Sunday, April 24, 2011

Prayer 101 - #20 Let's Pretend - 4 of 4

I tell you, even though he will not get up and give you the bread because of friendship, yet because of your shameless audacity he will surely get up and give you as much as you need. Luke 11:8


When Jesus tells a story, there is usually one primary point that he wants to communicate. In this story the primary point is that God responds to shameless audacity. Shameless is defined as impervious to disgrace. And audacity is fearless daring. In a single Jewish word, shameless audacity is chutzpah. Simpler yet, shameless audacity is gall.


Shameless audacity is behavior born out of passion, determination and perseverance in pursuing a goal. It is behavior born in the heart and not behavior that is feigned or fabricated. Faith and confidence in God is at its core. It is Holy Spirit induced behavior.


It is the behavior that was seen when a packed-out, house-meeting with Jesus was interrupted by friends of a paralytic lowering him through the roof in front of Jesus. (Lk 5:18-26) It was the Gentile woman’s behavior who refused to be deterred from her pursuit of Jesus to deliver her daughter from demon possession. Jesus initially ignored her, the disciples tried to send her away, she didn’t fit with Jesus’ mission statement, and she didn’t stop when Jesus said something to her that could be perceived as insulting. (Mk 7:24-30) Shameless audacity was a blind beggar who refused to be silenced in his attempt to get Jesus’ attention in order to be healed.


Students of prayer pay attention. Jesus clearly tells the subject story in Luke 11 in the context of teaching his disciples to pray. Prayer according to Jesus will connect with God when it is offered with shameless audacity.

Saturday, April 23, 2011

Prayer 101 - #19 Let's Pretend - 3 of 4

‘Friend, lend me three loaves of bread’… And suppose the one inside answers, ‘Don’t bother me. The door is already locked, and my children and I are in bed. I can’t get up and give you anything.’

Luke 11:5B, 7


The asker in the “Lets Pretend” story initially encounters resistance to his request. The same is often true in prayer. There are times we ask God for something and encounter apparent resistance to our request. In the Bible someone attempting to talk to Jesus experienced this.


A gentile lady, concerned for her daughter who was tormented by the devil, came to Jesus in Matthew 15:21-28 and desperately cried out for help for her child. Here’s what happened:


  • Jesus did not answer a word.
  • The disciples attempted to send her away because of the annoying persistence of her cries.
  • Jesus stated that he came to minister to Jews not Gentiles.
  • The woman knelt before Jesus, again begging for help.
  • Jesus stated it would be inappropriate to take the ministry intended for the Jews (i.e. the children) and give it to the Gentiles (i.e. the dogs).
  • The woman responded that even the dogs get the crumbs under the master’s table.
  • Jesus responded and said your request is granted and the woman’s daughter was healed at that moment.


When we encounter apparent resistance from God, will we walk away? Did the “bread asker” in the “Let’s Pretend” story walk away at the initial response to his request? Jesus teaches us to persevere in prayer.

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Prayer 101 - #18 Let's Pretend - 2 of 4

Then Jesus said to them, “Suppose you have a friend, and you go to him at midnight and say, ‘Friend, lend me three loaves of bread; a friend of mine on a journey has come to me, and I have no food to offer him.’ Luke 11:5-6


Jesus continues his prayer class by telling the disciples a “Let’s Pretend” story concerning prayer. The story has the disciples as the main character asking for bread from a friend at an unseemly hour in order to feed a traveling friend who is in need of food. The request for bread was granted…not out of friendship but because of the shameless audacity of the requestor.


Though the friendship between the “bread-asker” and the “bread-giver” was not ultimately the reason the request for bread was granted, it was the basis for why the request was made in the first place. The “bread-asker” knew the “bread-giver” well enough to call him friend…well enough to know that he would have enough bread to give…well enough to know if he came at the most inconvenient time, he would likely grant his request. Prayer is not approaching a stranger named “God” or an impersonal King with a request. Prayer is approaching someone with whom you have a relationship…someone you can call “Friend”. Prayer is approaching someone you know well enough to know that he has abundant supply…well enough to know that he will grant your request. Because he is your friend, you know he will grant your request even though you may approach him very imperfectly.

