Sermon on the Mount: Praying With Jesus Part 2 (How to Pray)
Notes
Transcript
Matthew 6:9-14
Praying With Jesus Pt.2
(How to Pray)
Introduction: We began last week looking at the subject of Prayer. In
Christian understanding and teaching, prayer is talking to God the Father,
through the atoning work of Jesus the Son, by the power of the Holy Spirit.
In the Bible prayer begins with God. He has first spoken to us through
natural revelation (creation). Have you ever had a transcendent moment?
Maybe it was piece of music? Maybe seeing half dome in Yosemite or
looking out over the vastness of ocean. Maybe from Taylor Mountain
looking over the beauty of our city..maybe the birth of your child…
Transcendence is that moment where you are caught up in such awe,
wonder, and worship, you just want to burst out in gratitude to someone or
something. This is God speaking to us of his power and beauty - that
created all that we see. Then through his special revelation (his word) his
character, his acts in creation, his judgments, his redemption and rescue,
his love mercy and grace…again that bring us to awe and wonder to burst
out in gratitude..what is mankind that you are mindful of us??
Prayer is a response to God’s words to humans.
“Prayer is continuing a conversation that God has started through his Word
and his grace, which eventually becomes a full encounter with him.” Timothy J. Keller, Prayer: Experiencing Awe and Intimacy with God
In the Bible we find many different forms of prayer. Prayers of thanksgiving
and praise, prayers of confession and lament, prayers of petition and
intercession. But all are the same in that they are directed to God. Now of
course prayer is part of the Christian life, it is necessary for the follower of
Jesus. Even here Jesus doesn’t say, if you pray, but when you pray. He
assumes that his people will be a people of prayer. For the follower of
Jesus prayer is not just a practice it is a way of being - a continual
conversation and dependence on God.
Last week we looked at Jesus’ teaching on “How not to Pray”. We saw
that the first step and first importance in prayer is that we come to the
Father who loves us with simplicity and honesty - Pray what you have… I
do believe this is where prayer needs to begin for the Christian. To develop
a continual conversation and daily, even, moment by moment,
dependence on God. Prayer begins by knowing that God loves me and
accepts me, has already started a conversation by his word and his grace,
He knows me, He knows what I need. So I simply come to him as I am,
and I share what is on my heart…
But we cannot stay here. Prayer cannot end there. And Jesus doesn’t
leave us there. As I’ve said many times before one of the things prayer
does in the life of the follower of Jesus - is to mold us and shape us, to
mature us to bring spiritual formation by giving us a greater vision of God
our Father, his will, his kingdom and his glory.
So I ask this morning - What is in you? What is your vision for you life?
What do you desire?
You want to experience an exciting, full life?
You want meaning and purpose?
Do you want inner peace?
You want a meaningful career?
You want to make enough money so you don’t have to worry about
money? Security?
You want to love and be loved; to be known and accepted?
I believe each of these in part are a whisper, an echo of the longing for the
kingdom of God - and that’s where Jesus wants to raise our minds and
hearts - To God Our Father, and his Kingdom. Let’s look at this pray in
order that it would shape our imaginations and teach us to pray.
1. Pray like this: In Luke 11 Jesus is recorded as saying, “say these
words” or recite these words” in reference to the Lord’s prayer. There
are different views on what we are to do with this prayer - do we recite
it verbatim, do we paraphrase and make it our own? It’s interesting to
note that Jesus’ teaching on prayer is the very middle of the sermon on
the mount so whatever your view is on it is - Jesus’ purpose is that it
would bring radical shape to the life of his followers. - The point being make this prayer a regular part of your life as a follower of Jesus.
1. Our Father in heaven
1. The first two words of this prayer set the tone for everything that
comes afterwards. We are talking to our Father in heaven. Jesus
uses possessive language “OUR Father”, we belong to him, and
are a part of his family. Of course, when Jesus calls Yahweh “Our
Father” he means father in the best of terms. Jesus uses the
word Abba to refer to God here, it is the equivalent to our word
Papa. Not only this but the Jews had a certain posture when they
would pray - lifted hands, eyes raised to the sky. It was a posture
of dependence, of reliance upon, a posture of a child reaching for
it’s Father. Think of your crying, needy child - what is your heart
to them when they are hurting, afraid, and truly in need - how
much more Our Father in heaven?
