Sunday, July 27, Seventh Sunday after Pentecost
âAll You Have To Do is Askâ
Psalm 138; Genesis 18:17-33; Colossians 2:6-19; Luke 11:1-13
Service of Prayer and Preaching
Hymns: #869 âWith the Lord Begin Your Taskâ; #769 âEternal Spirit of the Living Christâ; #779 âCome, My Soul, with Every Careâ; #807 âWhen Morning Gilds the Skiesâ; #770 âWhat a Friend We Have in Jesusâ
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Dear Friends in Christ,
   Grace, mercy, and peace to you, from God our Father and from our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. Amen.
   Opening Prayer: âLord, âteach us to prayâ is a good prayer, and a very needful one, for only Jesus can teach us, by His Word and Spirit, how to pray. Lord, teach us what it is to pray, and stir up and quicken us to the duty. Lord, direct us what to pray for, and teach us what we should say. Amen.â (Matthew Henry)
   I love this story about a little boy who was praying the Lordâs Prayer; and like young children will do, he didnât get the words just right. Instead he prayed, âForgive us our trash baskets, as we forgive those who trash basket against us.â Not exactly the right words, but he sure did capture the spirit of the thing, didnât he?Â
   Because forgiveness is so central to the Lordâs Prayer â and to any Christian prayer, for that matter. Our Small Catechism asks the question, âWhose prayers are acceptable to God?â And the answer comes back, âOnly those who believe in Jesus Christ may pray to God and expect to be heard.â The only reason weâre able to pray to God and believe Heâll hear us is because Jesus gave Himself on a cross to bring us forgiveness for our sins; all prayer depends on the cross. God in Christ, out of nothing but mercy and grace, forgives all the trash in our baskets, and He expects us in turn to open our hearts and forgive all the trash done against us. And with the trash and the sin taken out of the way, then weâll be ready to pray.
   Our Gospel from St. Luke says, âOne day Jesus was praying in a certain place; and when He had finished, one of His disciples said to Him, âLord, teach us to pray, just as John taught his disciples.ââ The disciples were so impressed by the way Jesus prayed - like a Son talking to a Father. No fancy words and no pretensions, reflecting a relationship just as natural as natural can be. I want to know how to pray like that, too! And Jesus proceeds to teach them - and us - just how to do that.
   You may have noticed that the version of the Lordâs Prayer we have in Lukeâs Gospel today isnât exactly the one weâre all used to. The âclassic versionâ of the Lordâs Prayer comes from Matthew 6 and Jesusâ Sermon on the Mount, where He says: "This, then, is how you should pray: 'Our Father in heaven, hallowed be Your name. Your kingdom come, Your will be done on earth as it is in heaven. Give us today our daily bread. Forgive us our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors. And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from the evil one.ââ
   In St. Lukeâs version, read literally from the Greek text, Jesus simply says: âOur Father, holy be Your name. Your kingdom come. Give us this day our daily bread. And forgive us our sins, for we also forgive everyone indebted to us. And lead us not into temptation.â And thatâs it. And neither Gospel has the familiar doxology, âFor Thine is the kingdom and the power and the glory, forever and ever, Amen.â That ending was added as a liturgical add-on in the days of the early Church because, I think, the thing seemed to need a proper ending. (In our divine service, the doxology is actually set up to be sung, to make a clear distinction between the Scriptural part and the man-made.Â
âFor Thine is the kingdom and the power and the glory forever and ever, Amen.âÂ
   The version in St. Luke just isnât the same, is it? It sounds funny that way; it doesnât fit the beloved, age-old formula. I, for one, like the Lordâs Prayer just fine the way it is. This isnât how we were taught to pray it when we were little. But you know, maybe thatâs a good thing. The fact that there are two different versions tells us that Jesus didnât intend this as a formal prayer, but as a pattern to help us pray from the heart. He didnât give it to us as magic spell, or as words to repeat because thereâs some particular magic in them, but as a really fine way to prepare our minds and hearts to talk to God.
   The important things are all there in Luke: We acknowledge first who it is weâre praying to; and we ask for Godâs kingdom, His Spirit, to come, to be present, while we pray. And we acknowledge that our daily bread, all the good things we need to live, come from Him - including the faith to be able to pray and believe weâll be heard. And we ask that the sin that would separate us from God and keeps us apart from Him will be taken away, and that weâll be able to put aside the unforgiving attitudes and resentments and anger that separate us from Godâs will and from true communication with Him. And we ask that weâll be free of the temptation to pray for things that arenât good, and that weâll be free from distractions from the devil and the world while we pray; and that weâll be free from the temptation to doubt that our prayers will be heard.
   And that, says Jesus, is how we get ourselves ready to pray. The Lordâs Prayer isnât âthe whole prayerâ, and Jesus didnât mean it to be. Itâs the preparation, the prelude, the preface to prayer; itâs the introduction, the opening sentences, to get you ready to talk to God, and to listen while God talks to you. Maybe we ought to be praying it at the beginning of our worship service instead of at the end. Itâs good that in our Communion liturgy, we pray it before coming to the Lordâs Table, as a way to get our hearts ready to receive Christ.
   So, Jesus gives His disciples this âpreface for preparing to prayâ; and then, as He so often does, He gives them an illustration, a parable, about what prayer is and how it ought to work. Jesusâ parable is about a man who has a friend. The door-knocking friend in the parable is us, and the man heâs waking up in the middle of the night to ask for bread is God. Do you ever think God gets tired of answering our prayers? All the prayers and needs keep coming to Him by the millions and billions, hour after hour and day after day. Do you ever think He needs a vacation, or a day off once in a while, or even just a good nightâs sleep? (And no, I donât know how God hears all those prayers all at once, but Heâs God, so I believe that somehow, He does!)
