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Ninth Sunday after Pentecost, 07/29/2007

Sermon on Luke 11:1 - 13, by Walter W. Harms

 

HOW TO PRAY

How do your pray? Who taught you to pray? Maybe no one ever taught

you how to pray and what it is all about. Do you pray a lot? A little?

Too little? Think you ought to pray more? I am here on this last

Sunday I am leading you in worship to give you a guilty conscience for

not praying enough! You can believe that if you want to.

Perhaps a more important question is: why pray at all? If God is in

charge and he loves you and accepts you (I hope you have heard that

enough from me), then why pray? Or perhaps you may believe that while

the saying goes, "prayer changes everything," in reality, prayer

changes nothing. Life, well, it just happens and so what is the

meaning of prayer if that is the case? Jesus has some interesting

points to make with you are persistent prayer in the Gospel for today.

Now both you and the disciples of Jesus way back then had heard more

than their share of public prayers. They had been to the synagogue and

to the temple in Jerusalem and heard many prayers. I am certain that

in their homes they had prayers spoken both in the morning and in the

evening. Yet now they came to Jesus and asked him to teach them to

pray, as John the Baptizer had taught his disciples to pray. So they

knew about prayer and praying. John the Baptizer must have taught his

disciples a special way to pray. Too bad, we have not a clue how he

taught them or the contents of his prayers.

But let's not rush things too much. Let's try to understand why we are

to pray and perhaps a little bit of what prayer is all about to begin

with. Then I hope you will understand the prayer Jesus taught to his

disciples a little better. Oh, yes, and don't get too disturbed that

the Lord's Prayer in Luke is a little different than in the other

Gospels. Luke and none of the other disciples include all that Jesus

said. They only included what they thought, as God the Spirit lead

them, to write what was important to their view of Jesus.

If you are a Christian, then you probably have been baptized. Being

baptized puts you into the family of God. That's where you are with

all those who have faith in Jesus as their Lord and Savior. It's a

huge family, a growing family. I heard last week that 65,000 new

members come into our family every week, most of them in Africa.

Now in every family, there is the head of the family. Even if the male

head is gone, there is a head of the family. In most families the head

is the Father. So in the family of God, we, and the "we" is important,

we have our heavenly Father.

Now if you grew up in a family without the presence of a father, or if

your father, sad to say, ignored you or hurt you, calling God "our

Father" can be somewhat problematic. We missed something not having a

father, but just what we missed, we are not sure. We may have

unresolved questions about life and our place in it because a father

never confirmed our importance. In fact, his absence may have

unconsciously confirmed our value as being low. Why would a father

desert his child, unless the child was "defective?" Lurking in back o

our minds may be the notion: God is going to leave me some day because

I am not good enough for him.

We cannot resolve all that. Most of us would probably say we did not

have a "perfect" father. I know I would not say that. But in the

family with a father, we have protection, care, love and so much more.

You who are parents know what goes into parenting and it is much more

than a roof over the head, clothes on the back, and food on the table.

And children know where all the goodies in life come from. And they

ask their father. He is the one who can give them anything and

everything they want. No need to do anything but ask and the father

comes through. And if he doesn't, well, they still trust and love him.

So it is in the family of God. Our heavenly Father cares for all of us

more abundantly that we can either ask or deserve. He is "our" Father.

He has the whole family of God in mind, always. Isn't that absolutely

magnificent? He protects, provides, looks down the road at what we

might need, keeps harmful persons and events from getting to us, cleans

up our messes, teaches us lessons, helps us so we have a good spirit

about life and what's ahead, cares for the weakest and the strongest in

the family. We are never ignored.

When you pray, when you invoke the deity above all other deities, then

say: "Father."

Then we say, "Help us to honor you as the one who give us all things."

Keep us from thinking we are in charge and we are the ones who provide

everything. Help us to remember that you sent Jesus to let us know how

much you love and care for us. And it doesn't make any difference how

we act as your children, loving or unloving, you always are there for

us. Wow! Father, help us honor you as our Father and the Father of

our Lord Jesus Christ.

As Jesus said, if we who forget even at the tender age of whatever age

you are, who God is and wish he wasn't around to keep us on the

straight and narrow because the broad and easy road looks so much more

exciting, he still is going to give us good gifts.

Good gifts? I'm a little suspicious. I don't know about that when I

look at what I have received in life. Ever get a gift and you

wondered: Why in the world would someone give me this? You know like a

vacuum cleaner on your birthday. Yet all that comes from God is good

for us his children. And the promise is that God will give us this

special gift of the Holy Spirit! Isn't that exciting!!!! That news

doesn't exactly make you jump up and down, does it?

Well, the Spirit is the one who give you the ability to trust you've

got a real Father in heaven. He helps us trust that in the midst of

things we cannot understand, God is a loving Father to us. The gift of

the Spirit is always to be treasured, for without him, we live in the

arid desert with terrible fires threatening to destroy us. With the

Good News of the Living Water from heaven life means nothing and the

Sacraments become simply stupid repetitions of remembering that someone

long ago got nailed for being a nice guy. Well, so what? Life is

tough and good guys often end up on the short end. That is precisely

what we would think without the Spirit, the gift from our Father to us

his children. So you be in charge of our lives, Father. Your kingdom come.

And we're always worried about whether we're going to have enough. So

don't forget to give us, your forgetful children what we need to live

so that we will remember you and honor you and live the abundant life,

trusting you as our Father.

And we always have this wash out in the road of life that we could

never get around, and all progress in life would be thwarted and we

would have to carry this burden of knowing that despite all your

kindness, we ignore you, forget you, think we know better than you.

Yes, that we are guilty of wanting to be THE BIG ONE in life. We are

always trying to take your place, like a child is told when the daddy

leaves: "Now you be the daddy in the family until I return." That's

what we keep telling ourselves. What a bunch of @$#%X that is. Me be

in charge? I can't even do well with what you have entrusted me, much

less be in charge of the whole matter.

I saw the movie, Bruce Almighty, about a person who gets to be God for

a while. Does he ever screw things up! He hasn't got the foggiest

about what is good for others or for ourselves. And we know better than

our Father?

So, forgive us our sins, and like it or not, we'll forgive everyone,

yes, everyone who is indebted to us.

And if we know a little about ourselves, we would know that all too

often, if it were up to us whether we would take the fruit on the

forbidden tree, or our heavenly Father, we would choose the fruit and

have not a thought about its consequences. So, Father, you like to

test people. You tested Abraham, you even put Jesus to the test, but

please, don't do that to us because we would probably more than likely

fail miserably. Well, you know well enough to make the tests you give

us easy, so we can pass.

Prayer is continuing to ask, to seek, to knock on heaven's door for

whatever you want from God. You will be given; you will find; you will

have doors opening to you.

Why have I the arrogance to say that? Because I know the Father. And

how do I know the Father? Because I know his Son whose coming into this

world, whose participation in our world, whose work in this world,

whose mission to rescue man by his dying in this world, and who will

come back to take us to himself is all a revelation of our Father and

comes from our Father. And he says pray this way. I am going to do

that. I hope you always will, too. Amen.

________________________________________________________________________



retired pastor Walter W. Harms
Austin, TX U. S. A.

E-Mail: waltpast@aol.com

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