Sunday, November 26, 2017

Matthew 6 - Our Lord teaches us how to pray Part 3



Give us this day our daily bread.
As Paul said in 1 Corinthians 10:11, Israel was set forth as an example to us as the Church.   Thus we see the principles Father was seeking to teach Israel, apply to us today for He is unchanging in His character and He desires for us to grow in our conforming to His character and His ways.  We see this understanding of our “daily bread” coming from Exodus 16, that the Lord wanted to teach His people to trust in Him for provision and not in themselves.  It says, “every man had gathered according to each one’s need” (16:18).  We also read what was above and beyond was wasted, and spoiled.
There is a central concept repeated by Paul in 1 Timothy 6, that we are to be content with food and clothing.  Jesus also exhorted us that they are not to be as the unbelievers who are constantly preoccupied with these things, but rather seek first the Kingdom and His righteousness. 
This should cause us to pause and if need be repent, of unbelief or preoccupation and any anxiety of whether our physical needs are going to be met or not.
It’s also a hard prayer to relate to when we have pantries, refrigerators and freezers full of food that will last us the next month or more.  It should cause us to examine our hearts, and to pray that we would never lose the perspective and understanding that all we have is because of the Lord’s grace and mercy.  It should also keep us in check that we don’t become the rich man that built bigger barns and was not rich towards God (Luke 12). In other words he didn’t discern the reason of his prosperity.  The riches weren’t to be for selfish desires, but to be generous towards others and to use it for Kingdom purposes.

The second principle we see in this prayer is found back connected to the manna.  Deuteronomy 8, we read, “So He humbled you, allowed you to hunger, and fed you with manna, which you did not know nor did your fathers know, that He might make you know that man shall not live by bread alone; but man lives by every word that proceeds from the mouth of the Lord.”
We see the connection of physical bread with spiritual bread which we know of course refers to the Word of God (Matthew 4:4, 1 Corinthians 3, Hebrews 5, 1 Peter 2, etc.)  We need His bread daily, His Word, His fresh “rhema” for the day.  I won’t share any more on this for sake of space, but many testimonies could be given on the importance of waiting for His Word (I would say in addition to a regular Bible reading plan but not necessarily) in trust of something that He knows we’ll face for the day.  O Lord, give us today, our daily bread....


And forgive us our debts,
As we forgive our debtors.

Almost every time Jesus taught on prayer, He would connect it with forgiveness. We see that same connection with worship and forgiveness (Matthew 5:23-26) that Jesus said for you to leave your gift (an aspect of worship) and be reconciled.  So we see the same connection in prayer.  If you want your prayers to be heard, you have to be forgiven, and Jesus is clear, if you don’t forgive others trespasses against you, count on you yourself not being forgiven by the Lord. 

This so serious an issue, that Jesus repeated this over and over.  In fact He gave one of the most sobering warnings in regard to unforgiveness. In Matthew 18, He speaks of the unforgiving servant, who is handed over to the “tormenters” because of his unwillingness to show the same mercy that was shown him.  And Jesus, in case there were any there who were wondering if that applied to them (as it happens today!) left no doubt by stating, “So My heavenly Father also will do to you if each of you, from his heart, does not forgive his brother his trespasses.”  Remember the context is Peter, his beloved disciple, the one He would place in a sense as “chief” apostle asking how many times he should forgive.

We must search our hearts.  The Hebrew writer talks about the “root of bitterness” (Hebrews 12:15), and in this context the writer exhorts to the readers to “look diligently” or “look carefully” that no one would fall short of the grace of God.  This is serious, dead serious!   This is about demonstrating whether we really know Him or not.   A root cannot be seen, it’s deep and often hidden.  We must be careful to allow the Holy Spirit time to reveal if there are any hidden offenses, any resentment, any grudge, and we release that quickly to the Lord and forgive, forgive, forgive.  As many have rightly pointed out, unforgiveness is a prison we lock ourselves in!  How foolish!  Unforgiveness is also a subtle foolish statement of pride.  It’s declaring that you can exact better justice on someone who has done you wrong than Father can.  Whereas, the Word is clear, that vengeance belongs to Him, He is the One Who repays (Romans 12).  How foolish to think we can “punish” someone with our unforgiveness.  The devil laughs, we remain bound, and God remains separated from us because He says He won’t forgive us.  It’s not worth it! Let us now release all from any thing of the past or present, and release those individuals into the Lord hands.  Let us fix our eyes on the Cross and remember what great a debt we owed and worship Him for His amazing mercy and grace that He lavished on us, that we could be called His sons and daughters, and be entrusted the Person of the Holy Spirit to live in us, and seal us unto the day of redemption.


