Prayer Can Change Your Life

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Jn 15; Luke 11

 

If I told you that you were going to have the opportunity to talk with Jesus Christ for fifteen minutes this afternoon and you could make one request of Him, what would your request be?  If you could ask Him anything, would you ask for protection?  a new job?  money?  What would you ask for?

The disciples got this opportunity at one point.  Luke 11 tells us they came to Jesus one day and they had a request.  "Lord, teach us to pray."  Why, of all the things they could have asked Jesus, why did they ask that question? 

I think it was because they saw the results of prayer in His life.  They saw Him pray and they saw what happened.  It's interesting that the disciples watched Jesus preach the greatest sermons ever, they watched Him do miracles, heal the sick, raise the dead and all kinds of things, but never once did they say, "Lord, teach us to preach" or "Lord, teach us to do miracles" or "Lord, teach us to raise the dead".  Instead they said, "Teach us how to pray."  They saw that was the life support system of Jesus Christ.  They recognized that was the key to His life.  There is nothing more vital to your Christian life than prayer. 

The average Christian knows more about Ann Landers than they do about prayer.  There are a lot of faulty misconceptions about prayer, a lot of ignorance about how prayer works and why we pray and when to pray. 

Some people think prayer is a magic wand.  We kind of wave it at something -- it's a superstitious approach -- and you get what you want.  God is kind of like a genie that you rub the vase and God comes out and you pray the request -- "My wish is your command!" 

Some people think prayer is a first aide kit.  For them, prayer is an act of desperation.  Sign for fire extinguisher:  "Use only in emergency."  For a lot of people, prayer is like that:  Use only in emergency.  It is a last resort.  When things finally fall apart, then you pray.  Like the deacon who came to his pastor one day.  The pastor said, "I guess all we can do is pray," and the deacon said, "Has it come to that?"  For us, prayer is like the last thing.  You do everything you can and then you pray. 

For some people, prayer is a tug of war.  A religious con game that you play with God where you try to convince God to do something nice for you.  The idea is you have to beg and plead and God is some cold hearted monarch sitting a million miles out in outer space and you have to urge and beg and plead to convince Him that He ought to do something good for you.  It's like a sales pitch.  You keep pestering God until finally God gets so irritated that He finally says, "Ok, I'll give it to you!" and He gives in.  It's like conning God into giving you what you want and, if you pray hard enough, eventually He gives in, reluctantly.  Jesus told a parable to illustrate the exact opposite.

The worst idea or the worst misconception about prayer is, for many people, prayer is simply a religious duty.  The basic motivation behind it is guilt.  I know I should pray more, I ought to pray, it's something I ought to do.  It becomes a duty. You have a sense of obligation that if you don't pray you'll be on God's Bad List.  As a result, you go through a meaningless ritual that becomes a rut.  You learn memorized phrases and you get caught in religious cliches and say the same thing over and over.  It's totally meaningless to you but you know you ought to do it.  When you think of prayer you think of one word -- boring! You think, "Why do I have to pray?"  It becomes something you endure rather than something you enjoy. 

If prayer is a duty for you, you have missed the total point of prayer.  You don't understand prayer in the slightest, if you think it's a duty.  It's no wonder you can't get motivated if you're going around saying, "I should pray, I must pray, I have to pray."

One of the most frustrating things in the Christian life is doing the things you know your suppose to do.  Like praying.  You know your suppose to and yet it is often so difficult to do. 


I.  PRAYER IS AN ACT OF DEVOTION.  Jn 15:1-4


Psa 86:11 (GN)  “Teach me, Lord, what you want me to do, and I will obey you faithfully, teach me to serve you with complete devotion.”


Acts 2:42ff  They devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and to the fellowship, to the breaking of bread and to prayer.


Illustration:  In France, there once lived a poor, blind girl who obtained the Gospel of Mark in raised letters and learned to read it by the tips of her fingers. By constant reading, these became callous, and her sense of touch diminished until she could not distinguish the characters. One day, she cut the skin from the ends of her fingers to increase their sensibility, only to destroy it.  She felt that she must now give up her beloved Book, and weeping, pressed it to her lips, saying “Farewell, farewell, sweet word of my Heavenly Father!” To her surprise, her lips, more delicate than her fingers, discerned the form of the letters. All night she perused with her lips the Word of God and overflowed with joy at this new acquisition.


