As Dear Children Ask Their Dear Father (2)
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“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!” (Luke 11:13).
Grace
and peace to you from God the Father and our Lord Jesus Christ!
A
few years ago, I painted my twin two-year-old granddaughters’ fingernails. My
wife, Aimee, couldn’t believe it. “You never did that for your girls,” she
said. “That’s right,” I answered. “They never asked me. Madyn and Briyr did.”
“Papa, will you paint fingernails,’ they asked, emphasizing their request by
wiggling their little fingers. So, I told them, “Yes, I will, as soon as I
finish feeding Boden.” They squealed in glee and then asked me a couple of more
times as they were waiting for me to get to it.
But
it did get me to wonder: Why didn’t my girls ask me to paint their fingernails?
I suspect it was because they thought I would say no. I might have said no on
so many other occasions, they just assumed that would be my answer. Maybe they
felt their poor behavior did not merit my consideration of their request.
Perhaps they thought I already did so much for them already, they didn’t want
to ask for anything more. Maybe they thought I couldn’t do it because I lacked
the skill. Or that I wouldn’t do it because I lacked the will—perhaps I thought
it unmanly to do so, or I didn’t think I had time for such foolishness. But
whatever the reason, my granddaughters had no such barriers. They fully
expected Papa to paint their fingernails if they asked.
So,
what does this have to do with prayer? A whole lot! Aren’t many of these
possible barriers to making requests of our loved ones similar to those you and
I experience (or anticipate) in our prayers to God? Do you fail to pray for
something because a guilty conscience tells you that you don’t deserve anything
good from God? Do you ever hold back on your prayers because God has done so
much for you already? Have you ever wondered if God really cares about your
worries and concerns? Have you ever failed to ask God for something because
you’ve reasoned it is such a small thing that it is hardly worth His time or
concern? Have you ever held back on asking God for something because it seems
like such an impossible request? I bet you have! I know I have. That’s why
Jesus teaches us to pray. Well, that and because one of His disciples asked
Jesus.
“Lord,
teach us to pray…” he asked. And Jesus taught them to pray. He gave them His
prayer, the Lord’s Prayer. It is also called the “Our Father,” though not so
often in contemporary Lutheran circles. And that’s too bad, because “Our
Father” reminds us of the proper posture of prayer. As Martin Luther explains
in the Small Catechism: “With these words God tenderly invites us to believe
that He is our true Father and that we are His true children, so that with all
boldness and confidence we may ask Him as dear children ask their dear father.”
Or if you permit me a little literary license: “As dear children ask their dear
Papa.”
That’s an important place to begin. Little
children ask for help because they realize they need help. They also quickly
begin to trust someone who is able to help, and who consistently answers their
cries and whispers for help. As they grow up, they lose that dependence and
trust as they learn to do more for themselves, or as someone consistently fails
to deliver on their requests.
Now,
to a certain extent, that is good in our day-to-day, temporal lives. We need to
grow up, to become more independent. The world already has enough adult
children still living in their parents’ basements or on the public dole. But
it’s dangerous path to walk in our spiritual journey, where maturing in our
faith actually means becoming more dependent upon the Lord.
As
Lutherans, we confess that we believe in justification by grace through faith
in our Lord Jesus Christ. Yet too often we fail to live by grace and
faith. This is especially true in our prayer life, where we all to easily fall
back into justification by work and reliance upon our own performance.
Unfortunately,
our old Adam is too often steered back to our own works and filthy rags of
self-righteousness. Go into a Christian bookstore looking for resources on
prayer, and you are more likely than not to find literature that only
reinforces the idea that improvement in prayer depends upon you—your knowledge,
your faith, your attitude, and your expertise. These teachings are popular
because they promise to be practical and powerful. But they fail to acknowledge
an important truth: your own spiritual impotence. These teachings divorce
prayer from Jesus and what He has done and is doing for your salvation. They
seldom teach that prayer is God’s doing, something that He produces in you.
Jesus
teaches very little about the theory and practice of prayer. He doesn’t spend
much time on when, where, why, and how to pray, but emphasizes repeatedly the
importance of faith in Him and His Word. Jesus teaches that God-pleasing prayer
depends entirely on Him, from beginning to end, rather than the person praying.
We see this very clearly in our Gospel today, Luke 11:
Now Jesus was
praying in a certain place, and when He finished, one of His disciples said to
Him, “Lord, teach us to pray, as John taught His disciples.” And He said to
them, “When you pray, say: ‘Father, hallowed be your name. Your kingdom come.
Give us each day our daily bread, and forgive us our sins, for we ourselves
forgive everyone who is indebted to us. And lead us not into temptation’” (v.
1-4).
Seeing Jesus pray, at least one of His disciples is
motivated to learn more about prayer. And he starts in the right place by
asking Jesus for help. We do well to follow his lead. Like Jesus’ disciples, we
are all inept and inexperienced when it comes to praying. Left to ourselves, we
can’t pray properly, nor do we know how to pray effectively. Jesus needs to
teach us. He is the only expert in prayer.
Jesus teaches His disciples and us to pray by
giving us His prayer. He alone has the right to speak to God as Father. He
alone has access to Him as His only Son. He alone can legitimately come to God
with His prayers and petitions “as dear children ask their dear father.” But in
His great love and mercy, Jesus shares that special access with you and me by
sharing His prayer.
