Rogate, The Fifth Sunday
after Easter, 2012
Ascension Day – Holy
Communion – Thursday, 7 PM Central Standard
Pastor Gregory L. Jackson
Bethany Lutheran Church, 10
AM Central Time
The Hymn # 202 Welcome Happy Morning 4:28
The Confession
of Sins
The Absolution
The Introit p. 16
The Gloria Patri
The Kyrie p. 17
The Gloria in Excelsis
The Salutation and Collect p. 19
The Epistle and Gradual
The Absolution
The Introit p. 16
The Gloria Patri
The Kyrie p. 17
The Gloria in Excelsis
The Salutation and Collect p. 19
The Epistle and Gradual
The
Gospel
Glory be to
Thee, O Lord!
Praise be to Thee, O Christ!
The Nicene Creed p. 22
The Sermon Hymn #458 Our Father 4:50
Praise be to Thee, O Christ!
The Nicene Creed p. 22
The Sermon Hymn #458 Our Father 4:50
Prayer in Five Parts
The Communion
Hymn # 207 Like the Golden Sun 4:76
The Preface p.
24
The Sanctus p. 26
The Lord's Prayer p. 27
The Words of Institution
The Agnus Dei p. 28
The Nunc Dimittis p. 29
The Benediction p. 31
The Hymn #657 Beautiful Savior 4:24
The Sanctus p. 26
The Lord's Prayer p. 27
The Words of Institution
The Agnus Dei p. 28
The Nunc Dimittis p. 29
The Benediction p. 31
The Hymn #657 Beautiful Savior 4:24
KJV James 1:22 But be ye
doers of the word, and not hearers only, deceiving your own selves. 23 For if
any be a hearer of the word, and not a doer, he is like unto a man beholding
his natural face in a glass: 24 For he beholdeth himself, and goeth his way,
and straightway forgetteth what manner of man he was. 25 But whoso looketh into
the perfect law of liberty, and continueth therein, he being not a
forgetful hearer, but a doer of the work, this man shall be blessed in his
deed. 26 If any man among you seem to be religious, and bridleth not his
tongue, but deceiveth his own heart, this man's religion is vain. 27
Pure religion and undefiled before God and the Father is this, To visit the
fatherless and widows in their affliction, and to keep himself unspotted
from the world.
KJV John 16:23 And in that
day ye shall ask me nothing. Verily, verily, I say unto you, Whatsoever ye
shall ask the Father in my name, he will give it you. 24 Hitherto have
ye asked nothing in my name: ask, and ye shall receive, that your joy may be
full. 25 These things have I spoken unto you in proverbs: but the time cometh,
when I shall no more speak unto you in proverbs, but I shall shew you plainly
of the Father. 26 At that day ye shall ask in my name: and I say not unto you,
that I will pray the Father for you: 27 For the Father himself loveth you,
because ye have loved me, and have believed that I came out from God. 28 I came
forth from the Father, and am come into the world: again, I leave the world,
and go to the Father. 29 His disciples said unto him, Lo, now speakest thou
plainly, and speakest no proverb. 30 Now are we sure that thou knowest all
things, and needest not that any man should ask thee: by this we believe that
thou camest forth from God.
Fifth Sunday After Easter
Lord God, heavenly Father, who through Thy Son didst promise
us that whatsoever we ask in His name Thou wilt give us: We beseech Thee, keep
us in Thy word, and grant us Thy Holy Spirit, that He may govern us according
to Thy will; protect us from the power of the devil, from false doctrine and
worship; also defend our lives against all danger; grant us Thy blessing and
peace, that we may in all things perceive Thy merciful help, and both now and
forever praise and glorify Thee as our gracious Father, through our Lord Jesus
Christ, Thy Son, who liveth and reigneth with Thee and the Holy Ghost, one true
God, world without end. Amen.
Prayer in Five Parts
- God’s Promise.
- Faith.
- Specific petitions.
- Asking.
- In the Name of Christ.
