What was He thinking? When Jesus asked God for daily bread after discussing such majestic ideas as God’s kingdom and will, He as probably thinking that the Father sees no sharp difference between His cosmic purposes and our welfare. We are on His short list of priorities! Part of His grand purpose is to care for us. So, Jesus was thinking that asking for help would be helpful. It helps us to recognize the Father’s provision when it comes. It continues to break down the wall of independence/ insecurity that normally governs our inner life. Praying for what we need allows us to to think whether we really do need it or whether we just want it because we are afraid, in which case, the NEED is really something else. When Jesus taught us to ASK for daily bread it was because God is willing to help. Asking is just part of the process.
Author: Don Guthrie
His Will = Better wisdom
“Yet not as I will , but as you will”. (Matthew 26:39) I do not pray this prayer easily. (I do not think Jesus prayed it easily.) It is hard for me to surrender–what I think, what I choose to do. Sometimes I pretend respect but then do what I was thinking in the first place because I think my wisdom is best. (Or maybe because I am just too lazy to challenge old pattens and adopt new ones). I am probably the only one who does this. Jesus was more humble than I am. Go figure! As a man, He was completely surrendered to the will of the Father. He welcomed the choices of God, the timing of God, the provision of God. Praying for God’s will was an sincere exercise for Jesus because He was convinced that God’s will is God’s wisdom. Our only wisdom is to learn this same lesson.
Kingdom = His nearness
What was He thinking? When Jesus prayed for the Kingdom to come, what images filled His mind? Buckingham palace? Something similar? Crowns, thrones, royalty? Or did He think of His own coming? “I will come again”, he said in John 14 with the main thought being His presence (the King) among His people again. It was the thought of good government, of order and safety, of protection and prosperity. Kingdom was a key concept in the mind of the savior. It was His most hopeful aspiration. It was what He prayed for and hoped for–that day in the future (already here, but even more glorious later) when all things will be restored to order by His own management. Is this true for you, dear friend? Do you look forward to the day when the ONLY important fact is that a good and kind King has come and all things are subject to His control?
Hallowed = awareness + respect
What was He thinking? When Jesus prayed for God’s name to be hallowed, He was thinking that the human race needs to notice God more than we do and respond with respect. To be honest, there are days (weeks?) that we move through life without a single moment of recognition/reverence that He is near. When Isaiah saw the Lord high and lifted up (Isaiah 6), he cried out “Woe is me for I am a man of unclean lips”. To hallow the Lord, therefore, is to experience an APPROPRIATE DISCOMFORT with our own failure, and an APPROPRIATE SURRENDER to a glorious, worthy God. Today will you ASK God to create a new awareness in your heart that God is near? Will you ASK Him to cause a holy reverence to fill the hearts of your children, your friends, the leaders of your church and country? Consider what the world will be like when He answers this prayer.
Heaven = future home
What was He thinking? When Jesus used the word Heaven, what picture did He have in His mind? What picture did He want us to form in our minds? In John 6:38, Jesus said He “came down from Heaven”. In Luke 24:51, the Bible reports that He was “carried up into Heaven” on the day of His ascension. Obviously, it is a real place, and one that Jesus knew well. It is also the home and throne of God, the nerve center of a moral and wise government of all time and space. “Our Father, which art in Heaven”. It is also our future home. “I go to prepare a place for you.” (John 14:2) Today, as you pray the Lord’s prayer, linger for a moment on the word “Heaven”. Let yourself think and feel what it is to have a “place ” that has been “prepared” for you. When Jesus talked about Heaven, He thought about going home.
Father = steadfast love
What was He thinking? When Jesus called God “Father” and taught us to do the same, what did the word mean to Him? What emotional context did the Lord intend for our prayers? One clue may be the way he painted the picture of the Father in the story we call “the prodigal son”. (Luke 15) Father, for Jesus, is a person of steadfast love. He does not change. In the face of his son’s disrespect and public failure, His love stays constant! He does not reject his son when he stumbles home. He welcomes him. Do you have such a Father? Jesus’ answer is YES! and part of His intention is that you trust your Father to welcome you when you go to Him this morning. Rejoice, dear friend. Enjoy! Your sins have not changed His love for you. He is your Father.
Thoughts on healing
“For I am the Lord who heals you. (Jehovah Rapha).” Exodus 15:26. I read an interesting statement this week. “Healing is not an activity God may choose to do or choose not to do. Healing is who He is; it is his very nature, reflected in His name.” (Nancy Guthrie, The One Year Book of Hope) I agree ,with this one caution , that the Lord’s prayer doesn’t contain a single prayer for healing. Not physical healing. (A remarkable fact given the amount of time dedicated to it in a typical prayer meeting.) What Jesus does pray is for our souls to be reconciled to God, for us to have what we need (daily bread, forgiveness, guidance, protection) to live in obedient cooperation with Him. So, when I pray for physical healing, I will also pray, and with renewed vigor, for the restoration of the soul. For Jesus, this is the truest healing of all.
Forgive US!
When Jesus told us to “LOVE our enemies”(Matthew 5:44), He added “PRAY for those who persecute you”. If you love someone, you pray for them. That’s what Jesus believed. I wonder what would happen if we really did? If not only my friends and family, but also my enemies were included in my daily prayers. If big enemies and small, Islamic terrorists and “friends” who have been critical all got the same treatment– prayer? C. S. Lewis prayed every night for the people he was most tempted to hate. His list included Hitler, Stalin, and Mussolini. What if we did the same? What if we prayed, as Jesus did on the cross, “Father forgive them” and transferred the burden of this wearisome task to His broad shoulders? What if we prayed “Forgive US” (both our enemies and ourselves in one foul package)? When Jesus told us to love our enemies, He knew that we would need to pray for them.
Giving Back
My apologies! I posted this yesterday for publication this early this am. Somehow, author error is my guess, it has evaporated into cyber space! ARGGGH! Anyway. . .”I am amply supplied, having received the gifts you sent” (Philippians 4:18) Am I generous? Forget the glass being half full, how do I see myself, my situation? Having RECEIVED from God, am I ready and willing to GIVE time, energy, attention, effort and money to others and to the Lord? Or do I stay a consumer?, trained by this present age to always be needing something, always asking, never realizing that one of my deepest needs is to GIVE BACK. Prayer is part of my contribution. Whenever I pray “Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done” I am using the privilege of prayer for something other than my own needs! I am giving back, offering myself and my heart in grateful service to the one who has so generously loved me. Am I generous? Prayer will lead me there. To the glory of God.
The miracle I need
Yesterday, we talked about the confidence that Christ had, the confidence that we learn from Him as we pray. Maybe it isn’t a prayer story (per se) but John 6 is the same lesson. Phillip is playing Eyore. “Here is a lad with 5 loaves and 2 fish, but what good is that with this huge crowd?” He is not hopeful, but it does not take him long to realize his mistake. By focusing on the limitations rather than on the Lord, by ignoring Jesus as the main factor in any equation, Phillip makes himself a captive to a fear. I wonder whether I see this mistake when I am making it. Today, as I pray “For thine is the Kingdom and the power and the glory”, I will look long at the Lord rather than at my problems. Maybe that is always the miracle I need. Et tu?