And do not lead us into temptation,

Notice Jesus did not say, “lead us not into sin.”   He said something similar in Matthew 26:41, Luke 22:46, and Mark 14:38, exhorting His disciples to “watch and pray that you would not fall into temptation.”  Again, he didn’t say to pray lest you fall not into sin.  In my experience (and I’m sure you can testify) when you pray, and are depending on God, you won’t even be tempted to sin.  You won’t even find yourself many times in tempting situations.  Prayer has a way of not only empowering you to walk in victory in holiness, not only of God’s protective shield being about you, but also fixing your heart so much on Him you are not even enticed as you would be if you were not filled with the Spirit.  You don’t want to get near sin!  When you remain in prayer you are more likely to walk in the fear of God and the Word states “holiness is perfected in the fear of the Lord,” (2 Corinthians 7:1) and, “The fear of the Lord is the hatred of evil,” (Proverb 8:13).  We as Christians can at times talk so much of the woes of temptation and the snares of sin, that it steals from the blessed truths of the Word that call us to overcome, live abundantly in holiness, and abide in His presence!  HalleluYah!  As you pray and ask God to not lead you into temptation, not even temptation... believe it!  Believe for you to go from glory to glory, and to a deeper level of sanctification all by His grace and for His glory.  Amen?

If we do not abide in prayer, we will abide in temptation. Let this be one aspect of our daily intercession: "God, preserve my soul, and keep my heart and all its ways so that I will not be entangled." When this is true in our lives, a passing temptation will not overcome us. We will remain free while others lie in bondage.  – John Owen


But deliver us from the evil one.

The Lord reminds us in teaching us to pray the very real aspect of spiritual warfare in our sojourning on this earth with Him.  This is a spiritual battle.  It’s not “hyper” spiritual to be aware of demonic influence or Satan’s schemes.  Rather we are commanded in 1 Peter 5 to be vigilant because there is a very real adversary who seeks to devour us.  Paul tells us that we wrestle not with what we see physically, but with spiritual entities.  Thus, foolish is the one who minimalizes the enemy’s ability to attack them or seek to deceive. He is the father of lies, and he’s been at this a long time.  The battle can be very subtle!  It’s so subtle it can be the thinking of thoughts that the enemy has placed there!  Just look at Peter. In one breath he’s inspired by Almighty God to confess that Jesus is the Christ the Son of the Living God only to turn right around and contradict the will of God by telling Jesus to preserve His life and then being rebuked by our Lord that this idea was actually satanic in origin!

 Or look at Paul’s words in 2 Corinthians 10:3-5, showing the nature of this warfare is not carnal but spiritual, and where does Paul place emphasis to be victorious in?  Our thoughts... “casting down arguments and every high thing that exalts itself against the knowledge of God, bringing every thought into captivity to the obedience of Christ,” (2 Corinthians 10:5).  This is an imperative, not a suggestion or simply good advice....

Probably one of the clearest testimonies I’ve heard in how this prayer (as taught by our Lord) applies to our lives, was by way of Pastor Yongghi Cho of South Korea.  He spoke of a time he was becoming fatigued and worn out from the ministry. It was in that time, that he came home one night and said he was irritated and not wanting to pastor any more.  He said he walked into his home and began to complain about his house, as he continued also complaining about the ministry.  He walked into his bedroom and looked at his wife and her snoring and confessed to himself how he couldn’t stand her snore and even saying to himself she wasn’t attractive to him.  It was then he heard the Holy Spirit speak to him, “you are under attack.”  Cho said he came into his living room, dropped to his knees and prayed the Lord’s Prayer. When he got to “deliver me from the evil one,” he felt a shift in the atmosphere and he said his window in his room literally shook as he felt a presence leave.  He got up from his knees, no longer irritated, and thankful for his home and to be a pastor.  He then went into his bedroom and said to himself, “What a beautiful wife I have! And I love that snore!”  His whole attitude had changed!
How many times do you think the enemy effects our attitude because we are under attack and have not lifted our voices in prayer for God’s deliverance?  I think it’s probably more times than we’d like to admit or perhaps aware of. 
Paul said we are not ignorant of the enemies schemes (2 Corinthians 2).  Let us remember though our degree of authority in resisting the enemy is connected to our submission to the Lord (James 4:7).  If we are manifesting anger, or anxiety or fear it’s showing that area is not entirely submitted to God and we are still holding on to “control” of it in some capacity.  His peace comes when there is full surrender.

For Yours is the kingdom and the power and the glory forever. Amen.

