Monday, August 19, 2019

July 28, 2019 Sermon Luke 11:1-13 "Considering the Lord's Prayer Anew"


"Considering the Lord's Prayer Anew"
Rev. Peter Hofstra

            We pray these words every week.  We probably know it better than we know our own Social Security numbers.  Whenever we have a mixed crowd, like at a wedding or funeral, you will hear me hold half a beat on debts and debtors so that the Catholics in the room can fit in trespasses and trespassers.  We call it the Lord’s Prayer and the Padre Nuestro in our order of worship, but it is also known as the “Our Father”, so named for the words it opens with.  It carries such weight in the tradition of the church that the Heidelberg Catechism and the Westminster Shorter and Longer Catechisms offer line by line interpretations of the prayer, what it has to say, its relevance to us, and the richness of theological insight that Jesus has gathered in so few words.
            So here is the problem.  Rote.  In the order of worship for our church, we generally close the prayers of the people with the Lord’s Prayer.  And I wonder how many times it serves as little more than an extended Amen.  In 2 languages.
            Luke 11:3, “Give us each day our daily bread.”  When I first got here, part of Sunday School was a reward system for number of bible verses memorized.  My favorite is from the story of Lazarus, the whole verse is “Jesus wept”, but this one serves in that same vein rather nicely. 
            There is an inherent danger in providing the disciples, and us, with a fixed prayer formula.  It is the problem we have already identified; the formula becomes Rote.  We have it memorized and we can spit it back without a second thought as to what the words actually mean.  To address this, Jesus does what Jesus does so well, he shares with us a parable, about daily bread.  And remember, these are well before the days of a 24-hour 7-11 or Walgreens.
"Suppose one of you has a friend, and you go to him at midnight and say to him, 'Friend, lend me three loaves of bread; for a friend of mine has arrived, and I have nothing to set before him.'  And he answers from within, 'Do not bother me; the door has already been locked, and my children are with me in bed; I cannot get up and give you anything.'  I tell you, even though he will not get up and give him anything because he is his friend, at least because of his persistence he will get up and give him whatever he needs.”
            To read this back into the Lord’s Prayer, we pray “Give us this day our daily bread” and we keep asking until the Lord provides, not so much because we are loved, but because in this case we will get off the Divine’s back.
            The cleaned up version of the lesson in persistence comes next, "So I say to you, Ask, and it will be given you; search, and you will find; knock, and the door will be opened for you.  For everyone who asks receives, and everyone who searches finds, and for everyone who knocks, the door will be opened.”
            Instead of looking at the Lord’s Prayer simply as the go to when we can’t think of anything else, except maybe grace, perhaps Jesus has intended something far more comprehensive with these words.
            If you look at the Order of Worship, you will see the variety of prayers that we offer over the course of this time period.    We offer a prayer of confession, an offertory prayer-which is a prayer of thanksgiving, the prayers of the people, which are intercessory prayers, asking the Lord’s intervention in the things of life in our concerns, and praise to the Lord in our joys.  We sing our prayers.  Our opening hymn is a prayer of praise to our God.   After sharing God’s Word, we sing a prayer of response. 
            Look at how this fits into what Jesus has given to us:
              Father, hallowed be your name”: this is a prayer of praise, offering up our knowledge of the Holiness of our Father in heaven.
            Your kingdom come: this is a prayer of thanksgiving, responding to the gift of Christ’s death and resurrection, of our salvation, of the gift of life eternal we shall return when God’s kingdom comes again.
            “Give us this day our daily bread.”  This is not just about having a sandwich each day.  This is a prayer of intercession.  Lord, give us what we need.  It may be for us, it may be for those whom we love.
            And forgive us our sins, for we ourselves forgive everyone indebted to us: This is our prayer of confession and the exchanging of the peace.  You know the words, “Since God has forgiven us in Christ, let us forgive one another.  The Peace of Christ be with you.”
            And do not bring us to the time of trial.  You know the cliché, an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure?  It seems to work for prayer as well.
            This is not exactly the same format as we share in worship, but that form amalgamates the different places where the story of the Lord’s Prayer is told to us in the gospels.  But I hope we can understand what we have here.  It is not just a memorized religious curiosity.  In the Lord’s Prayer, we have the framework, the table of contents if you will, of a fully rounded and extended conversation with the Almighty. 
            When I was in Seminary, we had weekly prayer groups.  The whole student body was divided into groups, each led by a member of the faculty.  It was powerful stuff.  One day we got into the power of the personalness of prayer.  The subject under discussion was about praying for missionaries.  Who are the missionaries we know, what do they need, what can we lift up to the Lord?
            This was over and against the generic “we pray for all missionaries everywhere”.
            There is the difference between the Lord’s Prayer as a standard repetition each week over and against what it was meant to be, a lesson by our Savior Jesus Christ on how we should pray.
            Here is another cliché for you, we will get out of this prayer what we put into it.  Ever been here on a Sunday when it just wasn’t happening?  We could be singing, “Jesus loves me, this I know…” but it might as well be blah dee blah dee blah for all the meaning we are taking away from it.  So it can be even more easily with the Lord’s Prayer because it is so ingrained that we can slide right through.
            Remember learning your multiplication tables?  At first, for me, it was like the teacher had invented a whole new level of mind-numbing torture.  I don’t care how many flashcards or speed drills or treats I got for getting them right, eight times eight is sixty four….blah dee blah dee blah.  Until we started to build on it.  Multiplying multi digit numbers.  Before I knew my times tables, I did not think they were possible (I am of the generation that was on the cusp of the personal calculator).  But once I had those tables down.
            How much more then in the Lord’s Prayer?  There are books full of math stuff that I have learned that I have truly NEVER used again.  But there is not a day that goes by that is not made better when I am living it in the Lord and not on my own.  There is nothing that can stop us if we are in the love of God.  Like Jesus concludes our passage today, even evil people give their kids nice stuff, how much more will our heavenly Father give to us through the Holy Spirit?
            We pray these words every week.  How much more powerfully could they change our lives for the better, in Christ, with the investments of our words, our hopes, our fears, our joys, our sorrows, our very lives, offered up to our Father who art in heaven?
Amen.

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