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The Perfect Prayer
A Topical Study of Matthew
6:9-13
As far as we know, the disciples never asked Jesus to teach
them to preach, to prophesy, or cast out demons; how to worship or witness,
how to build a ministry or lead their families. The one thing the disciples
asked of Jesus directly was, 'Lord, teach us to pray.'
Why? I believe it is because, after watching Jesus for several
years, the disciples were convinced prayer was the secret of His ministry
and the foundation of all He did.
In Luke 11, Jesus gave His disciples the same prayer, virtually
word for word, that He had given two years earlier, recorded here in Matthew.
He didn't say, 'The prayer I taught two years ago was for the multitudes,
but for you disciples, here's something heavier.' Or'The prayer I
taught in the Sermon on the Mount was at the beginning of My ministry, but
now two years later, here is something more meaty.' No, He said, 'Don't
you recall what I taught you two years ago?' as He gave this prayer verbatim
to them once again.
This revolutionized my thinking. I had always been under the
impression that the Lord's Prayer was simply an example, or a modelthat
we could study it and learn from it, but it was not necessarily to be prayed
verbatim. While I still believe the Lord's Prayer is a wonderful model and
a perfect example, I have come to believe it is more than that. I believe
it is actually sacramental.
'Sacrament' means 'coming from the outside and working its
way in'. Baptism, the Lord's Table, and the marriage ceremony are all sacraments
because they are external demonstrations which signify internal transformation.
I have discovered personally that the Lord's prayer is sacramentalor
close to it. That is, by praying the Lord's prayer from memory word for
word externally, there is something wonderful and mystical and beautiful
which happens internally.
'Wait!' you say. 'Didn't Jesus teach against meaningless repetitions?'
Yes, in Matthew
6:7, Jesus did warn about vain and meaningless repetitions. If I say
the Lord's prayer with my mind a million miles away and my heart not sensitive
to the Spirit, it will profit me nothing. But, when I say it meaningfullyconcentrating,
thinking, contemplating, and meditatingwhen I pray this prayer as
the Lord gave it to His disciples in Luke 11 and to the masses in Matthew
6, I have discovered it has a very powerful and potent effect upon me personally.
I believe it will upon you as well.
There are two things which strike me about this prayer. I
am amazed first of all by its completeness. It is wonderful because it covers
all of our needs and all of God's worthiness. Secondly, I am impressed with
its conciseness. 65 words long, it only takes 30 seconds to pray.
We have fallen into the fallacy of thinking the strength of
prayer is in direct proportion to the length of prayereven though
Jesus went out of His way to say, 'Don't think you will be heard for your
much speaking.' Jesus' prayers were complete, but concise. If I asked the
Lord to teach me to pray, I would think He would give me a book 100 pages
long at the very least. But He didn't. He simply gave a prayer 65 words
long.
I am reminded of the time Moses' sister Miriam was struck
with leprosy. He looked to the Lord and said, 'Heal her now, O God, I beseech
Thee,' (Numbers
12:13). Eight words. And the Lord healed her.
Now, we also know Moses was so in love with God he spent 40
days and 40 nights seeking His face in the desert. Thus, I'm not discounting
or diminishing the importance of those lengthy chunks of time when you seek
the Lord. But in our daily prayer life, I think we need a re-adjustment
in our thinking.
During the past several days as I have frequently prayed the
Lord's Prayer word for word, I have found a liberty, an empowering, and
a joy that has been really special and refreshing to me. I can pause in
my car before going to my next appointment (already late) and say,
'Our Father which art in heaven, Hallowed be Thy Name. Thy
Kingdom come. Thy will be done in earth, as it is in heaven. Give us this
day our daily bread. And forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors.
And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil: For Thine is the
Kingdom, and the power, and the glory forever. Amen.'
Then it's out my door, and into the meeting with the sense
that the Lord is with me and the bases are covered. Notice six elements
of this prayer:
The first component, verse 9, concerns God's Person.
The second, verse 10, concerns God's Purpose.
Thirdly, God's Provision is seen in verse 11.
God's Pardon is in verse 12.
God's Protection is in verse 13.
God's Pre-Eminence is in the last half of verse 13.
Our Father . . .
When Jesus taught this prayer, He must have shocked those
who were listening to Him when He said, 'Our Father'. The word for 'Father'
is 'Abba', meaning 'Papa'. Keep in mind that in the Old Testament, God was
addressed as Elohim, the Strong One; El Shaddai, the Mighty One; Yahweh,
the unspeakable word which meant, 'I Am that I Am'.
Why did Jesus suddenly say, 'When you pray, call God Daddy,
Papa, Abba, Father?' Was He no longer the Powerful, Unspeakable, Omnipotent
God of the Old Testament? Did God change? No. God didn't change. We did.