This Gospel lesson is continues the sermon of Jesus where He
taught the disciples about “a little while” – joy turning to sorrow, and then
to joy again.
The historic lectionary broke off this part because prayer
is good for a sermon by itself. The context - disciples’ hearts are full of
sorrow because they are just facing the loss of Jesus, their constant companion
and Teacher for the last three years. Jesus guides them in the truth, but they
cannot bear everything at this point. Therefore, He is sending the Holy Spirit
to guide them in their future work, to remind them of everything He has taught.
Because the non-Lutheran Protestants do not teach the
Biblical Means of Grace, they tend to make prayer the Means of Grace. But that
is like having apples first and then the trees.
Prayer is the fruit of faith rather than the cause. For this
reason the Bible always begins with Gospel messages to create and build faith,
ending with Gospel invitation to pray to God in the Name of Christ.
The gracious invitation is similar to our welcoming of
guests. It is normal to say, “We have plenty of food and would love to have you
stay with us. Have supper with us tonight.” A hospitable person would not say,
“Eat! Now! Sit! Stay!”
Therefore, prayer begins with God’s promise of love and
abundance.
Part One – God’s Promise
John 16:23 And in that
day ye shall ask Me nothing. Verily, verily, I say unto you, Whatsoever ye
shall ask the Father in My name, He will give it you.
Lenski:
Trench interprets correctly: “In that day, he would say, the
day of my seeing you again, I will by the Spirit so teach you all things that
you shall be no longer perplexed, no longer wishing to ask me questions, which
yet you dare not put.” “In that day” refers to no special day but to the time
in general when Jesus will again be with his disciples through the Spirit.
Lenski, R. C. H.: The
Interpretation of St. John's Gospel. Minneapolis, MN : Augsburg Publishing
House, 1961, S. 1098.
Luther summarized this Gospel lesson thus –
1.
In this Gospel we have a promise and Christ does not only promise, but he even
swears that our prayers shall be heard; but through himself as mediator and
high priest.
2.
We should pray that we may have peace through faith, which St. Paul says, is a
true and perfect peace.
3.
When Christ says: “These things have I spoken unto you in parables (dark
sayings), it is as much as to say, hitherto you have been unable to understand
my Word, it all appears to you dark and hidden; but the time will come, when I
send the Holy Spirit, that I shall speak plainly by my Spirit, that is,
publicly in your hearts, of the things that belong to my father.
So
the sum and substance is, that without the Spirit one does not understand the
Word.
The Gospel is God’s Promises, including many promises and
blessings. The first of all is forgiveness of sin, in spite of human frailty,
and perfect peace – in spite of the raging storms.
This is the work of the Holy Spirit. Pentecostalism (as a
denomination) and the Charismatic Movement (within mainline denominations) grew
because the leaders no longer taught the work of the Holy Spirit through the
Word.
In fact, when I did research on this topic at the Concordia
Seminary Library, St. Louis, I found almost nothing on the efficacy of the
Word, which is proof of God binding His Spirit to His Word.
Luther and the orthodox generation after him were quite clear
on this, and Hebraic studies also teach it, even in modern Judaism to some
extent. But modern Protestants and Lutherans stopped teaching it and forgot it.
No wonder they turned to business methods, marketing, and the Fad du Jour.
(Let’s try puppets. That will do it – puppets are fun and entertaining. No –
liturgical dance. That worked great in Philly. No wait – we need to buy a
downtown movie theater, maybe a bar. That will do it.)
This future work of the Holy Spirit, promised by Christ,
includes everything in the Christian life. No one teaches the Word, except
through the Holy Spirit. When we hear the Word of God, the Holy Spirit is
conveying Christ in both Natures to us. The Holy Spirit pronounces forgiveness
on us, the faith created by the Spirit receiving this absolution (justification
by faith). The Holy Spirit moves us to pray in hundreds of Biblical passages
and helps us in our prayers. All good works done by believers are moved by the
Holy Spirit – they are the nine-fold fruits of the Spirit (Galatians 5).