Jesus doesn’t just teach you a few fundamentals of
prayer and then turn you loose to work on it yourself. Instead, He gets you to
join in with Him as He prays to His heavenly Father. In giving you the Our
Father, Jesus gives you much more than a set prayer that is to be the model for
all your prayers; He gives you His own status as God’s Son and allows you to
share in all of the privileges of His unique relationship with His Father. By
giving you His prayer, He includes you in His relationship and allows you to
act as if you were Him.
But that’s not all! The prayer Jesus gives you to
pray with Him is, in fact, His prayer for you and for the whole world. Notice
how He doesn’t just address God as His own Father, but as “our” Father. Jesus
goes so far as to pray for “our” daily bread, “our” forgiveness, and “our”
protection in temptation, even though He Himself needs none of these things. He
identifies Himself with us and our needs, our sins, and our temptations. He
joins Himself to us so that we can join Him in prayer and borrow everything
from Him. In “the great exchange,” Jesus trades places with us so that we can
be where He is before God the Father.
Jesus also teaches you to pray by sending you
people to pray for. That’s the point of His parable:
“Which of you who
has a friend will go to him at midnight and say to him, ‘Friend, lend me three
loaves, for a friend of mine has arrived on a journey, and I have nothing to
set before him’; and he will answer from within, ‘Do not bother me; the door is
now shut, and my children are with me in bed. I cannot get up and give you
anything’? I tell you, though he will not get up and give him anything because
he is his friend, yet because of his impudence he will rise and give him
whatever he needs” (Luke 11:5-8).
Jesus,
rather ironically, compares God the Father with a grumpy next-door neighbor.
Like the person in the parable, you are often confronted with friends and
acquaintances who need something from you, physically or spiritually, that you
are unable to provide for them. For example, what help can you offer to someone
who is battling cancer or an addiction or who has lost faith in God? You want
to help them, but you’ve got nothing to give them. But you do have access to a
friend next door—God the Father—who has everything that you lack. You may
shamelessly borrow from Him by praying for them, even using Jesus’ own prayer.
Jesus
teaches you that the point of praying is to receive God’s gifts:
“And I tell you, ask, and it will be given to
you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you. For everyone
who asks receives, and the one who seeks finds, and to the one who knocks it
will be opened” (Luke 11:9-10).
You
don’t need to use prayer to wear God down, like demanding children do with
their reluctant parents, nor do you need to inform Him about what you or your
neighbor needs as if He is unaware. The point of prayer is to receive from God the Father. Jesus
gives you His own prayer so that you can use it and your faith in Him to
receive the good gifts He promises to give you. God is not stingy or reluctant
to give. The problem lies in you and me, who are too reluctant to ask for what
He wants to give to us. Jesus helps you pray by commanding you to ask for what
you need and promising that God the Father will give what you ask for.
Yet,
when you pray with Jesus, the Father gives you even more than you ask. Jesus
explains this by comparing prayer to knocking at the door of His Father’s
house. When you knock on the door of your parents’ house, they don’t ask what
you want; they invite you in. Like your parents, God the Father opens the door
for you when you ask Him for something, and He lets you in. Therefore, you
don’t just get something from God when you pray, you receive God the Father,
His company, and life with Him. That is the unexpected bonus of prayer!
Actually,
that’s just one unexpected bonus; there is one gift that is even better. God
the Father gives you His Holy Spirit to help you pray:
“What father among
you, if his son asks for a fish, will instead of a fish give him a serpent; or
if he asks for an egg, will give him 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!” (Luke 11-13).
On the surface, this promise of the Holy Spirit
seems to have nothing to do with teaching us how to pray. Yet, on a deeper
level, it has everything to do with praying. Jesus recognizes that the basic
problem you and I have with prayer is our inability to pray as we would like
and as God requires. His solution is to send the Holy Spirit as our helper, the
one who prompts and enables us to pray.
So, to overcome your inability to pray properly,
Christ not only gives you His prayer, He also gives you the authority to
address His heavenly Father as His dear children by pouring out His Spirit in
your hearts. When you pray, you don’t just join with Jesus who carries you
along with Him; you go along with the Holy Spirit who moves within you and
leads you with Jesus to God the Father.
St. Paul explains this more fully in Romans
8:26-27. He writes that even though you don’t know how to pray or what to pray
for, the Holy Spirit helps you in your weakness and intercedes for you in
accordance with God’s will. The Spirit helps to articulate your hidden needs
and prompts you in what to say. And when you can’t come up with words, He
brings your sighs and groans to God as proper prayer. The Holy Spirit is the
Spirit of prayer (Zechariah 12:10). So, it’s no surprise that the best help
that Jesus gives to you for praying is His Holy Spirit.
And if the Father gives you the Holy Spirit, He
gives you faith in Christ. If He gives you faith in Christ, you are His beloved
child, and He will not cease to hear your prayers and answer them in the way
that’s best for you. So, go in the peace of the Lord and serve your neighbor
with joy. You are forgiven for all of your sins.
In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the
Holy Spirit. Amen.
Much of the teaching on
prayer in this sermon is drawn from John W. Kleing’s “Grace upon Grace:
Spirituality for Today” copyright © 2008. Published by Concordia Publishing
House, St. Louis, MO, 161-166.
Unless otherwise
indicated, all Scripture quotations are from the Holy Bible, English Standard
Version, copyright © 2001 by Crossway Bibles, a publishing ministry of Good
News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
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