Praise bookends our prayers to the Lord. Much like the Psalms that start in praise and end in praise, so Jesus teaches us to do the same.  Similar to Paul’s teaching, that we are to be anxious for nothing but in making our supplication known to the Lord, we are to do so with thanksgiving (Philippians 4:6,7).  In the end, it’s not about us, and it never will be, it’s about the Lord God receiving glory, being acknowledged that its His power at work in us both to will and to work for His good pleasure, and that our lives are to be lives for His Kingdom’s agenda.  As Jesus goes on to teach in Matthew 6, we are to seek first His Kingdom.  Let us make sure that all of our prayers end in praise, and rightly so, for without His great gift of salvation, we couldn’t even approach His Throne of grace to pray to Him in the first place.  Without the blood of Jesus, we would have no hope of being heard, cleansed and brought into right relationship.  Worthy is the Lamb Who was slain to receive, power, and honor and praise forevermore.  Worthy is the Father to receive all glory for His great love in giving His only begotten Son to save us and redeem us to Himself.   Yours, is the Kingdom, power and glory Lord! For from You and to You are all things, and they and we were created for Your glory! 

How appropriate to end our corporate or personal prayers with even a doxology, like that of Jude 24, 25 or maybe of 1 Timothy 1:17!

Monday, October 23, 2017

Matthew 6 - Our Lord teaches us how to pray Part 2


In this manner, therefore, pray:
Our Father in heaven,
Hallowed be Your name.

Just as we see Jesus focus on the secret personal aspect of prayer with the Father, so we see from His teaching the expectation and normalcy of corporate prayer by starting out with “Our Father.”  We also see Jesus, as the author and finisher of our faith, invite us into the same relationship that He modeled in addressing God as “Father.”  This should cut through a lot of divisive rhetoric of calling God by His “proper” name.  Whether that is Christians speaking strongly we must address Him as “Yahweh” or “Jehovah” or even “Yeshua” the word used by our Lord to show we have relationship with Him and unity of spirit, is simply calling Him our “Father.”   That’s even a point to make for Jehovah witnesses who say God must be called “Jehovah”, you can simply ask if Jesus was our model according to Hebrews 12:1 (to which they will agree) and then to ask how many times did Jesus refer to Him as “Jehovah?”  The answer of course is “zero.” What a freedom it is to know we are heard because of relationship with God through Jesus, and we have the assurance to come before Him and call Him “Papa,” our Heavenly Father.

The first thing we see is recognition of where our Father is.  What would have come to the disciple’s minds at the thought of “heaven”?  I believe their minds would have raced to the two primary passages.... Ezekiel 1, and of course Isaiah 6.
I submit to you the first thing we must do in prayer, is to behold Him as He is revealed in Scripture. Seated on His throne, reigning in power, surrounded by fiery angels crying “Holy, Holy, Holy” the temple filled with glory (Isaiah 6), the sound of rushing water and the sound of like a tumult of an army (Ez. 1:24).  A throne where the One seated on it looks like glowing metal with the appearance of a rainbow around the Throne.  And now for us the further insights we have from the book of Revelation of the Throne room and how awesome He is! (Lightening and Thunder and voices,.... this is our God!)  When we behold Him as we begin to pray we are reminded of His omniscience, His omnipotence, and omnipresence.  We are reminded nothing is difficult for our King!  We are reminded He is in control, and He has all power to change anything, and we can fully trust in Him.  Faith arises as we behold Him!  Perspective changes as we behold Him!  And we are less likely to come flippantly or half heartedly when we behold Him.

The first thing we see in Jesus teaching on prayer, is praise.  We enter His gates with thanksgiving and His courts with praise (Psalm 100).  We praise Him for His sacred Name.  To the Jew, the name of a person is their character.  You can’t separate the two.  To declare someone’s name was to declare who he or she is.  So it is with our Father!  When we speak His Name, we declare Who He is!  And how as He revealed His Name over the ages through the Scriptures?