But as many as received him, to them gave he power to become
the sons of God, even to them that believe on His name. John
1:12
We were adopted into His family. If you are truly a child
of God, He is still the Unspeakable One, the Almighty One, the Omnipotent
Onebut because you have been adopted into His family, to you He is
also Abba. Notice also, He's not just my Father, but He is Our Father. He's
the Presbyterian's Father and the Pentecostal's Father, the Catholic's Father,
and the Lutheran's Father. Christians, hand in handregardless of their
denominationpray, 'Our Father', not only now, but throughout the ages.
I can't hit like Babe Ruth, paint like Michelangelo, or sing
like George Beverly Shea. But you know what? I can pray like John Knox,
like Martin Luther, like Charles Spurgeon, because I can pray the same prayer
they prayed. It is the perfect prayer because it came from the Perfect Pray-er,
Jesus Christ. You can pray this prayer daily, hourly, whenever you like.
And you will find yourself in incredible company with the great saints of
the ages, with believers of all other flavors, who all love God and address
Him as Father because of their relationship to the Son.
Which art in heaven . . .
As my Father, I relate to Him. But because He's in heaven,
I reverence Him.
Be not rash with thy mouth, and let not thine heart be
hasty to utter any thing before God: for God is in heaven and thou upon earth:
therefore let thy words be few.
I like that! Solomon reminds us we don't have to pray with
lofty terminology or sanctimonious tones. Yes, we must be reverent because
God is in heaven. But we can be real because He's our Father.
Hallowed be Thy name . . .
'Hallowed' is a word which has been lost in our language because
the concept has been lost from our lives. It means 'to make holy, separated,
transcendent'.
'O, Lord, hallowed, holy is Your Name. Everyone around me,
everything that touches me, all that is within me has been tainted and eroded
by sin. But You are holy. Hallowed is Your Name.'
Secondly, notice not only God's Person, but His Purpose .
. .
Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done on earth as it is in
heaven.
There are only two kinds of people: Those who are in harmony
with God's purpose, saying, 'Thy will be done', and those who live for themselves,
saying, 'My will be done.'
God is terrifyingly fair. If you say, 'My will be done', He
will allow that to happen. If you say, 'I don't want God', He will allow
you to be damned. If you say, 'I want my way', He will give you your way.
We have a choice to make. We can either, as the Psalmist says,
'Be still and know that He is God', or we can say, 'God, You be still and
know that I am me.'
The prophet Isaiah went to Hezekiah and said, 'Hezekiah, the
Lord wants you to know it's time for you to die. Prepare your house.' Isaiah
38 tells us Hezekiah turned his face to the wall and chattered like a bird,
'Let me live. Let me live.' Finally, God said, 'OK, you got it. Your will
be done.' Hezekiah lived 15 more years, and they were the 15 most tragic
years of his life. During that time, Hezekiah set the stage for the Babylonian
invasion, and he fathered a son named Manassehthe most wicked king
in the history of Israel. Hezekiah would have been so much better simply
praying, 'Thy kingdom come; Thy will be done, Father, on earth as it is
in heaven.'
When you pray, is it with a profound simplicity? 'Father,
Thy will be done.' Or is it with a demanding mentality. 'You listen to me,
God. I want this'?
Ruth Bell Graham said this: 'I am so glad God did not listen
to my foolish demands in my younger years. I would have married the wrong
guy fifteen times.' But she showed wisdom when she ended her prayers with
the Lord's prayer, saying, 'Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done.'
Thirdly, God's Provision.
Give us . . .
Notice Jesus did not pray, 'Give Me My bread,' but 'Give us
our bread.' There are no singular pronouns in the Lord's Prayer. For me,
it's so freeing to think of my needs as 'our needs'. If I'm feeling tired,
I pray, 'Lord, give us strength, my brothers and sisters who are feeling
fatigued today.' If I'm sad, I pray, 'Lord, lift our spirits today.' There's
wonderful, continual intercession when a person prays, 'Our Father, give
us this day, forgive us our debts, lead us not into temptation'.
. . . this day . . .
Give us this daynot this month, not this year. Why does
the Lord want us to pray day by day? Why can't we just sort of blanket our
requests by saying, 'Lord, give us this month our monthly needs' or 'Give
us this year our yearly bread.'
The Lord wants us to pray for our daily needs because prayer
in and of itself is our greatest need. If the Father gave things to us on
a monthly basis, we wouldn't pray very frequently. The Lord wants you and
me to come before Him every day. Because He's on an ego trip? No. Because
He has need of us? No. Because we have need of Him. He is our Bread.
. . . our daily bread.
I think it's foolish for people to pray, 'Give us this day
our daily bread', but fail to take Communion. It's like praying, 'Lord,
send light', while keeping our eyes closed. 'For this cause,' writes Paul,
'many are weak and sick and even dying unnecessarily,' (I Corinthians 11:30).