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Prayer 101 - #17 Let's Pretend 1 of 4

Then Jesus said to them, “Suppose you have a friend, and you go to him at midnight and say, ‘Friend, lend me three loaves of bread; a friend of mine on a journey has come to me, and I have no food to offer him.’ Luke 11:5-6


Luke 11 begins with a disciple asking Jesus to teach them to pray. Jesus begins his prayer class by giving the disciples the words of a prayer. These are not words to be mindlessly babbled but words that give insight regarding legitimate elements of prayer. Jesus continues his prayer class by telling the disciples a “Let’s Pretend” story concerning “how” to pray and “who” to pray for.


Jesus tells the disciples “Let’s pretend you have a traveling friend that has come to you and you have nothing to feed him. Let’s pretend you go to another friend to request food for your traveling friend. And let’s pretend you go with your request at midnight. He’s in bed, his kids are in bed, the door is locked and, by the nature of things, you are going to spotlight your own insensitivity, sloth, or poverty.” Jesus goes on with the story to say that the request was fulfilled…not out of friendship but because of the shameless audacity of the requestor.


Prayer is about requesting provision for those God places in your life that have needs which you are incapable of meeting. Notice in the “Let’s Pretend” story that the provider does not give the bread directly to the traveler but to the audacious requestor so that the requestor can give it to his traveling friend. When you pray for your friend’s needs be prepared to have the request answered through you.

Monday, April 11, 2011

Prayer 101 - #16 JM 4 of 4 Thoughts on the Lord's Prayer

Note: John MacArthur (JM), pastor of Grace Community Church in Sun Valley, California, has some of the best developed thoughts on the Lord’s Prayer that I could find. I would like to devote a number of Prayer 101 postings to excerpts from his sermons.

Now remember this, every part of this prayer speaks of God. "Our Father, who art in heaven," that's God's paternity, as our Father. "Hallowed be thy name." That's God priority. "Thy kingdom come." That's God's program. "Thy will be done," that's God's plan. "Give us this day our daily bread." That's God's provision. "Forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors." That's God's pardon. "Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil." That's God's protection. "For thine is the kingdom, the power, the glory forever." That's God's pre-eminence. The whole of prayer focuses on Him and thus we've used the verse again and again, and where Jesus said in John 14:13, "Whatever you ask in my name, that will I do, that the Father may be glorified in the Son." It's the glory of God that is the measure of prayer.


http://www.gty.org/Resources/Sermons/2236

Saturday, April 9, 2011

Prayer 101 - #15 JM 3 of 4 Thoughts on the Lord's Prayer

Note: John MacArthur (JM), pastor of Grace Community Church in Sun Valley, California, has some of the best developed thoughts on the Lord’s Prayer that I could find. I would like to devote a number of Prayer 101 postings to excerpts from his sermons.


“Look just at the last three elements. The bread, provision, the forgiveness, pardon, and the leading not into temptation, protection, and you find the three time dimensions of life. Our daily bread, present. Our debts, sins from the past. And lead us not, that's the future. This little prayer encompasses the past, the present and the future provision sustenance of God. Bread, that's physical, forgiveness, that's mental it relieves the anguish of guilt, and leading not into temptation is spiritual, that's the maintenance of spiritual life. Whether you talking about past, present, future, whether you're talking about physical, mental, spiritual, whatever it is you're talking about it's here, it's here. And by the way all of the petitions in this verse are in the imperative mode in the Greek which means there's an intensity to them, a tremendous intensity, there's a fantastic brevity in every phrase, but it's an intense thing, "Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done." There are no qualifying elements. Everything in this prayer beloved seeks to glorify God, seeks to lift up His name, seeks to exalt His holiness. And I would just tell you right now that's the purpose of all prayer, if you think prayer is for you you've missed the point, you've missed the point. That's why we get so messed up, we're praying for ourselves we don't take into account the whole community of faith and we don't take into account the whole will of God and the perimeters of His own Kingdom.”


http://www.gty.org/Resources/Sermons/2233

Thursday, April 7, 2011

Prayer 101 - #14 JM 2 of 4 Thoughts on the Lord's Prayer

Note: John MacArthur (JM), pastor of Grace Community Church in Sun Valley, California, has some of the best developed thoughts on the Lord’s Prayer that I could find. I would like to devote a number of Prayer 101 postings to excerpts from his sermons.