JEHOVAH/ YAHWEH- “THE SELF EXISTANT ONE” EXODUS 3:14, JOHN 8:58
YAHWEH YIRAH-  “THE LORD WILL PROVIDE” GENESIS 22:13,14, ROMANS 5:6-11
YAHWEH MEKADDISHKEM- “THE LORD WHO SANCTIFIES” EXODUS 31:12,13, 1 PETER 1:15,16
YAHWEH NISSI- “THE LORD IS MY BANNER” EXODUS 17:15,16, EPHESIANS 6:10-18
YAHWEH RAPHA- “THE LORD WHO HEALS” EXODUS 15:25-27, MATTHEW 8:17)
YAHWEH ROHI- “THE LORD IS MY SHEPHERD” PSALM 23, JOHN 10:11-18
YAHWEH SHALOM- “THE LORD IS PEACE” JUDGES 6:22-24, HEBREWS 13:20
YAHWEH SHAMMAH- “THE LORD WHO IS PRESENT” EZEKIAL 48:35, MATTHEW 28:20
JESUS (YEHOSHUA)- “JEHOVAH SAVES/ SAVIOR” MATTHEW 1:21

Take the time to praise Him, to praise His Name as He has revealed it, but know that all of these ways He has revealed His character is to reveal ultimately the truth of the meaning of “Father.”  A Father Who protects, provides, heals, is present, etc....  this is what the Perfect Father looks like, let us rest in how He defines fatherhood, and let those who have had a distorted view of what a father looks like because of their earthly fathers, come to now recognize and embrace the true definition as the Creator defines it.  HalleluYah!  Take the time to praise Him for His character and thank Him for how you’ve seen Him demonstrate this in your life.
10 
Your kingdom come.

As others have pointed out, Jesus didn’t come to start another world religion called Christianity.  He came to bring the Kingdom of God. He is the King of that everlasting Kingdom.  This was His first message in Matthew 4, and this is what He taught and demonstrated throughout His life, and this is what we see carried on with His followers (ex. Acts 8:12, 19:8, 28:13, 31).  A Kingdom of course is where the King reigns; everything is subject to His reign.  Everything is to be submitted to His rule.  What a joy that we serve such a benevolent, loving, good King! HalleluYah!
I would submit to you, when we are praying for God’s Kingdom to come, which is a now, but not yet fully reality (His Kingdom is advanced as souls come to Jesus and impact comes through His influence but won’t be fully realized until He comes back), we must first make sure everything in our lives are showing they are submitted to His Kingdom rule. 
This part of the prayer I believe is reminding us to examine our lives, and make sure everything is under His authority.  When we are walking in truth, it is then that we can rightfully pray and be used to see His Kingdom come through our lives as well.  Areas that we must examine to make sure are submitted to God are: our possessions/finances, our families, our relationships, our future, our health and our reputations.  There are three emotions that will often be revealed if these areas our not submitted to God; fear, anger and anxiety. If you see these emotions rising up, it’s demonstrating your need to surrender, and declare His Lordship over that area of your life and yielding to His control.  His will is that we walk in peace. 
From this place we are asking God’s Kingdom to come, and that we would be used to advance His Kingdom wherever He has strategically placed us for such a time as this.

Your will be done
On earth as it is in heaven.

Jesus, by His own disclosure, was preoccupied and consumed with doing the will of His Father.  He said He didn’t do anything of Himself but what He saw the Father do (John 5:19), He said He had come down from heaven not to do His will but the One Who sent Him (John 6:38).  If Jesus is the author and finisher of our faith (which He is), then we are to have that same disposition, standard and focus.  It’s not about us.  It’s about the will of the Father.
So in that, our daily prayer,....again our daily prayer, is to pray that not our will be done but His will be done.   This is fundamental, and if we miss this, we will be found wandering, disillusioned, frustrated, confused and depressed.   When we are praying this foundational prayer of surrender and by faith believing He will indeed have His will be done in and through us, we walk with purpose, a sense of destiny, in peace, and with joy even in the face of pain (just as David could pray with such confidence in Psalm 23).
And how do we know what the Father’s will is?  Through His Word, and more specifically the One Who is called “The Word of God” Jesus Christ our Lord.  If you want to see the will of the Father, study and emulate the life of Jesus.
In saying this, one challenge that was given that has stuck with me, came from a Bible teacher named Ray Vanderlaan.  He talks of the Jewish understanding of discipleship, and how the disciple is to imitate everything the rabbi does, to be as it were in his dust, because you are so close in observing his every move and action.  When Ray was in Israel studying the Torah, the teacher gave a challenge (although he himself was not a follower of Jesus), that anyone that claimed to be a follower of Yeshua, who did not study His words of the four Gospels at least once a week, couldn’t possibly know their rabbi like they claim to.  Ray submitted the challenge, are we even acquainted with Jesus to read one Gospel a week to observe, study and pray to imitate how Jesus lived and interacted with people?  I have taken that challenge at different times and found it most profitable.  I encourage and challenge you to try it for a couple of months at least, and then as you do, be praying with understanding, “Father, let Your will be done on earth, through me, through Your church, as it is in heaven, let us do Your will as Jesus modeled to us.” 
Let us take note on some recurring things seen though from His life; self denial, compassion, humility, power, truthful speaking, eternal perspective, giving and fostering true community...