“The Holy Spirit will convict the world of sin, because they
do not utterly rely on Me.” [New Jackson Living Bible, 2012 edition]
Why do people neglect prayer? Because they do not completely
trust in Christ’s Promises. No one can keep all promises except God. His
Promises are sure. They are everlasting. The Holy Spirit is so powerful, as
Luther wrote, that He can turn the worst sorrows into the greatest blessings,
as proven by the crucifixion of Christ.
Every Promise in the Old Testament was fulfilled precisely
as uttered by God, from the triumph of the Savior in Genesis 3:15 to the way in
which the traitor Judas received a morsel from Jesus at the Last Supper. Even
more important, the gracious forgiveness of God has been proclaimed and received
by millions – in the Name of Christ.
I used this argumentation with a former Lutheran who was
overwhelmed with sorrow about his financial worries. He was successful and
hard-working, but his anxieties were crippling. I asked him about all the
things God had done, from Creation to the Incarnation, Atonement, and
Resurrection. Each time I asked a question. Do you believe this? He did. Then I
asked him, “You believe God did all these things, but He is unable to provide
for you and your family?” The co-worker smiled and cried at the same time – the
Word of God convicted him of his unbelief. He knew the Gospel well and believed
it, but he did not apply it to himself.
When we are filled with anxieties, sorrows, fears, brought
to a standstill because of difficulties beyond our control or future threats,
we should start with the Promises of God. Any Gospel passage in the Bible will
start us on a new way of thinking because the Holy Spirit teaches us – “Frail,
frightened mortal. How can anything separate you from the love of God in
Christ?”
I just began a class with a brand new learning platform
online. Online teaching and learning is full of extra problems. This new system
has its technical problems and we are all learning how to use it. I expect
problems but I get frustrated too. The students got so anxious that I said,
“This is a shake-down cruise, not the voyage of the Titanic. We will make it to
the other side.” That was secular assurance, but it calmed them down.
The advantage of age is perspective. The believer who has
faced many crises will have a calmer attitude because it has happened before in
some form. This is the Spirit teaching us through the Word that God guides us
throughout life. I have told many persons, bewailing the events of the day, “I
hope this is the worst day of your life.” After some additional cajoling it
dawns on them that their complaints will be very minor through the perspective
of time. In fact, real crises are often the only way God can move us to a new
work to do in His Name. He builds up our faith through little problems until we
can face bigger ones. At some point we have enough scars to help the wounded.
Luther said that a person who has undergone trials is worth
50 who have not. To prove that, church leaders who have enjoyed nothing but
financial security (especially by doing nothing about false doctrine) brag
about their financial security. They are really saying, “False doctrine does
pay, and I pity those who do not follow my lead.”
Part Two – Faith in Him
Luther:
3. So God himself now founds our prayer upon his promise and
thereby encourages us to pray. If it were not for this promise, who would have
the courage to pray? We have hitherto resorted to many ways of preparing
ourselves to pray — ways with which the books are filled; but if you wish to be
well prepared, take the promise and lay hold of God with it. Then your courage
and desire to pray will soon grow, which courage you will never otherwise get.
For “those who pray without God’s promise, imagine in themselves how angry God
is, whom they wish to propitiate by means of their prayers. Without faith in
the promise, there is then, neither courage nor desire to pray, but mere
uncertain delusion and a melancholy spirit; there is, therefore, no hearing of
prayers, and both prayer and labor are lost.
John 16:24 Hitherto have
ye asked nothing in my name: ask, and ye shall receive, that your joy may be
full. 25 These things have I spoken unto you in proverbs: but the time cometh,
when I shall no more speak unto you in proverbs, but I shall shew you plainly
of the Father.
