if all our prayers were answered! Then we should govern the world and not God. And do you think we should govern it better? It gives me pain to hear the long wearisome petitions of folks asking for senseless things they do not really need!"

How senseless to see God as nothing more than a pawn to be used for our own selfish desires. How senseless to picture God as some kind of divine waiter who at our slightest whim rushes off to a heavenly kitchen and then runs back with steaming portions of whatever we have asked for! How senseless to expect God to do for us what we can do for ourselves!

Jesus prayed regularly and He prayed sensibly… and so can we.

III. THIRD, JESUS PRAYED CONFIDENTLY… AND SO CAN WE.

"Thy will be done"… that was the prayer of Jesus… and it is a prayer we can pray with confidence because God knows us better than we know ourselves. He knows what we need and what is good for us better than we know. This is precisely what Garth Brooks is saying in his humorous country song, "Thank God for Unanswered Prayer."

Some years ago when I was a 5th grader, I wanted a motor scooter. More than anything I wanted a motor scooter… but my dad said, "No!" "Too dangerous… and you are too young!" But I had a friend named Roy Wilcox who had a new motor scooter. One Saturday morning, I convinced Roy to let me ride it. He showed me how to get it started and how to keep it going, but not now to get it stopped!

I circled the block five times trying to get information on how to stop that motor scooter. Each time, Roy would shout instructions, but I was out of earshot before he could communicate completely. Finally, I had to turn it over and slide it to a stop in a pile of gravel. I aged enough on that trip to last me a long time. As I got up, dusted myself off and limped home, I remember thinking, "Daddy’s right… I don’t really need one of those things after all!"

Likewise, God, like a loving parent, knows what is best for His children. Our best prayer is a confident "Thy will be done!" One of the reasons Jesus prayed confidently was because He saw prayer as friendship with God. Someone once described prayer simply like that… as "friendship with God." That’s a pretty good definition, isn’t it?

Some years ago, Leslie Weatherhead told a beautiful story about an elderly Scottish man who was quite ill. The minister came to see the dying man and noticed an empty chair in the opposite side of the bed… The chair was pulled up especially close to the bed. The older man said, "Let me tell you about this chair. Many years ago I found it quite difficult to pray, so one day I shared this problem with my pastor. He told me not to worry about kneeling or about placing myself in some pious position or about speaking in high-sounding words. Instead, he said, ‘Just sit down, put a chair in front of you, and imagine God sitting there in that chair… and then just talk to Him as you would talk to a friend.’" The older man said, "I’ve been doing that ever since."

Some days later, the daughter of the older man called the minister to tell him that her father had died peacefully. And then she said this: "For some reason, his hand was on that empty chair on the other side of the bed. Isn’t that strange?" "O no, it’s not strange at all. I understand perfectly. He was reaching out to his ‘Best Friend.’"

That’s what prayer is. It’s reaching out to God. It’s reaching out to our best friend. Jesus prayed regularly, sensibly, confidently, and so should we.

ChristianGlobe Network, Collected Sermons, by James W. Moore