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Lesson 53 |
Lesson Subject: Lessons in the School of Prayer
Lesson Plan
Lesson Setting
Time: December, A.D. 29. Soon after Jesus' return from the
Feast of Dedication, and the incident at the home of Martha
and Mary, in our last lesson.
Place: Somewhere in Perea, east of the Jordan
Place in the Life of Christ: Early in His Perean ministry,
near the close of His third year, about four months before
His crucifixion.
Why do we need to learn how to pray?
Jesus' example as to prayer.
The true use of the Lord's prayer.
The Lord's Prayer as a whole, and the reason for the order of the petitions.
Compare v 13 with Matt 7:11, and note the difference.
Christ's lesson from the Fatherhood of God.
The three forms of praying in v 9.
The three kinds of answer to prayer.
The Teacher Jesus had returned from Bethany, where we saw Him in our last lesson, and was again at work in Perea. The great crisis of His life was but a few months away. The burdens of His last ministry were crowding upon Him. The leaving of His vast mission for the world in the hands of a few unlearned and imperfect fishermen, demanded a faith and vision almost immeasurable. There was no power that could sustain Him but His Heavenly Father and His Holy Spirit. Hence ...
v 1 ... "he was praying in a certain place," because He needed to pray, and to be in closest communion with God at special times, as one eats his food at special times, but lives and works by means of it all the time.
Note:
The Teacher was experiencing in His own life the very things
He taught His disciples at their request. It is well to
notice this as we proceed with the lesson. Every teaching
concerning prayer grew out of Jesus' life and experience.
It was not hearsay, it was the fruit of His soul. It is this
that makes a great teacher. And every teacher is successful
just so far as this is true of his teaching.
v 1 ... "when he ceased" praying where they knew He was at prayer, or when He returned to them from some secret place where He was alone with God.
v 1 ... "one of his disciples said unto him, Lord, teach us to pray." The disciples realized more and more how much they needed prayer. We must learn to do even the best things, if we desire to do them in the best way. With the holiest and most earnest spirit, we need to learn how to express it most perfectly. The one most full of music, or of artistic talent, takes the greatest pains to learn how best to express what is within him. So the disciples needed to learn how to pray -- the true spirit of prayer, the right things to pray for, the length or intensity of praying, the attitude toward God, praying alone, or in public, what to expect in answer, and when to expect it, and many other things to cherish or to avoid. There must have been a great contrast between the prayers of the Pharisees, and the prayers of Jesus.
In response to this request, Jesus gives them a Series of Lessons in His School of Prayer.
Matt. 7:13 ... "the kingdom and the power." He is ruler of nature and man. All forces are under His control.
v 13 ... "and the glory." God's glory is the outshining of His nature, His character, His love, the perfection of His being.
An Oriental Story of Two Neighbors
Jesus begins by appealing to His disciples as if it might occur.
v 5 ... "a friend, and shall go unto him at midnight." In hot climates traveling was largely done in the night. But for the householder it was a most inconvenient time, when it would require a good deal of patience to grant the request.
v 5 ... "lend me three loaves." Thin cakes, of which it would easily take three to satisfy a hungry man.
v 6 ... "For a friend of mine." Giving the reason for his inopportune but urgent request. The friend, arriving at the late hour, was doubtless suffering from hunger. There were almost no hotels in the East to which he could go. The host was entirely out of food, but hoped that his friend might have some left over, though usually they prepare bread enough only for a single day. Perhaps he did not even have the meal to make bread.
v 7 ... "Trouble me not." One translation says, "Don't bother me."
v 7 ... "my children are with me in bed." In the same apartment, but not in the same bed. Each had a bed, or mattress. It was usual in that time for a whole poor family to sleep in the same room.
v 7 ... "I cannot rise and give thee." It is altogether too much trouble. It was indeed a good deal to ask, but its excuse was that it was for others and not for himself.
v 8 ... "Though he will not rise and give him, because he is his friend." Though the higher motives will not avail to overcome his reluctance for the friendship is weak.
v 8 ... "yet because of his importunity." The word importunity is actually too mild. The original is a very striking word, describing persistence; literally, shamelessness. He let no modesty keep him from insisting that his friend grant his request.
Jesus' Application of the Story is made in verses 9 and 10. It is the same as that of the parable of the Unjust Judge in Luke 18, "And shall not God avenge his elect, that cry to him day and night, and yet he is longsuffering over them" (Am. Rev.)! "However long the answer to prayer may seem to be delayed, constant faithful prayer always is answered" (Int. Crit. Com.).
The two similar parables "imply that we have to wait for the fulfillment of spiritual desires, and they teach that it is worth our while to wait; fulfillment's will come" (Exp. Greek Test.).
In order to avoid certain misunderstandings it is wise to note:
Prayer-answers are often long preparing; as one prays for fruit, and the answer is begun by the planting of a seed, followed by the nurture of sun and rain. But the fruit must grow and ripen before it can be eaten. Familiar examples are found in every good reform in the growth of character. Much of our best training in God's School comes through the work and thought, and interest in the long-continued nurture of the good seeds of the kingdom into fruit-bearing trees beside the river of life.
These verses express one of the conclusions to be drawn from the story of the selfish neighbor. Asking is the condition of receiving. Prayer opens the door to the divine treasure house which contains supplies for all our needs.
In the Arabian Night's tales there is a story of a remarkable ointment which, if rubbed on the eye, makes one see all the riches in the world; the gold hidden in the mines, the diamonds treasured in secret places. Education is like that ointment. But prayer, taking hold of the powers of God, is not only the ointment that makes our eyes to see all the riches of God's worlds, earthly and heavenly, but is the "open sesame," unlocking the doors to those treasures.