Lenski:
In 14:13, 14 the matter of asking in Jesus’ name is stressed
as something that is altogether natural for disciples of Jesus. So in 15:16 “in
my name” again appears as a matter of course. Now, however, we learn that “in
my name” pertains to the Giver as well as to the petitioner; as we pray, so the
Father (or Jesus, 14:13, 14) gives “in my name.” Hence the disciples must use
this name. They must in all their needs come not merely with the name “Jesus”
on their lips or attached to their prayers but with the revelation (Name) of Jesus
in their hearts by faith. Up to this time, Jesus says, the disciples have not
prayed in this manner. Some think that Jesus points to a shortcoming, a
weakness, a fatal deficiency in the praying of the disciples. If this were the
case, the blame would fall on Jesus himself, since he delayed until this time
to impress upon the disciples the necessity of using his name in prayer. Until
this time Jesus himself had allowed the disciples to pray as all true Jews
prayed in connection with the name of God as it was known to them from the old
covenant made with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. In their prayers hitherto they
used the Old Testament promises and prayed in connection (in) with them. But now
the fulfillment of these promises had arrived in Jesus; in a few hours the new
covenant would be sealed with the blood of Jesus. Thus faith had to advance and
to embrace this new covenant, the fulfillment of the old promises in Jesus. It
thus had to use Jesus’ name and revelation when praying. The reason for the
advance to Jesus’ name is objective. The Spirit will take “of mine” and will
report this to the disciples (16:14, 15). Thus subjectively, too, the disciples
will now turn to Jesus’ name. Refusal so to do would mean the rejection of the
revelation (name) of Jesus.
Lenski, R. C. H.: The
Interpretation of St. John's Gospel. Minneapolis, MN : Augsburg Publishing
House, 1961, S. 1100.
This is an important verse, because it reveals how the
disciples changed from praying as traditional Jews to praying as Jesus’
apostles. To pray in the Name of Christ is a confession of faith in Him. Every
religion has some kind of prayer. Free-thinkers insist on dropping “in the Name
of Christ.” A Masonic Lodge chaplain is not allowed to pray in the Name of
Christ, because that will offend other Masons. That alone is proof that Masonry
is not Christian, but anti-Christian.
Now we have paid chaplains at universities who start a
ceremony with bowed heads and a “moment of silence to pray to whatever power we
believe in” – or not. Prayer in the Name of Jesus has become quiet time. When
Al Benke, the LCMS DP, prayed at the all-religions service at Yankee Stadium,
he did NOT pray in the Name of Christ. That is the definition of apostasy,
refusing to make a confession of faith when it matters most. He is a constant
presence on the ALPB Online Forum, where he admonishes pastors not to spend all
their time on the computer (as he does). The Barry-McCain administration did
nothing about his apostasy, which is additional proof of synodical apostasy.
Kieschnick punished Wallace Schulz for doing something, however minor and
temporary it was.
Praying in the Name of Christ indicates our faith. Crawling
away from that confession, in terror that Sikhs and Zoroastrians might frown,
is evidence of complete unbelief, especially unbecoming in the clergy.
Not praying is conviction of unbelief. Not casting our cares
upon our gracious Heavenly Father is admission of unbelief.
Luther made fun of the Medieval Rogate processions, with
great shows of prayer. He said that when they got rid of them, no one prayed,
which proved they were not praying then, either. That reminds me of the great
displays of piety today – very Roman or Eastern Orthodox. Although I favor the
formal liturgy and the traditions associated with it, because they are good,
high church hysteria communicates a lack of trust in the Word. Chemnitz also
had some fun with the bawling and carrying on, which he pronounced either a
farce or a tragedy.
Part Three – Specific Petitions
John 16:26 At that day ye
shall ask in My Name: and I say not unto you, that I
will pray the Father for you:
Lenski:
Here Jesus amplifies v. 23, 24. “In that day,” after
Pentecost, the petitions directed to the Father by the disciples in Jesus’ name
will not need the support and the intercession of Jesus in order to be granted
by the Father. Hence Jesus does not say to them that he will second their
petitions by himself…
Lenski, R. C. H.: The
Interpretation of St. John's Gospel. Minneapolis, MN : Augsburg Publishing
House, 1961, S. 1103.