Ro 12:11 (GN) “Work hard and do not be lazy. Serve the Lord with a heart full of devotion. 12Let your hope keep you joyful, be patient in your troubles, and pray at all times. 13Share your belongings with your needy fellow-Christians, and open your homes to strangers.”


Illustration:  “We will not accept into membership anyone with any reservations whatsoever,” declared Lenin, the founder of Russian communism. “We will not accept into our membership anyone unless he is an active, disciplined, working member in one of our organizations.”


2 Chron 31:20 (GN) “Throughout all Judah, King Hezekiah did what was right and what was pleasing to the Lord his God. 21He was successful, because everything he did for the Temple or in observance of the Law, he did in a spirit of complete loyalty and devotion to his God.”


Illustration:  Consecration Of Jonathan Edwards  I claim no right to myself—no right to this understanding, this will, these affections that are in me; neither do I have any right to this body or its members—no right to this tongue, to these hands, feet, ears, or eyes.  I have given myself clear away and not retained anything of my own. I have been to God this morning and told Him I have given myself wholly to Him. I have given every power, so that for the future I claim no right to myself in any respect. I have expressly promised Him, for by His grace I will not fail. I take Him as my whole portion and felicity, looking upon nothing else as any part of my happiness. His law is the constant rule of my obedience.  I will fight with all my might against the world, the flesh, and the devil to the end of my life. I will adhere to the faith of the Gospel, however hazardous and difficult the profession and practice of it may be.  I receive the blessed Spirit as my Teacher, Sanctifier, and only Comforter, and cherish all admonitions to enlighten, purify, confirm, comfort, and assist me. This I have done.  I pray God, for the sake of others, to look upon this as a self-dedication, and receive me as His own. Henceforth, I am not to act in any respect as my own. I shall act as my own if I ever make use of any of my powers to do anything that is not to the glory of God, or to fail to make the glorifying of Him my whole and entire business.  If I murmur in the least at afflictions; if I am in any way uncharitable; if I revenge my own case; if I do anything purely to please myself, or omit anything because it is a great denial; if I trust to myself; if I take any praise for any good which Christ does by me; or if I am in any way proud, I shall act as my own and not God’s. I purpose to be absolutely His. 


II.  PRAY IS AN ACT OF SUPPLICATION.  Jn 15:5-8


Philippians 4:6, it says, "Don't worry about anything but in everything, with your prayers and your supplications, make your requests known to God and the peace of God which passes all understanding will keep your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus."  


C.H. Spurgeon, a great pastor in London, England, once said this, "God never shuts His storehouses until you shut your mouth."  You have to ask.  Prayer is an act of supplication. 


Illustration: True story about a high school student who had just become a Christian.  He was learning all these words about God.  Big theological words.  God is omnipresent -- that means God is present everywhere.  God is omnipotent -- that means God has all power, there is nothing too hard for God.  Then he learned God is omniscient -- that means God knows everything -- the past, the present, the future.  So the student went home one day and got to thinking about this.  "If You know everything that's going to happen in the future, that means You know what's going to be on the Algebra final before the teacher even writes it."  He prayed, "God, if You know what's going to be on the test, I pray that You'll help me know what to study for, that I'll study the right things."  He began to study, pray, work.  He said, "You said to ask for anything so I'm going to be specific.  God, I pray that I'll get an 87 grade on my test."  He didn't have enough faith for an A, I guess.  He prays for an 87.  This is a true story. He took the test the next day and thought he did pretty good on it.  He went back to school the next day and found he'd gotten an 86.  He was really discouraged.  He was a brand new Christian and didn't know any better than just to believe God.  "God, You really let me down!  I prayed for an 87 and only got an 86.  I really believed You were going to do it."  He went back to school the next day and the teacher said, "I made a mistake on five papers.  I need to call those papers back in."  He did and he'd gotten an 87. 