“For example, one way that to look at this prayer, it unfolds the relationship that we have with God, and it hits it so many ways it's just staggering. For example, it says, "Our Father," that means that we have a Father-child relationship with God. It says, "Hallowed be thy name," we have a deity and worshiper relationship with God. It says, "Thy kingdom come." We have a sovereign and a subject relationship with God. It says, "Thy will be done," we have a Master and a servant relationship with God. It says, "Give us our daily bread." We have a benefactor and a beneficiary relationship with God. It says, "forgive us our (trespasses or our) debts," we have a Savior sinner relationship with God. It says, "Lead us not into temptation," we have a guide and a pilgrim relationship with God.”



“We could study this prayer in just that way, how does it show our relationship to God. Let me look at it another way. It defines the spirit in which we're to pray. What is to be our attitude as we pray? First of all it says, "Our," that's an unselfish spirit, then it says, "Father," that's a family spirit, then it says, "Hallowed be thy name." A reverent spirit. "Thy kingdom come." A loyal spirit. "Thy will be done," a submissive spirit. "Give us our daily bread." A dependent spirit. "Forgive us our trespasses," a penitent spirit. "Lead us not into temptation," a humble spirit. "Thine is the kingdom," a confident spirit, "and the power," a triumphant spirit, "and the glory," an exultant spirit.”


http://www.gty.org/Resources/Sermons/2233


Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Prayer 101 - #13 JM 1 of 4 Thoughts on the Lord's Prayer

Note: John MacArthur (JM), pastor of Grace Community Church in Sun Valley, California, has some of the best developed thoughts on the Lord’s Prayer that I could find. I would like to devote a number of Prayer 101 postings to excerpts from his sermons.


“Further let me say this, there is no occasion in the entire New Testament, Gospels, Acts or Epistles where this prayer is ever repeated by anybody. It is not a prayer to be made a ritual. It is a model for every prayer you ever pray about whatever you pray about. It is a skeleton on which you are to put meat and bones and flesh. For example, I have in front of me some sermon notes, now that’s not a sermon that's just some notes. And if I came in here and just read you the notes we'd be done in ten minutes and you wouldn't know much. That isn't the point, it's; a skeleton I gotta put flesh and bones on it, I gotta make it live and what Jesus is giving here is a prayer outline, that's all. Here are the basic elements of prayer, it's just like an outline, you have to develop this into its meaningful expression in every different situation. And beloved, this prayer covers everything, it is, it's staggering, it just, the more I studied this the more frustrated I got, I came back here on Saturday because there was so much of this going in my head and I usually try to finish by Friday so that I can have Saturday to mull it over, I was here on Saturday, I went home on Saturday night, I started to get into bed and I went back to this thing and I...it just kept flooding my brain, I got up this morning and again I was at it. I feel like so much is in my head, because there's so many ways to see this prayer, it just got bigger and bigger and more encompassing and more encompassing the more I studied it. It teaches us so much about prayer.”

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Prayer 101 - #12 The Evil One

“but deliver us from the evil one.” Matthew 6:13b


This is a continuation of the petition of asking God to not lead us into temptation. It is another way of praying the same thing. It is the recognition of one in particular who is evil who would have us not recognize God as our Father, not hallow the name of God, not recognize God as king nor desire his rule on earth, not depend on God for daily needs, not forgive others who are in debt to us, not recognize our own severe debt to God, not recognize his willingness to forgive our debt. All of these attitudes and behaviors are self destructive and cause unnecessary injury to our relationships with God and others. Yet the evil one is a master at luring us into these things and once he has lured us there, he is a master of how to snare us and keep us there. It is proper when we pray to ask for God to deliver us from evil and from the evil one. This is a prayer that indicates awareness of who we are, who Satan is, our propensity to do evil, and our inability to set ourselves free from the snare of evil.


The Lord’s Prayer builds up to this petition. Our aim and passion as believers is to hallow the name of God and to live supernatural relationships on earth. The evil one’s aim and passion is to prevent us from doing this and to exercise his expertise in making it so. But to pray “deliver us from evil” is an answerable prayer, one we can confidently pray in the name of Jesus, one we can be sure will be answered and one that should evoke the deepest praise and thanksgiving and worship as we pray it.