Why do I pray? In some sense, it seems so unnecessary.
If God is all-knowing,
God is all-powerful, and God is all-loving, then he knows everything I need,
has the power to give me everything I need, and loves me enough to want to give
me everything I need. Why are my prayers
of petition necessary?
If God is secure in
his being - and who could be more secure - then why are my prayers of praise
necessary?
If God loves me
unconditionally, then what do my prayers of thanksgiving or even contrition
mean? God still loves me.
Yet Jesus insists that
I pray. And he leads by example. The Gospels are filled with instances of
Jesus at prayer. The disciples see this
and ask Jesus to teach them how to pray.
And in teaching them
how to pray, Jesus gives us insight into why we pray.
Jesus begins the
prayer with “Abba”, an Aramaic term of endearment for a father. In English, it would be more properly
translated as “Daddy.” Of course, since
every person is created by God, every person, whether Christian or not, is a
child of God. But by using the intimate
term “abba,” Jesus teaches us that, as his followers, his brothers and his
sisters, our relationship to God, our status as children of God, is much deeper
and more intimate than that of creator and creature. Instead, it is the relationship of a loving
parent and a loved child. Our anxiety is replaced by comfort and peace.
Jesus then teaches
that “when we pray,” we begin with praising God, for hallowed is his name. In ancient thinking, a reference to one’s “name”
implied the entire essence of the person.
God is the holy one, the source of all that is holy and all that is
good. Our pride is replaced by humility.
As Christians, Jesus
has us pray for the entire world, for God’s kingdom to come – a kingdom of peace,
a kingdom of justice, a kingdom of love.
In Matthew’s more familiar version, Jesus connects the coming of the
kingdom with the doing of God’s will, on earth as it is in heaven. Jesus places prayer for God’s will and prayer
for the world ahead of our own desires.
Our greed is turned to generosity.
Jesus has us pray for
“daily” bread, that which sustains us, that which is necessary for our
survival. He reminds us that our sustenance
is an every day affair. Even at the very
end, we still depend on God to protect us from temptation, the final test. Our self-righteousness is turned to gratitude.
We pray for
forgiveness, for we forgive all who do wrong to us. We are reminded of our call to emulate Christ
who demonstrated forgiveness to the point of forgiving even those tortured and
killed him. Our vengeance is transformed
to mercy.
C. S. Lewis had it
right. When a skeptic once asked him why
he thought his meager prayers could change the almighty and immutable God whom he
professed, his answer was simple. He
said that his prayers did not change God, they changed him.
Whether in praise,
petition, thanksgiving, contrition, or contemplation, the essence of prayer is
placing us in the transforming presence of God, making us the peaceful, humble,
generous, grateful, merciful servants whom God created us to be, whom Jesus
calls us to be, whom the Spirit gives us the strength and courage to be.
With confidence, let
us pray.
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