| Dear Friend,
Something
that most everyone knows, even if they are not religious and
do not attend church, is the Lord’s Prayer. All someone
has to do is start saying, “Our Father, which art in heaven,
hallowed be thy name...” and soon everyone bows their
head and murmurs along, skipping over the words they might not
remember. But what do those words really mean that many times
we mumble aloud without taking the time to think about them?
The
Lord's Prayer was twice given by our Saviour, first to the
multitude in the Sermon on the Mount, and again, some months
later, to the disciples alone. The disciples had been for
a short time absent from their Lord, when on their return
they found Him absorbed in communion with God. Seeming unconscious
of their presence, He continued praying aloud. The Saviour's
face was irradiated with a celestial brightness. He seemed
to be in the very presence of the Unseen, and there was a
living power in His words as of one who spoke with God.
The hearts of the listening disciples were deeply moved.
They had marked how often He spent long hours in solitude
in communion with His Father. His days were passed in ministry
to the crowds that pressed upon Him, and in unveiling the
treacherous sophistry of the rabbis, and this incessant labor
often left Him so utterly wearied that His mother and brothers,
and even His disciples, had feared that His life would be
sacrificed. But as He returned from the hours of prayer that
closed the toilsome day, they marked the look of peace upon
His face, the sense of refreshment that seemed to pervade
His presence. It was from hours spent with God that He came
forth, morning by morning, to bring the light of heaven to
men. The disciples had come to connect His hours of prayer
with the power of His words and works. Now, as they listened
to His supplication, their hearts were awed and humbled. As
He ceased praying, it was with a conviction of their own deep
need that they exclaimed, “Lord, teach us to pray.”
Luke 11:1.
Jesus gives them no new form of prayer. That which He
has before taught them He repeats, as if He would say, You
need to understand what I have already given. It has a depth
of meaning you have not yet fathomed.
The Saviour does not, however, restrict us to the use
of these exact words. As one with humanity, He presents His
own ideal of prayer, words so simple that they may be adopted
by the little child, yet so comprehensive that their significance
can never be fully grasped by the greatest minds. We are taught
to come to God with our tribute of thanksgiving, to make known
our wants, to confess our sins, and to claim His mercy in
accordance with His promise. Thoughts
from the Mount of Blessing, page 102.
So, over the next few weeks, we’ll take a sentence-by-sentence
look at the Lord’s Prayer. And, as we begin the New Year,
may our prayer lives become better than they have been in the
past!
Until we visit again next year, keep the Son in your focus!
Mark
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