In His Sermon on the Mount Jesus describes His disciples in Matthew Chapter 5: 3-16. These verses, most often referred to as The Beatitudes, describe the character or nature of Jesus' followers. Using this as His introduction Jesus uses the rest of the sermon to teach how His followers live out what they are. In 6:5 Jesus tells us "When you pray..." Listen carefully. Jesus repeats it in verse 7 - "When you pray..." There is a powerful assumption in this statement. Jesus assumes His disciples are praying. He does not command us to pray, but instructs us on how we are to pray, believing that we are praying.
It has been often said it is much easier to talk about prayer
than to pray. We are great examples of that. The prayer workshops, books,
and Bible studies are innumerable. We want to rush past the "when you pray"
of Jesus' teaching and get to the dos and don'ts He speaks about. The instruction
and discussion is important, other wise Jesus wouldn't have given it. But,
the daunting question before us is not if we know how to pray. Rather it
is are we praying? Jesus' "when you pray" places a
criterion before us that requires self-examination. Even now I am tempted
to discuss the reasons why we avoid prayer, or do not pray, or hesitate
to pray. But after all the discussion this question remains - do we pray?
In Luke 11:1 Jesus is praying and when He gets done one of His
disciples comes up to Him and requests, "Lord, teach us to pray." Jesus
responds, "When you pray" and proceeds to give a pattern prayer. The request
was "teach us to pray" but Jesus gives a pattern. They didn't need to be
taught to pray. His followers desire to pray, are compelled to pray. His
disciples are a praying people. What was needed was instruction on how.
It is not that we should not study about prayer. It is not that we should
neglect learning about how to pray. It is that we should be praying as
we study and learn. No one needs to teach us to
talk with family and friends. Even the smallest infant attempts to
communicate with its parents. Though we do not need to learn to, we do
need to be taught how.
The Word of God is our meat and drink. Prayer is our breath. As eating and breathing are necessary for us to live, so feasting on God's Word and praying to Him are for those in Christ. Whether the babbling prayers of an infant Christian or the mature prayers of the seasoned saint - let us pray!
Keep Close To Jesus
Pastor Gerry