Why does God want us to ask in prayer?  "That your joy may be complete."  (Vs. 11)


III. PRAYER IS AN ACT OF COMMUNICATION. Jn 15:9-15 


Illustration:  You can't communicate with somebody unless you know your relationship to them.  What is our relationship to God?  v. 15 Jesus says this, "I no longer call you servants because a servant don't know his master's business.  Instead I have called you friends for everything I've learned from My Father, I've made known unto you.  You didn't choose Me, but I chose you to go and bear fruit that will last.  Then the Father will give you whatever you ask in My name."  He says the reason you can ask anything in prayer is because we're friends.  Isn't that amazing? God says, "I don't treat you like servants, like slaves.  I treat you as friends." 


Illustration:  A number of years ago there was an international incident -- the Cuban Missile Crisis.  I remember it was a stand off between President Kennedy and Premier Khrushchev of Russia over planting missiles in Cuba.  We nearly went to war over it.  But we didn't because communication was established.  There was one positive benefit of the Cuban Missile Crisis.  They established right afterwards a communications link called a Hot Line.  They put a red telephone on the desk of the President of the United States and a red telephone of desk of the Premier of Soviet Russia and there was only one number.  Even if the employees went on strike, they'd still get through.  It was so there would be no misunderstanding.  If at any time somebody thought somebody else was doing something wrong, they could simply lift up the phone and communicate.  Communication is vital on the international scene.


IV.  PRAYER IS AN ACT OF COOPERATION.  Jn 15:16-17

Six times in this passage, Jesus says, "If you will ask, I will answer. ,... If you will ask, I will do ... "  He says, "Your part is the asking, My part is the doing."  That's great because He's in a lot better position to do than you or I are.  He has a few more strings He can pull, a few more resources at His command.  He says, "If you pray, I will do."  Our part in cooperating with God's plan in the world is prayer.  We can pray. So the most important thing you can do in your Christian life is pray.


D. L. Moody, a great pastor, once said, "Every great movement of God can be traced to a single praying, kneeling figure." 


Probably the most amazing verse in the Bible is John 14:12-13. Just before it, v. 11, Jesus says, "Believe Me when I say I am in the Father and the Father is in Me or at least believe the evidence of the miracles themselves.  v. 12  I tell you the truth, anyone who has faith in Me will do what I have been doing."  Have you been doing what Jesus has been doing?  Have you been raising any dead lately?  Healed any sick?  I think that's the hardest verse in the Bible to believe.  He says, "Anyone who has faith in Me will do what I have been doing... And he will do even greater things than these because I'm going to the Father." 

 


PRAYER CAN CHANGE YOUR LIFE

Prayer Can Change Your Life  -  Part 1 of 4

Jn 15

We're beginning a new series today.  If I told you that you were going to have the opportunity to talk with Jesus Christ for fifteen minutes this afternoon and you could make one request of Him, what would your request be?  If you could ask Him anything, would you ask for protection?  a new job?  money?  What would you ask for?

The disciples got this opportunity at one point.  Luke 11 tells us they came to Jesus one day and they had a request.  "Lord, teach us to pray."  Why, of all the things they could have asked Jesus, why did they ask that question? 

I think it was because they saw the results of prayer in His life.  They saw Him pray and they saw what happened.  It's interesting that the disciples watched Jesus preach the greatest sermons ever, they watched Him do miracles, heal the sick, raise the dead and all kinds of things, but never once did they say, "Lord, teach us to preach" or "Lord, teach us to do miracles" or "Lord, teach us to raise the dead".  Instead they said, "Teach us how to pray."  They saw that was the life support system of Jesus Christ.  They recognized that was the key to His life.  There is nothing more vital to your Christian life than prayer. 

We're going to begin a new series this week called "Prayer Can Change Your Life".  Why?  The average Christian knows more about Ann Landers than they do about prayer.  There are a lot of faulty misconceptions about prayer, a lot of ignorance about how prayer works and why we pray and when to pray. 

Some people think prayer is a magic wand.  We kind of wave it at something -- it's a superstitious approach -- and you get what you want.  God is kind of like a genie that you rub the vase and God comes out and you pray the request -- "My wish is your command!" 

Some people think prayer is a first aide kit.  For them, prayer is an act of desperation.  Sign for fire extinguisher:  "Use only in emergency."  For a lot of people, prayer is like that:  Use only in emergency.  It is a last resort.  When things finally fall apart, then you pray.  Like the deacon who came to his pastor one day.  The pastor said, "I guess all we can do is pray," and the deacon said, "Has it come to that?"  For us, prayer is like the last thing.  You do everything you can and then you pray. 