This change in prayer emphasizes that the disciples will
pray directly to the Father, with Jesus no longer seconding those petitions. In
the Greek text the pronoun “I” does not need to be used, because it is part of
the verb. However, Jesus said “I” as a pronoun, which emphasizes that He
Himself will do this.
Luther:
8. The third requisite of true prayer is, that one must name
definitely something that he brings to God or for which he prays; as for strong
faith, for love, for peace, and for the comfort of his neighbor. One must
actually set forth the petitions; just as the Lord’s Prayer presents seven
petitions.
This is what Christ means by the words: “If ye shall ask
anything of the Father.” “Anything,” that is, whatever you are in need of.
Besides, he himself interprets this “anything” and says: “That your joy may be
made full.” That is, pray for all things you need, until you have acquired even
all and your joy is made full; and his prayer will first be fully answered on the
day of judgment.
The Lord’s Prayer is a model for specific petitions or
requests. As we mature, the requests reflect that change. In Sunday School,
children pray that they will win the next soccer game. That is not bad, because
it is the start of faith. When we have a pattern or habit of prayer, the
requests change.
Because so many things weigh on us, praying to God about
them will give us relief as He answers according to His wisdom.
KJV Ephesians 3:20 Now unto
him that is able to do exceeding abundantly above all that we ask or think,
according to the power that worketh [same basic word as efficacy] in us,
The Gospel is at work in us so that our prayers are answered
beyond what we can even imagine.
Even more, God promises in Isaiah that He is already
answering our prayers before we ask –
KJV Isaiah 65:24 And it
shall come to pass, that before they call, I will answer; and while they
are yet speaking, I will hear.
We can see that at work when things happen that needed a
start before we even asked.
Parts 4 and 5
Asking (4) in the Name of Christ (5)
John 16:27 For the
Father himself loveth you, because ye have loved me, and have believed that I
came out from God. 28 I came forth from the Father, and am come into the world:
again, I leave the world, and go to the Father. 29 His disciples said unto him,
Lo, now speakest thou plainly, and speakest no proverb. 30 Now are we sure that
thou knowest all things, and needest not that any man should ask thee: by this
we believe that thou camest forth from God.
This is the Gospel motivation, which John 16:26 indicates in
a startling way. “I Myself will not ask, because God the Father loves you for
loving Me.” Therefore, our petitions are just as direct toward the Father as Jesus’
were when He prayed, “Abba, Father.”
This is even more motivation to pray, because we are counted
as equals because of faith in Christ and His work for us. Both go together.
Notice how well James and the Fourth Gospel go together. Is
the Epistle of James against faith?
KJV James 1:5 If any of you
lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth to all men liberally, and
upbraideth not; and it shall be given him. 6 But let him ask in faith, nothing
wavering. For he that wavereth is like a wave of the sea driven with the wind
and tossed. 7 For let not that man think that he shall receive any thing of the
Lord. 8 A double minded man is unstable in all his ways.
Certainly James urges people to pray and condemns them for not
praying because they lack faith. Going back and forth between human wisdom and
relying on God is not good – it is unstable. Thus pastors, people, and synods
are tossed about like waves driven by the wind.
Luther:
18. And here we also see that to “believe in Christ” does not mean to believe that Christ is a person who is both God and man; that does not help any one. But that this same person is the Christ; that is, that he went forth from the Father and came into the world, and again leaves the world and goes to the Father. The words mean no less than that this is Christ, that he became man and died for us, rose again and ascended to heaven. Because of this office of his, he is called Jesus Christ, and to believe this concerning him, that: it is true, means to be and to abide in his name. There follows further in this Gospel: “His disciples say, Lo, now speakest thou plainly, and speakest no dark sayings.”