Friday, October 13, 2017

Matthew 6 - Our Lord teaches us to pray Part 1



Now let’s look at Jesus’ teaching on prayer for us! We see His first teaching of course in Matthew 6 at the Sermon on the Mount....

5 “And when you pray, you shall not be like the hypocrites. For they love to pray standing in the synagogues and on the corners of the streets, that they may be seen by men. Assuredly, I say to you, they have their reward.

The context of Matthew 6 of course is Jesus contrasting the ways of the Kingdom of heaven vs. this world (including its religious system).  This includes those that claim to follow and know God but show by their actions they really don’t.  Overall we see Jesus make this contrast between the outward display of religious devotion/ dedication vs. what is to be the inward reality displayed in those who are really devoted to the Lord and know Him.
The warning is clear.... don’t be a hypocrite!  In the Greek this word literally means a stage player, someone whose profession does not match their actions,... a pretender.  Jesus uses this word three times, in addressing all three ways of displaying devotion; alms giving, prayer and fasting.
The first thing Jesus is addressing here in prayer is motive.  Whose eyes are we living for?  Is it for the eyes of men or the eyes of God?  Paul said it so succinctly in Galatians 1 verse 10, where he said if he is seeking to please men, he is no longer a servant of the Lord.... they are diametrically opposed.

 But you, when you pray, go into your room, and when you have shut your door, pray to your Father who is in the secret place; and your Father who sees in secret will reward you openly.

To those who are truly His disciples, they are told where they are to find their place of communion, alone with Him.  This is the way of the Kingdom of heaven; if you want to be “seen” by the Lord you do it in secret. It’s the antithesis of the ways of the world, a world of self-promotion, and self-exaltation.   A world that wants everyone to see how “good I am” a world of social media that wants to post and make known ones life to all (some times almost every detail!).
The way of the Lord is a way of demonstrating He is our first love, by giving Him undivided attention and undistracted communion.  This is the bulls-eye of our lives.  If this isn’t being done, we are living out of order and will not walk in our full destiny.  Abiding with Him starts here.... and we know He said apart from Him we can do nothing.
The enemy will fight you tooth and nail here.  He will do anything to keep you from being connected to Him and from having this time.  As I said before, if you don’t believe in the reality of spiritual warfare, just determine to have more alone time with the Lord in prayer and tell me of your experience.  Pray until you pray.  Know that the Father delights to have this time with you more than you do, and it’s worth all your effort to contend for that alone time with Him.
To pray in secret to the Father, is a life that is rewarded.  Rewarded with a deeper sense of walking with Him and the nearness of His presence, favor, guidance, answered prayer, joy, vision, fulfillment to name a few things.  Is that time worth fighting for, protecting and cherishing?  With everything in you! With all that you have! Yes, yes, yes!!!

 And when you pray, do not use vain repetitions as the heathen do. For they think that they will be heard for their many words.
“Therefore do not be like them. For your Father knows the things you have need of before you ask Him.

I saw this first hand overseas living in West Africa.  All night prayer meetings in a sect of Islam, repeating the same phrase over and over for hours.  This is the evidence of a lack of relationship.  This is evidence of resorting to formula because you don’t know if you are really being heard or not.  However, in the reality of the new birth by the Holy Spirit upon belief in the Gospel of Jesus Christ, we are to know that we’ve been given the spirit of adoption whereby we cry, “Abba, Father.”
I would just say a couple of things to this “vain” repetitions in possible application for us though.  First let us be careful of “fillers” in our prayers.  In other words, constant words used repeatedly in prayer that are “automatic” but show not a natural conversation but perhaps used to prevent being stalled in prayer.  Such words as “just” or even using “Father” or “God” or “Jesus” over and over in a way you wouldn’t address someone naturally in conversation if you were talking to anyone else.  I myself used to use fillers, and was gently rebuked by a brother.  At first I was somewhat offended, but then God convicted me it was true and showed me my pride in being offended.
Second, in the area of speaking in tongues, let us remember Paul’s words in 1 Corinthians 14, “Therefore let him who speaks in a tongue pray that he may interpret. For if I pray in a tongue, my spirit prays, but my understanding is unfruitful.  What is the conclusion then?  I will pray with the spirit, and I will also pray with understanding.  I will sing with the spirit, and I will also sing with the understanding.”  Let there be a prayer for understanding rather than just any form of automated disengagement in ones mind.

We’ll go into the prayer itself that Jesus taught next time...