For some people, prayer is a tug of war.  A religious con game that you play with God where you try to convince God to do something nice for you.  The idea is you have to beg and plead and God is some cold hearted monarch sitting a million miles out in outer space and you have to urge and beg and plead to convince Him that He ought to do something good for you.  It's like a sales pitch.  You keep pestering God until finally God gets so irritated that He finally says, "Ok, I'll give it to you!" and He gives in.  It's like conning God into giving you what you want and, if you pray hard enough, eventually He gives in, reluctantly.  Jesus told a parable to illustrate the exact opposite.

The worst idea or the worst misconception about prayer is, for many people, prayer is simply a religious duty.  The basic motivation behind it is guilt.  I know I should pray more, I ought to pray, it's something I ought to do.  It becomes a duty. You have a sense of obligation that if you don't pray you'll be on God's Bad List.  As a result, you go through a meaningless ritual that becomes a rut.  You learn memorized phrases and you get caught in religious cliches and say the same thing over and over.  It's totally meaningless to you but you know you ought to do it.  When you think of prayer you think of one word -- boring! You think, "Why do I have to pray?"  It becomes something you endure rather than something you enjoy. 

If prayer is a duty for you, you have missed the total point of prayer.  You don't understand prayer in the slightest, if you think it's a duty.  It's no wonder you can't get motivated if you're going around saying, "I should pray, I must pray, I have to pray." 

In this series, we're going to demolish some of these misconceptions.  Today I want to talk to you about the four purposes of prayer. 

 


THE FOUR PURPOSES OF PRAYER

John 15 is actually in the middle of four chapters.  Chapters 13, 14, 15, 16 are Jesus' last words to His disciples.  The last discussion that Jesus Christ shared with the twelve disciples before He was crucified on the cross.  He is telling the people repeatedly, "I am going to die and then be resurrected and go back to heaven.  I'm not going to be here physically but I'm going to be here spiritually.  I'm going to put My Spirit in your lives -- the Holy Spirit -- and you can still talk to Me, even though I'm not here physically.  You can talk to Me through prayer."  And He gives us the four reasons for prayer.

1.  Prayer is an act of dedication.

It is an opportunity to express, one, our devotion to God and two, our dependence upon God.  It is an act of dedicating ourselves, saying, "God, I need You."  Our biggest problem in prayer is we don't feel a dependence upon God.  We think we can do it ourselves.  Ever since Adam and Eve, man has vastly overestimated his ability.  So we go thinking, "I don't need to pray because this is something I just do."  The biggest problem in prayer is admitting we need God's help.  The reason why a lot of people don't pray is because it costs.  It costs honesty.  You have to be honest to God -- "I admit I am inadequate.  I am helpless.  I need Your help in this situation."  As long as you think you're self sufficient, prayer can have no meaning for you. You think you've got it all together.  Prayer is an act of dedication:  "God, I admit I have a need.  I need Your help in my life."  Prayer is a declaration of dependence upon God.  It's our way of saying to God, "This proves I'm depending upon You."


John 15:5, Jesus is giving an illustration of a plant, I am the like a vine and you Christians are like the branches.  "If a man remains in Me and I in him, he will bear much fruit, but apart from Me, you can do nothing.  If anyone doesn't remain in Me, he's like a branch that's thrown away and withers.  Such branches are picked up and thrown into the fire and burned.  But if you remain in Me [if you be dependent upon Me, express your trust in Me] and My words remain in you, you can ask whatever you wish and it will be given to you."  That's like a blank check.  He says "If you really put your dependence in Me, you can ask whatever you will and I will give it."  That's an unbelievable promise in prayer!  It's like a branch and vine and like the branch is connected to the vine or stem, if you cut the branch off, it loses all its strength, all its power.  And if you cut a Christian off from God, he withers.

I watched a documentary on tv about deep sea divers.  They recovered some gold from a sunken ship in the North Atlantic. They talked about how they let a diving bell down, 800 feet under the water.  The only link between the people 800 feet below the water was the hose of air.  The hose was the lifeline, the support system, the connection between those above and those below. 