PRAYER
"This doctrine concerning the inability and wickedness of our
natural free will and concerning our conversion and regeneration, namely, that
it is a work of God alone and not of our powers, is [impiously, shamefully, and
maliciously] abused in an unchristian manner both by enthusiasts and by
Epicureans; and by their speeches many persons have become disorderly and
irregular, and idle and indolent in all Christian exercises of prayer, reading
and devout meditation; for they say that, since they are unable from their own
natural powers to convert themselves to God, they will always strive with all
their might against God, or wait until God converts them by force against their
will; or since they can do nothing in these spiritual things, but everything is
the operation of God the Holy Ghost alone, they will regard, hear, or read
neither the Word nor the Sacrament, but wait until God without means..."
Formula of
Concord, Free Will, 46, Triglotta,
p. 899.
"The Christian's faith trusts in the ordinary means. Prayer is not a means of grace. Means of grace are divine appointments
through which God uniformly offers blessings to all who use them. Faith is the means by which the
blessings are received and appropriated. God gives us bread, when we ask it,
not through the channel of prayer, but through the ordinary channels of His
providence. He gives us
grace when we ask it, not through prayer, but through the ordinary means
appointed for this end, namely the Word and Sacraments. He who despises these will as little
have grace as he who refuses to accept bread produced in the ordinary way of
nature. Faith asks with
confidence, and trusts in the ordinary means of God's appointment for the
blessings asked."
Matthias Loy, Sermons
on the Gospels, p. 387.
"Prayer is made vigorous by petitioning; urgent, by
supplication; by thanksgiving, pleasing and acceptable. Strength and acceptability combine to
prevail and secure the petition."
Sermons
of Martin Luther, 8 vols., VI, p.
107. Philippians 4:4-7.
"The Lord's Prayer opens with praise and thanksgiving and the
acknowledgement of God as a Father; it earnestly presses toward
Him through filial love and a recognition of fatherly tenderness. For supplication, this prayer is
unequaled. Hence it is the
sublimest and the noblest prayer ever uttered."
Sermons of
Martin Luther, 8 vols.,
VI, p. 107. Philippians
4:4-7; Matthew 6:9-13.
"In like manner, St. Paul says that God's ability is thus
proved, in that He does exceeding abundantly above and better than we ask or
think. Ephesians 3:20. Therefore, we should know we are too finite to be able
to name, picture or designate the time, place, way, measure and other
circumstances for that which we ask of God. Let us leave that entirely to Him, and
immovably and steadfastly believe that He will hear us."
Sermons of
Martin Luther, 8 vols.,
III, p. 179f. Ephesians
3:20.
"Only begin this [prayer, self-examination], I say, and see
how you will succeed in the task; and you will soon discover what an
unbelieving knave is hidden in your bosom, and that your heart is too dull to
believe it."
Sermons of
Martin Luther, 8 vols., II, p. 257. Mark 16:1-8.
---
Review
comments of Pastor Jackson's Ichabod posting - Rogate Sunday - Prayer: John
16:23-30
Part 1 - God's Promise:
* Luther:
"So the sum and substance is, that without the Spirit one does not
understand the Word."
NB - It's the Holy Spirit, who connects the dots. Preachers
can preach doctrine until the cows come home, but to connect the dots, that, is
a grace bestowed by the Holy Spirit.
* G.Jackson:
"The Holy Spirit is so powerful, as Luther wrote, that He can turn
the worst sorrows into the greatest blessings, as proven by the crucifixion of
Christ."
NB - So true! As the one hymn lyric, states:
"When
through the deep waters I call thee to go; the rivers of sorrow, shall not over
flow; for I will be with thee, thy troubles to bless, - and, sanctify to thee,
thy greatest distress." [TLH - "How Firm a Foundation" – v.4 - CPH
- c. 1941]
And, which
believer who relies upon the Lord for his daily natural and spiritual
sustenance cannot affirm those treasured words!
G Jackson's -
Great illustration of a former Lutheran Christian overcome with financial woes.
It was the Holy Spirit who (through the promises of the Gospel) conveyed to him
by his faithful pastor, which was able to connect the dots with this precious
soul, so that he could believe that God would overcome his precarious
situation.
* GJ Recounting Luther: "Luther said that a person who
has undergone trials is worth 50 who have not."