1. There is a beautiful passage in the prophets where Yahweh
expresses his fatherly care for his people - “Can a woman
forget her nursing child, that she should have no
compassion on the son of her womb? Even these may
forget, yet I will not forget you.Behold, I have engraved
you on the palms of my hands; your walls are continually
before me.” - Isaiah 49:15-16
2. As we discussed last week Our Father knows us intimately, sees
us, hears us when we call. He knows the hairs on our heads, our
thoughts before we think them, our words before we say them.
Our fears, our desires, our sins, our victories..he knows it all and
he loves us so very much - This is the Father that sent his one of
a kind son on a rescue mission to redeem us and bring us into
his family. You are dearly loved by our Father - Not only that, but
he is our father in heaven - All power, all wisdom, all authority
belong to him and he’s your Abba - talk to him, go to him with
your cares, your desires, your fears.
2. Hallowed Be your Name
1. Now I asked in our intro what your desires were; what your vision
for your life was? I want you to notice that Jesus here is raising
our vision with these three petitions that he teaches us - The
Father’s Name being known and honored, the kingdom of God to
come and His will to be done on earth like it is in heaven.
2. The Name - In Hebrew and Ancient usage to talk of someone’s
name incapsulated the whole person - to have a good name was
to have a good reputation.
3. There is a great example of this in Exodus 34. In this famous
passage Moses had asked Yahweh to see his “glory”. He wants
to see God as he is - pull back the veil so to speak. What
happens though is God puts Moses in a cave of sorts (so that he
is not vaporized by God’s glorious presents) and as God passes
by it says, He (Yahweh) proclaimed the name of the LORD. The
LORD passed before him and proclaimed, “The LORD, the
LORD, a God merciful and gracious, slow to anger, and
abounding in steadfast love and faithfulness, keeping
steadfast love for thousands, forgiving iniquity and
transgression and sin, but who will by no means clear the
guilty, visiting the iniquity of the fathers on the children and
the children's children, to the third and the fourth
generation.”
4. Jesus teaches us to ask for God’s name to be hallowed honored - glorified - it means that who God is and what he has
done would be held up for all to see, that it would be famous.
That God might have the applause and cheers of all people. It is
the God who’s name is mercy. The God who’s name is Grace,
The God who’s name is steadfast love and faithfulness - that is
the God we are asking to be made known and famous in all the
earth! The God of Salvation - the God of the Gospel!! The God of
the Bible has some bad PR. Do you ever hear people throwing
God’s name around - “God hates such and such people.” Using
God’s name for political agendas, dragging his name and
reputation through the mud. And that isn’t just in the culture it’s in
the church as well.
1. Listen to the way Paul talks about God “At one time we too
were foolish, disobedient, deceived and enslaved by all
kinds of passions and pleasures. We lived in malice and
envy, being hated and hating one another. But when the
kindness and love of God our Savior appeared, he saved
us, not because of righteous things we had done, but
because of his mercy. He saved us through the washing of
rebirth and renewal by the Holy Spirit, whom he poured
out on us generously through Jesus Christ our Savior, 7 so
that, having been justified by his grace, we might become
heirs having the hope of eternal life.” - Titus 3:3-7
(Ephesians 1; Psalm 103, etc)
2. That God’s name - who he really is - should be made known
should be the heart cry, and prayer of every follower of Jesus
that the world would really come to know and see the true
character of our God!
3. Your kingdom Come, Your will be done; On earth as it is in
Heaven
1. Can I just say that if you’re thinking this petition is a prayer of
surrendering your true happiness and fulfillment, a dull, defeatist
prayer, then you really don’t understand the Kingdom of God, his
will or his character. This is a prayer of the greatest and highest
vision! This prayer encompasses all the true heart longings of
humanity.
2. The Kingdom of God refers, not to disembodied souls being
caught up to another realm in some hypnotic state strumming
harps on clouds - crying Holy - but to Heaven on Earth; to God’s
final and eternal reign over his creation. And the Kingdom of God
means, a guaranteed new heavens and new earth, a healed
material creation. Absolute wholeness and well being- physically,
spiritually, socially, and economically.
3. The Kingdom is bound up with the Old Testament concept of
shalom - The peace and glory of God permeating every part of
the creation. The Kingdom was said to be fully established when
all that is broken and wrong with this world is mended and made
whole and right. As such, the Kingdom is tightly bound up with
poverty, oppression, misery and sin in all its various forms being
brought to an end, and an ushering in of absolute flourishing,
prosperity and blessing of the creation. That is the kingdom we
are asking to come - there will be no more hunger, or thirst, no
more war or genocide, no more rape and sex slavery, no more
tears or pain, confusion, hopeless and meaningless - but the
earth will be filled with the knowledge of the LORD as the waters
cover the sea!!