Likewise, prayer is our support system.  You cut it off and you run out of spiritual air.  Prayer is an act of dedication.  It shows our dependence.  Until we realize we need God, we can't pray.

2.  Prayer is an act of communication.

If you've been attending Ashburn Baptist Church for any length of time, you know how important communication is.  We talk about this all the time.  Most of our problems in life are communication problems.  Communication with your wife/husband/your business.  Most of your problems in life come from poor communication.  You can't understand a person in marriage unless you communicate with them. 

And you can't understand God, God's will for your life, unless you communicate with Him.

A number of years ago there was an international incident -- the Cuban Missile Crisis.  I remember it was a stand off between President Kennedy and Premier Khrushchev of Russia over planting missiles in Cuba.  We nearly went to war over it.  But we didn't because communication was established.  There was one positive benefit of the Cuban Missile Crisis.  They established right afterwards a communications link called a Hot Line.  They put a red telephone on the desk of the President of the United States and a red telephone of desk of the Premier of Soviet Russia and there was only one number.  Even if the employees went on strike, they'd still get through.  It was so there would be no misunderstanding.  If at any time somebody thought somebody else was doing something wrong, they could simply lift up the phone and communicate.  Communication is vital on the international scene.

It's vital in the Christian life.  Prayer is an act of dedication and it's an act of communication. 

You can't communicate with somebody unless you know your relationship to them.  What is our relationship to God?  v. 15 Jesus says this, "I no longer call you servants because a servant don't know his master's business.  Instead I have called you friends for everything I've learned from My Father, I've made known unto you.  You didn't choose Me, but I chose you to go and bear fruit that will last.  Then the Father will give you whatever you ask in My name."  He says the reason you can ask anything in prayer is because we're friends.  Isn't that amazing? God says, "I don't treat you like servants, like slaves.  I treat you as friends."

We seldom pray -- we have a hard time praying -- because we fail to recognize what a privilege it is to talk to God.  If I told you that tomorrow I'd arranged for you a twenty minute personal interview with the President of the United States, and you were to get up at 7:45 and you would have twenty minutes to talk to him about anything of your heart's desire, what would you do? One, you'd probably not go to bed tonight you'd be so nervous. You'd probably go out and buy a whole new wardrobe, maybe get a hairdo, haircut.  You'd probably write out some questions you'd want to ask so you didn't waste the time.  You'd get prepared because you were going to get to talk personally with the President of the United States. 

We have a greater invitation than that.  In this very passage you are invited to converse with the creator.  That's going to the top!  You're not working with some little bureaucrat.  You don't have to know the key men if you know the man who holds the keys. God says, "I am the King of Kings, the Lord of Lords, and you are My friend and I want to talk to you!"  That's what prayer is.  It is dedication but it is also communication.

Our problem is we have a hard time believing that God is really interested in us.  We can't seem to conceive that the creator of the entire universe is interested in car payments and house payments and buying new clothes for the kids for school and the guy at work who irritates you and the fact that you have back problems and everything else.  When you fully discover how much God really loves you, prayer will no longer be a problem for you. The problem is not, "I have to pray."  The problem is you don't really realize how much God cares about and loves you.  Why? Because we love to talk to the people who love us the most. 

If you find prayer is a duty, a ritual, a routine that you don't look forward to going through, it means you don't understand how much God's in love with you and how much He's interested in everything that is of interest to you.  Sure, if you have to go to God and talk to Him about things of no interest, who's going to want to do it?  Nobody.  But God says "You are friends." 


Prayer is an act of dedication.  It is the way we express our dependence upon God.  And prayer in an act of communication.  It is the way we communicate with God.  It is our life communication, the umbilical cord of the Christian life from which we draw our strength.

3.  Prayer is an act of supplication.


Supplication means request.  In Philippians 4:6, it says, "Don't worry about anything but in everything, with your prayers and your supplications, make your requests known to God and the peace of God which passes all understanding will keep your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus."  The result of your asking, your requests in prayer, will be peace of mind.