   The man tucked in bed in Jesusâ parable doesnât want to get up; who wants to get up out of a warm bed in the middle of the night? But âbecause of the manâs boldness, he gets up and gives him as much as he needs.â God, of course, doesnât treat us that way or get tired of our prayers; but this is a parable. Jesus is telling a story to make a point here. The Greek word for âboldnessâ is anaidea, a word that means persistent, shameless, or even impudent. Like father Abraham in our Old Testament reading, going back to ask of God again and again and again, even when he was afraid he might be making the Lord angry by asking âjust one more time.â Jesus told His disciples in another place that they should âalways pray and never give up.â And St. James says, âYou do not have because you do not ask God.â If the cause is just and the need is great, you just have to ask and keep on asking.
   I heard a lovely story a few years ago about a missionary school â in the Philippines, I think it was. All the children in their compound had the croup, and they were praying for hot water bottles (remember those?) to clear chest congestion and help the children breathe. A shipment of supplies from a church in America came the next day, that had been shipped six months before; and when they opened the first carton, it was filled with⊠hot water bottles! From a little group of Godâs people who had no idea when they packed the boxes what the need was going to be.Â
   Know that God already has the answer to your prayers before you even know what your needs are going to be. If He seems slow in answering, itâs not because Heâs lagging behind or not paying attention, or because heaven has a backlog or there are âsix callers ahead of youâ on the prayer line. The truth is, Heâs way ahead of you, anticipating your needs and knowing what they are - and what they will be - far, far better than you do.
   So, says Jesus, âAsk and it will be given to you; seek and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to you. For everyone who asks receives; he who seeks finds; and to him who knocks, the door will be opened.â This is such a wonderful affirmation from Jesus; itâs a promise to answer our prayers, from a God who always keeps His promises.Â
Itâs a statement that should erase all doubt about the power of our prayers; and doesnât it even make any doubt we may have about the effectiveness of our prayers a sin? So given the greatness of the prayer promise, why arenât we praying, and praying believing, far more than we do, when clearly, weâve been promised that it works? Jesus doesnât say might or maybe or could be here- He says WILL.What a pity it would be that our doubts might keep us from receiving the fullness of the gift.
   Jesus goes on here to talk about fathers and sons, and fish and snakes, and scorpions and eggs. The Father-child relationship is the big thing here - maybe the whole thing, and the whole point Jesus is making. Your Father in heaven loves you; He wants to bless you in every way there is to be blessed. âEvery good and perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of the heavenly lights,â St. James says.
If you ask your Father for good things â like a fish or an egg, or a hot water bottle â Heâs not going to dump a snake or a scorpion in your lap instead. No good father would do that.
   Now if you ask God to make you rich - âLord, please give me the numbers for tonightâs Powerballâ - most likely He isnât going to do that. For most of us, that kind of money would be bad for us anyway; winning the Lotto or striking it rich has a sad tendency to ruin people. If your three-year-old asks for the whole bag of candy, you donât just hand it over, because you know itâs going to make him sick. (If God has blessed you with wealth and prosperity, by the way, thereâs a reason for that, too; He expects you to be generous with your blessings and to help the poor and those in need; what He give to you, he expects to flow through you). And He isnât going to answer a prayer to zap your ornery neighbor with a lightning bolt, either.
   But as for your daily bread â what you need to live and get along and be happy from day to day â itâs His everlasting joy to give you those things. (The intangible things â love and joy and peace â are also included in daily bread; we need those most of all). And since we know we can trust Him for the smaller things, and we know that Heâs caring for our everyday needs, why in the world wouldnât we be bold to ask of Him when the really big needs come along?
   St. Paul says, âSo then, just as you received Christ Jesus as Lord, continue to live in Him, rooted and built up in Him, strengthened in the faith as you were taught, and overflowing with thankfulness.â Thatâs a call to prayer; thatâs what a life of prayer looks like, and what it means to âpray continually.â I love the definition of prayer in the Small Catechism: âPrayer is speaking to God in words and thoughts.â Not a litany of memorized prayers, to be repeated day after day; not a prayer you can run over your lips without thinking about what it really means; but prayer as a running holy conversation with your Father in heaven. (If you ever catch me talking to myself, it wasnât me I was talking to!)
   O Lord, what a marvelous gift weâve been given, that we can bring our prayers to You and know Youâll always hear us. Father in Heaven, holy be Your name, and help us all to be holy like You. Deliver us from the evil one, and from the âhollow and deceptive philosophiesâ of this world, and from any human tradition or principle or habit or idea that might separate us from Christ or keep us away from Him. Father, circumcise and purify our hearts, as St. Paul says, and keep us forever in our baptismal grace. We know that Jesus Christ our Lord has triumphed over sin, death, and hell, by His death on a cross for our sakes, and that Heâs opened the way to heaven for us by being raised up from the dead. Itâs by His precious blood that the sin that keeps us from God has now been removed, and itâs faith in the forgiving blood of Jesus thatâs opened the way for our prayers to be heard in heaven. Father, teach us to pray, help us to pray, and may our prayers be âpowerful and effectiveâ to change the world around us. We pray in Jesusâ name; Amen.