NB - So true! It’s called “the furnace of affliction!” No
better school of learning. I’ve always believed, (even with all my academic
educational schooling) that I should never allow that to get in the way, or, to
take the place of life long learning!
“When through fiery trials thy pathway
shall lie; My grace all-sufficient, shall be thy supply. The flames shall not
hurt thee; I only design, thy dross to consume and thy gold to refine.” [TLH -
"How Firm a Foundation" – v. 5 - CPH - c. 1941]
Part 2 - Faith in Him
* GJ - Nice terse explanation of how Christ
guided His disciples away from the old covenant and taught them to pray in His
Name, - the fulfillment of that covenant.
NB - The true mark of faith in Christ, is not being ashamed
to pray in His Name. Did not Christ say? - "Whosoever
therefore shall be ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful
generation; of him also shall the Son of man be ashamed, when he cometh in the
glory of his Father with the holy angels." [Mark 8:38]
Also, does
not the one hymn lyric so aptly say?
"Ashamed of Jesus, that dear
Friend, on whom my hopes of heav'n depend?
No; when I blush, be this my shame,
that I no more revere His name." [TLH - "Jesus and Shall It Ever
Be" - CPH - c. 1941]
Part 3 - Specific Petitions:
G. Jackson:
"......The
Lord’s Prayer is a model for specific petitions or requests. As we mature, the
requests reflect that change. In Sunday School, children pray that they will
win the next soccer game. That is not bad, because it is the start of faith.
When we have a pattern or habit of prayer, the requests change.
Because so
many things weigh on us, praying to God about them will give us relief as He
answers according to His wisdom.
KJV Ephesians
3:20 Now unto him that is able to do exceeding abundantly above all that we ask
or think, according to the power that worketh [same basic word as efficacy] in
us,
The Gospel is
at work in us so that our prayers are answered beyond what we can even
imagine......"
NB - A (true) story to accent my
agreement with the aforementioned:
I could not
help but think of how true the aforementioned words about prayer, are. As a
teenager I was privileged to play fast pitch softball for the Munger Fireman. I
was the pitcher in this Class D league. It was a windy evening at Bay City's Carroll
Park. My knuckleball pitch that evening was the best ever, because the wind was
blowing towards the pitcher's mound.
I was praying
for that "no-hitter" and was doing very well. God graced me, the
answer to my sport’s prayer. However, our team lost by a score of 5-4. One can
pitch a no hitter, but when one does not have the control of his pitches and
walks a number of the opposition - plus some fielding errors, and, a couple of
wild pitches, - how (in the world) can the Lord stretch his blessing that far?
Parts 4 and 5 - Asking (4) in the Name
of Christ (5):
G Jackson: "Therefore, our petitions are
just as direct toward the Father as Jesus’ were when He prayed, “Abba, Father.”
This is even
more motivation to pray, because we are counted as equals because of faith in
Christ and His work for us. Both go together."
NB - Yes! Did not Christ say that He was to show us the
Father? [John 14:1f]
Children of
the heav’nly Father
Safely in His
bosom gather;
Nestling bird
nor star in Heaven
Such a refuge
e’er was given.
God His own
doth tend and nourish;
In His holy
courts they flourish;
From all evil
things He spares them;
In His mighty
arms He bears them.
Neither life
nor death shall ever
From the Lord
His children sever;
Unto them His
grace He showeth,
And their
sorrows all He knoweth.
Though He
giveth or He taketh,
God His
children ne’er forsaketh;
His the
loving purpose solely
To preserve
them pure and holy.
Lo, their
very hairs He numbers,
And no daily
care encumbers
Them that
share His ev’ry blessing
And His help
in woes distressing.
Praise the
Lord in joyful numbers:
Your
Protector never slumbers.
At the will
of your Defender
Ev’ry foeman
must surrender.
http://www.cyberhymnal.org/htm/c/o/cofthehf.htm
Nathan M.
Bickel - pastor emeritus
www.thechristianmessage.org
www.moralmatters.org