John 16:24.  Prayer is an act of supplication.  It is the way we make our requests.  Jesus is talking and says, "I tell you the truth, the Father will give you whatever you ask in My name." Someday go through the New Testament and circle all the "whatever"s.  He says, "Whatever you ask, Whatsoever you pray for, If you ask anything ..."  v. 24 "Until now you have not asked for anything in My name.  Ask and you will receive and your joy will be complete."  He says, You're going to be happy because you're going to ask and I'm going to answer and you'll be happy.

The fact of the matter is prayer is God's chosen method of meeting your needs.  The Bible teaches that there are some things that God has promised to do only if we pray.  Some people think, "God knows what I need so I don't need to ask.  He'll just give it when I need it."  That's not true.  God has set it up in His plan that there are some things He will only do if you ask, if you pray. 

When we read the New Testament and read about the New Testament Christians, they were unbelievable.  They were happy, joyful, contagious, enthusiastic about life.  They had power in their lives.  They saw miracles happening on a regular basis.  You ask a typical New Testament Christian, "How's it going?" and he'd said, "Business as usual.  One miracle after another!"  We say, "How come I don't have that kind of power?  Why don't we have that same kind of power they had in the New Testament?"  We don't ask. 

James says, "You have not because you ask not."  Over twenty times in the New Testament the Bible says "Ask".  Ask, seek, knock, keep on asking. 

Story of a guy who died and went to heaven.  All over heaven were these warehouses.  Inside there were these tremendous gifts, fantastic things, spiritual situations, homes, jobs, happy families, all kinds of neat gifts.  The guy said, "Lord, what are all these gifts?"  Jesus said, "There is a tag on every one of these gifts.  And the tag says the same thing."  So he goes over to look and reads, "Never asked for."

C.H. Spurgeon, a great pastor in London, England, once said this, "God never shuts His storehouses until you shut your mouth."  You have to ask.  Prayer is an act of supplication. 

What are you lacking right now in your life simply because you've never asked God for it?  You've tried other things but you've never stopped to ask God for it. 

What do you ask for?  Ask for what you want.  God's not interested in you asking for something you don't want.  That's silly.  Ask for what you want.  Psalm 145:15 "He will fulfill the desires of those who reverence Him."  Not just the needs -- the desires.  Why?  Because if you're reverencing God, your desires are going to be right. 

Psalm 37:4 "Delight yourself also in the Lord and He will give you the desires of your heart."  Desires.  If you're delighting yourself in God, you're trying the best as you know how to let God's Spirit live in your life, your desires aren't going to be wrong. 

Psalm 84:11 "No good thing will He withhold from those who walk uprightly."  God is not up there holding all these things back and saying, "You've got to convince Me to give them to you!"  He says, "Ask!" 

True story about a high school student who had just become a Christian.  He was learning all these words about God.  Big theological words.  God is omnipresent -- that means God is present everywhere.  God is omnipotent -- that means God has all power, there is nothing too hard for God.  Then he learned God is omniscient -- that means God knows everything -- the past, the present, the future.  So the student went home one day and got to thinking about this.  "If You know everything that's going to happen in the future, that means You know what's going to be on the Algebra final before the teacher even writes it."  He prayed, "God, if You know what's going to be on the test, I pray that You'll help me know what to study for, that I'll study the right things."  He began to study, pray, work.  He said, "You said to ask for anything so I'm going to be specific.  God, I pray that I'll get an 87 grade on my test."  He didn't have enough faith for an A, I guess.  He prays for an 87.  This is a true story. He took the test the next day and thought he did pretty good on it.  He went back to school the next day and found he'd gotten an 86.  He was really discouraged.  He was a brand new Christian and didn't know any better than just to believe God.  "God, You really let me down!  I prayed for an 87 and only got an 86.  I really believed You were going to do it."  He went back to school the next day and the teacher said, "I made a mistake on five papers.  I need to call those papers back in."  He did and he'd gotten an 87. 

Why did I tell you that?  So you could go out and get an A on your final?  No.  I'm trying to tell you that God is intensely interested in every factor of your life.  He says, "You are My friends.  I'm interested!"  When you love someone you're interested in everything about them. 

Prayer is an act of dependence or dedication.  It's an act of communication and it's an act of supplication.  Ask. 