I believe the ultimate answer to this request is found at the Communion
Table, for truly He is our Bread. Don't let the pendulum swing too far,
Fundamental Protestant. Don't diminish the mystery of the Lord's Table by
saying, 'I don't believe Communion is really mystical or miraculous. It's
not really necessary. It's optional.'
No. It's foundational. It's essential. Check out the Book
of Acts. Communion was a key component of the Early Church. Jesus Himself
said, 'Do this often in remembrance of Me. Be constantly fed and refreshed
in Me.'
Fourthly, God's Pardon.
And forgive us our debts . . .
'What is found in Christianity which is not found in any other
religion?' That was the question asked at a seminar featuring several prominent
Christian theologians. C.S. Lewis, the brilliant thinker and gifted author,
was caught in traffic while the rest of the panel puzzled over this question.
After about an hour, Lewis arrived, and the question was posed to him. 'That's
simple,' he replied. 'The forgiveness of sin.'
Our past is buried in the sea of God's forgiveness and forgetfulness.
He does not remember our sin anymore. And that is what makes Christianity
absolutely unique.
. . . as we forgive our debtors.
In the expression of this prayer is the explosion of forgiveness.
I might begin praying the Lord's Prayer with bitterness in my heart towards
someone who hurt me six years ago, or eight weeks ago, or ten minutes agobut
as I pray, 'Forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors', suddenly the
resentment, the bitterness, the ill-will dissipates from me as I pray this
prayer meaningfully.
Fifthly, God's Protection.
And lead us not into temptation . . .
The word, 'temptation', does not mean a drawing into sin,
but into testing. Although Scripture records Abraham was tempted with a
knife in his hand and his son on the altar (Genesis 22:1), the temptation
was not to do evil. It was a testing. James 1:13 says that God cannot be
tempted with evil, neither tempts He any man with evil. God does not tempt
you.
What, then, is Jesus teaching us to pray here?
'Lead us not into testings'.
Wait a minute! Doesn't the Word declare that testings are
good? Doesn't James say to count it all joy when you fall into various testings
and trials, knowing that testing produces patience? Doesn't Peter say that
testings purify us like gold purified in a fire? Why would we pray, 'Lead
us not into testings'? The answer is humility. Which of us would stand up
today and say, 'Lord, test me! I'm ready! Send testing my way, and watch
me flex my spiritual muscles.' Foolish is the person who would say such
a thing! Thus, it's in humility that we constantly pray, 'Lead us not into
testing.' But if I have prayed, 'Lord lead us not into temptation, then
should God take me through testing, I can embrace it joyfully, knowing He
will not test me above what I am able (I Corinthians 10:13).
. . . but deliver us from evil.
Satan is real, and we need God's protection.
George Adam Smith, a wonderful preacher and author, was
on a mountain-climbing tour of the Alps. On one particularly high peak, he
ran to the very precipice and looked out over Switzerland. Suddenly, a strong
gust of wind came up which threatened to blow him over the edge. From several
feet away, his guide called to him, 'Mr. Smith! On your knees, sir! The only
way you're safe up here is on your knees!'
It has been rightly said that Satan trembles when he sees
the weakest saint upon his knees. Jesus taught us to pray, 'God, protect
us. Lead us not into trials and testings. And deliver us from the evil one.'
Finally, we come to the last componentGod's Pre-Eminence.
For thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory,
for ever. Amen.
This concise and potent prayer ends in an explosion of praise,
literally reading, 'For thine is the kingship, and the dunamis, the doxa,
the heaviness, the weight. It's all Yours. You are King. You are powerful!
Glory! So be it!' When I consider
the Person of GodHe's my Abba, my Papa;
the Purpose of GodHis will, which is right;
His Provisiondaily bread and the Bread of Life;
His PardonI am forgiven, and can forgive others;
His Protectionfrom temptation and the evil one;
I have no other choice but to worship Him. God does not need
our worship, but we need to worship. When I'm at a place where I'm saying,
'For Thine is the Kingdom and the power and the glory forever', with open
heart and raised hands, suddenly I'm outside myself, lifted above my cares
and worries, my hobbies and toys.
Sixty-five profoundly simple and simply profound words. You
can meditate on this prayer for hours, days, months, years, for the rest
of your life. But I encourage you to appropriate it right now. Allow this
Sacrament to be worked into your life, and you'll find a whole new dimension
of the Lord's Person and purpose, provision and pardon, protection and pre-eminence
worked out through your life.
Courson, Jon. "The Gospel According to Matthew."
Tree of Life Bible Commentary. Blue Letter Bible. 21 Nov 2002. 17 Apr 2005.
<http://www.blueletterbible.org/Comm/jon_courson/Mat/Mat006top_v9-13.html>.
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