We find here the threefold way of asking for them:
v 9 ... "Ask ... seek ... knock." These words imply three methods of prayer, and perhaps three degrees of intensity. Ask, express your desire, go to God with it; including and gathering up in itself the "seek" and the "knock," as in v 13, for these are modes of asking. Seek by all active efforts, which are acted prayers; use all possible means, as in the parable of the pearl of great price. Knock at the door of God's treasure house of blessings for the blessings which no seeking can obtain, but which must be given by God. For God has countless blessings in store for us beyond all we can ask or think. The power of steam lay dormant in every drop of water back to the garden of Eden. Electricity was sleeping unknown in the clouds ages ago, and the same is true of a thousand marvels, such as Cyber Space, which we are discovering in these latter days. But all these, wonderful as they are, are but a few grains from the waving harvests of blessing, which are waiting for man's earnest seeking, and his fitness to receive. We have not begun to exhaust the treasures of this world.
This is equally true of God's spiritual blessings. There is a fuller salvation, a nobler life, a higher character, a larger usefulness, a richer experience, grander triumphs for the kingdom, than poet's dream or artist's vision can conceive. All we have yet received are but the dawning rays of the glorious day that is coming; "as it is written, Eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered into the heart of man, the things which God hath prepared for them that love him" (1 Cor. 2:9).
And there is no way by which we can receive the fullness of these heavenly blessings, save by Asking, Seeking, and Knocking. Only in this way can the blessings be worked into our nature, as the sunshine is worked into the flower and the fruit.
Illustration
In the charming little booklet, Expectation Corner, Adam Slowman wrote about being led into the Lord's treasure
houses, and among many other wonders, revealed to him was
the "Delayed Blessings Office," where God kept certain
things prayed for until the wise time came to send them.
"It takes a long time for some pensioners to learn that
delays are not denials ... Ah, there are secrets of love
and wisdom in the 'Delayed Blessings Department' which are
little dreamt of. Men would pluck their mercies green when
the Lord would have them ripe." Therefore will the Lord wait,
that he may be gracious unto you (Isa. 30:18).
There are three ways in which prayer is answered:
Strive; yet I do not promise
The prize you dream of today
Will not fade when you think to grasp it,
And melt in your hand away;
But another and holier treasurer,
You would now, perchance, disdain
Will come when your toil is over,
And pay you for all your pain.Wait, yet I do not tell you
The hour you long for now
Will not come, with its radiance vanished,
And a shadow upon its brow;
Yet far through the misty future,
With a crown of starry light,
An hour of joy you know not
Is winging her silent flight.
Pray; though the gift you ask for
May never comfort your fears,
May never repay your pleading,
Yet pray, and with hopeful tears;
An answer, not that you long for,?
But diviner, will come one day;
Your eyes are too dim to see it,
Yet strive, and wait, and pray.-Frances E. Tyner
The Desire of Parents to Give Good Things to Their Children is But a Faint Type of the Desire of Our Father to Give the Best Things to His Children.
Jesus now appeals to their own hearts for a proof of God's willingness to hear and answer prayer. Prayer to our Heavenly Father should be as natural as a child's asking what he wants from his father; as free and ready to ask.
v 11 ... "If a son shall ask bread of any of you that is a father, will he give him a stone," that looks like bread, one of their round hard loaves. The great Scottish evangelist and teacher, Joe Nisbet, once told the story about obtaining from a friend one of the hard balls of bread from the convent of St. Catherine on Mt. Sinai, which while using as a paperweight he accidentally threw away, mistaking it for a stone.
v 11 ... "If he ask a fish, will he for a fish give him a serpent?" Which resembles some forms of fish. Here the contrast is between excellent food and something harmful.
v 12 ... "Ask an egg ... offer him a scorpion?" The white scorpion with the tail folded would actually look like a small egg. Here the contrast is between good food and the painful and deadly.
On the contrary, if the child ask for a stone or serpent -- anything injurious -- the father will refuse the harmful, and give him good food instead. It is the world and Satan that give stones for bread and serpents for fish.
The Conclusive Argument
v 13 ... "If ye then, bring evil," imperfect, more or less selfish, with many wrong motives and feelings and passions ...
v 13 ... "know how to give good gifts unto your children." Every parent who has not lost his very humanity, and become devilish, desires good for his children, and will take a great deal of pains and care to give them good things.
v 13 ... "how much more shall your heavenly Father," perfect in goodness, infinite in love, far more ready to give than we are to receive ...
v 13 ... "give the Holy Spirit." The best of all good gifts, the sum and source of all. It is like giving life to the dead, making possible to him all enjoyments and all powers. It is like giving light to those in the dark, or sight to the blind, revealing all the glories of earth and sky. The good Father who gives this best of all gifts will not withhold any of the lesser good things -- hence, it is said in Matthew, He will "give good things" ...
v 13 ... "to them that ask him." The late Dr. Fred B. Walker (Bible professor, Lipscomb University), preaching in a tent on Newtownards Road in Belfast, N. Ireland, beautifully applied this promise: "We should always realize that God is better than men -- kinder and moreloving to His children than we are to ours. But do we actually realize that? There are fond mothers, who resolutely cause pain or grief to their darlings by forcibly administering some unpleasant medicine, or by taking away some dangerous plaything, or unwholesome article of food, while they are unable to explain their ground of action to the little ones. They know that they are prompted in this by truest love, although to their children they may, for the present, seem unloving. Do those mothers never wonder how God can be influenced by love to them, in causing them pain or grief, by what He gives, or by what He takes away, while He yet fails to make full explanation of His course? If so, is there no suggestion in their thought that God is less loving and wise than an earthly parent?"
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