Why does God want us to ask in prayer?  "That your joy may be complete."  It will make you happy.  As a father, I love to grant the requests of my children.  Even if I know they don't need it, I like to give it to them.  God says, "Ask, that your joy may be full".  When you ask, everybody gets blessed.  God gets blessed because it shows His nature as a giver.  You get blessed because you get the answer to your request.  The world gets blessed because all of a sudden you've got a testimony.  One thing about people who have answered prayers is they can't keep it to themselves.  They have to share it.  They start sharing with everybody and that's what God wants.


Luke 11:11 Jesus is talking and says, "Which of you fathers if your son asked for a fish [to eat] would you give him a snake instead?  Or if he asked for an egg would you give him a scorpion?  If you then, though you are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father in heaven give the Holy Spirit to those who ask Him."  If I, being an imperfect dad, know how to give gifts, and know how to answer the requests of my children, how much more does God who's perfect, in perfect love, know how to give us good gifts?  God delights in answering requests. 

Prayer, an act of dedication, communication, supplication.

 

4.  Prayer is an act of cooperation.

This is the most exciting thing about prayer.  It's an act of cooperation.  God has sovereignly chosen, in His plan, that we can cooperate in His plan by praying and helping see His word done here on earth.  Prayer is God's program.  Prayer is God's modus operandi.  Prayer is God saying, "I have chosen to limit Myself to what I accomplish on earth simply by limiting Myself to the faith of My children on the earth.  What they believe Me for, I will do."  When we pray for other people, we are cooperating with God.  We are teaming up with God to accomplish God's work in the world. 

Probably the most amazing verse in the Bible is John 14:12-13. Just before it, v. 11, Jesus says, "Believe Me when I say I am in the Father and the Father is in Me or at least believe the evidence of the miracles themselves.  v. 12  I tell you the truth, anyone who has faith in Me will do what I have been doing."  Have you been doing what Jesus has been doing?  Have you been raising any dead lately?  Healed any sick? 

I think that's the hardest verse in the Bible to believe.  He says, "Anyone who has faith in Me will do what I have been doing... And he will do even greater things than these because I'm going to the Father." 

I'd have to admit to you, as your pastor, if there is any verse in the Bible that I have a hard time believing, it's that verse. I don't see myself doing greater things than Jesus.  Do you see yourself doing greater miracles than Jesus Christ?  I doubt it. That's kind of a hard verse to believe.  But He says it. "Anyone who believes in Me will do what I've been doing and even greater works." 

I honestly had a hard time accepting that verse until one day I got smart and read the verse right underneath it and all of a sudden it made sense.  "And I will do whatever you ask in My name so that the Father may bring glory to the Son.  You may ask Me for anything in My name and I will do it." 

How is it possible to do greater miracles than Jesus?  Simple. Through prayer.  By prayer.  When we pray, it can do greater things than Jesus Christ did while He was here on earth. 

You say, "How is that possible?"  Simple.  Prayer is not limited by time, nor by space.  It is limitless in scope.  When Jesus Christ was here on earth, He voluntarily limited Himself by becoming a human.  By God coming in human form He said, "I can only be at one place at one time and I can't be in the past, the present, and the future at the same time.  I can only be at this time and in this place."  He was limited to do the miracles within the vicinity where He was. 

But prayer is not limited by time or space.  Prayers are not limited by time.  The prayers of Jesus Christ 2000 years ago are still being answered today.  The prayers I pray today can be answered three weeks today.  They're not limited by time. 

Prayer is not limited by space.  You can pray and it's like sending a missile.  I could pray for somebody in Washington D.C. and it's like sending a missile directly to that guy's heart and I never leave California.   I can pray all over.  I get up tomorrow morning and go into my study and spend fifteen minutes in prayer and I pray for missionaries around the world.  My wife comes and knocks on the door, "What are you doing in there?"  I say, "Nothing much.  I'm just going to Africa, Asia, behind the iron curtain..." 

The prayers are penetrating behind those places.  It is limitless in its power.  People may reject your appeals, reject your arguments, reject you as a person, but they're totally defenseless against your prayers.  They have no defense system. They go straight to the heart.  The Bible says, "The heart of the king is in the hand of the Lord and He turns it whether soever He wishes."  Like a river.  God can change the course of history by prayers. 