1. I love Dallas Willard’s comment on this part of the prayer. He
says, “When Jesus directs us to pray, “Thy kingdom come,” he
does not mean we should pray for it to come into existence.
Rather, we pray for it to take over at all points in the personal,
social, and political order where it is now excluded: “On earth
as it is in heaven.” With this prayer we are invoking it, as in
faith we are acting it, into the real world of our daily
existence.” - Dallas Willard, The Divine Conspiracy
2. Where we see an absence of the Kingdom peace,
righteousness and joy in the world- we can cry out with this
prayer - bring your kingdom here!!
4. Your will be done - Means right relationships - righteousness
and justice, peace - All that is taught the sermon on the mount.
The Law of Loving our neighbor as ourself.
1. “The first and second petitions of the Lord’s prayer are
fundamentally gospel aches: They ache for the full Story to
become complete where God is All in All.” - Scot McKnight,
Sermon on the Mount
2. When we begin our prayer focusing on Our Father, his Glory being
known, His kingdom and will coming to pass - it put our own request in
the right perspective.. My heart is often settled from the fear, anger, or
frustration that I approached God in prayer with and I come to my
needs, whether practical, social or spiritual, with a renewed faith in my
Father who loves me, works redemption, and makes all things new.
1. Give us this day our daily bread. - Practical Needs
1. The need for God’s daily grace in our lives.
2. This request is not confined to food only. It is meant to cover all
our material needs, everything that is necessary for life in this
world.
3. Through this request we recognize God’s daily work in our lives
to provide all that we need for life and godliness. He is our good
father, and we acknowledge his very practical fatherly care. We
ask and thank him for what he provides.
2. Forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors. - Social/
Relational Needs.
1. This prayer reminds us of our continual need to confess our sins,
faults, and failures and to receive God’s forgiveness
2. The continual need of cleansing from the defilement and guilt of
sin done to us, sin done by us, and sin done in our presence that
defiles us.
3. This prayer reminds us of the need to stay in right relationship
not just with God but also with others - Jesus says, at the end of
this teaching - “For if you forgive other people when they sin
against you, your heavenly Father will also forgive you. But if you
do not forgive others their sins, your Father will not forgive your
sins.”
3. Lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evil. - Spiritual
needs.
1. This petition is not so much about God ’s not leading us into
testing or temptation - but about God’s protection, preservation
and rescue from temptation or testing
2. A prayer for being kept from sin and it’s power.
3. Praying against the evil that still resides in us - Lord, save me
from myself, Lord save me from worldly allurement, save me from
the schemes of the devil.
4. Praying that God would Preserve us for his will and his kingdom.
1. “Since then we have a great high priest who has passed
through the heavens, Jesus, the Son of God, let us hold
fast our confession. For we do not have a high priest who
is unable to sympathize with our weaknesses, but one
who in every respect has been tempted as we are, yet
without sin. Let us then with confidence draw near to the
throne of grace, that we may receive mercy and find grace
to help in time of need.” -Hebrews 4:14-16
2. These last two request are made so that we might enjoy
unbroken fellowship with God.
4. For Yours is the kingdom, and the power and the glory forever.
Amen.
1. Some translations leave this out because it is not in the earliest
manuscripts. However, it is a most appropriate conclusion and
benediction. Attributing once again power and worth to our God.
2. We close our prayer with declarations about God’s power and
worth! We finish with praise!
Conclusion: The Lord’s Prayer is meant to be recited whenever the
follower of Jesus prays - of course there are many prayers and Psalms
that we can pray from scripture - But Jesus says to his followers when you
pray, pray this prayer. He wants this prayer to be central to our lives as his
followers - he wants it to shape and form our hope, stir our faith and
reorient our desires.
As Tim Keller says, “Prayer is the way that all the things we believe in and
that Christ has won for us actually become our strength. Prayer is the way
that truth is worked into your heart to create new instincts, reflexes, and
dispositions.” - Tim Keller , Prayer, Experiencing Awe and Intimacy with
God
Church I challenge you to make this prayer a part of your daily rhythm and
begin to see how it brings a kingdom of God mindset and posture to your
life. May it shape your hope, refresh your faith and reorder your desires
toward your Father, his kingdom, and his glory!
Let’s close praying this prayer together:
“Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name.
Your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.
Give us this day our daily bread, and forgive us our debts, as we also
have forgiven our debtors.
And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil.”