Many times I have people come to me for counseling, kind of discouraged with an impossible situation.  We're going to talk in a future session on How Do You Pray About An Impossible Situation.  They come and say, "I'm so discouraged.  I don't know what to do.  I guess the only thing I can do is pray."  I want to say, "Great!  At least you've got a resource that most of the world doesn't have."  If you can pray, you can make the impossible possible.  All of a sudden you're not trying to work it out on your own.  You've got God's power behind you. 

Six times in this passage, Jesus says, "If you will ask, I will answer. ,... If you will ask, I will do ... "  He says, "Your part is the asking, My part is the doing."  That's great because He's in a lot better position to do than you or I are.  He has a few more strings He can pull, a few more resources at His command.  He says, "If you pray, I will do."  Our part in cooperating with God's plan in the world is prayer.  We can pray. So the most important thing you can do in your Christian life is pray.

That's why we're going to do a series on it.  We're going to learn how to destroy the old myths on prayer. 


Who are the heros going to be in heaven?  The Billy Graham's of this world?  The David Wilkerson's?  The great Christian leaders? I don't think os.  The heros in heaven are the little, unknown people who prayed for the front men.  The people who prayed for the superstars of Christianity and God blessed those guys ministry because the little people prayed.  There are no little people in God's eyes.  Prayer is the most important thing you can do. 

D. L. Moody, a great pastor, once said, "Every great movement of God can be traced to a single praying, kneeling figure." 

Today, I given you an introduction -- Why we pray.  In the future we're going to talk about, How do you pray specifically and get answers? and How do you pray for other people? and How do you pray for an impossible situation? and, What do you do when it doesn't look like the answer is coming through?  There's a delay.

I want our church to be a praying church.  A praying church is a holy church, a committed church.  When you pray it makes you sensitive to God and to other people.  It sensitizes your life. A praying church is an enthusiastic church.  We're excited. Churches that pray see miracles and that gets people excited.  We need some miracles in our church.  Many of you have made a commitment to the "Together We Grow" program.  It's going to take a miracle for you to fulfill that commitment.  We need a miracle for land, for buildings, lots of miracles in our church.  Some of you need personal miracles.  A miracle in your marriage.  Some of you need a miracle in your health.  Some of you need a miracle in your job, your finances.  A growing, praying church is a church that sees God act.  God acts according to prayer.  A praying church is a happy church.  When you pray and get answers, your joy is full.  There's nothing more fun than seeing answers to prayer.  You get excited.  It's contagious.  People want to get involved. 

Prayer:

What are you lacking in your life right now, simply because you've failed to ask God for it?  Ask!  He says, Ask!  We're going to do a project over the next couple of weeks, an experiment.  Maybe you've never had an answer to prayer before.  I don't want you to miss out on this.  Think of one specific thing that you can pray for.  What is uppermost on your mind right now?  What is your greatest need?  What is it that you would like to ask God for?  Sit still and let God talk to you.  Let something pop into your mind.  Dozens of you are going to have answered prayers in the next couple of weeks.  We are going to believe God together to answer your request.  This series can change your life.  Pray a couple of things.  Pray for the request you've just thought of.  Pray for next Sunday's service.  Even pray about bringing somebody to next Sunday's service.  We're going to talk about How do you pray and get answers, the steps to answered prayer.  Pray everyday this week for your request and for next Sunday's service. 

Then would you pray, "Lord, just like the disciples, teach me to pray."  Maybe you've been a Christian for a while and prayer has seemed kind of boring to you.  The problem isn't prayer.  The problem is you just don't realize how much God loves you.  It's not to be a duty, it's to be a delight. Not something you endure, it's something you enjoy.  Would you pray, "Dear God, teach me how to pray.  Jesus Christ, thank You for calling me Your friend.  I want to have a friendship relationship with You.  Help me to understand what that means.  I want You to direct my life.  Father, I want to see miracles happen in my life, things that can't be explained by my own effort.  I want to see impossible situations made possible through prayer.  Right now I ask You for ..." and then make your request to God right now. "Help me to believe that You'll answer it."  Then would you pray for our church, that it will grow, that it will develop spiritually.  Would you pray for the other people in this room, even the people in the first service who've made their requests and ask God to answer their requests.

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