A 5-day per week study.
April 17 – Reading Luke 11:1-13
Read and believe in Jesus.
“Lord, teach us to pray…” Luke 11:1
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The Gospel according to Luke
Review – Last time, Jesus visited two sisters in Bethany. Martha is anxious because there is “so much to do.” She commands Jesus to tell Mary to help her! Jesus, kindly but firmly, says no. Mary’s choice to sit and listen to his teaching was a good one. Rebuked … what did Martha do?
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Vss. 11:1-4.
We don’t know where this happened, but somewhere, the disciples quietly watched Jesus as He prayed. After He finished, they asked Him to teach them to pray. And Jesus did.
This is a shorter version of the “Lord’s Prayer” that Jesus taught the crowds in the Sermon on the Mount. At that time, He’d instructed them…
- NOT to stand up to pray in the synagogues or on street corners to be seen by others, but to go into their room, shut the door, and pray to God in secret. God will hear that prayer.
- NOT to “heap up empty words” when they prayed as the pagans did. God knew what they needed even before they asked.
Here, Jesus gave them a simplified version.
- Whom to pray to: the Father,
- Worship/adoration: hallowed (holy) is Your name.
- Humble submission to His will: (may) Your kingdom come.
- Looking to Him for our needs: give us each day our daily bread,
- Confession: forgive us our sins
- Repentance: as we forgive everyone indebted to us.
- Dependence on Him for holy living: lead us not into temptation.
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Vss. 11:5-7.
Jesus encourages His disciples not just to recite a prayer, but to be serious and urgent in their praying. We aren’t to kneel for a 5-minute morning prayer and a few “table graces” and think that is all we need.
Jesus then tells the disciples a parable to illustrate the persistence they should have in prayer.
The scenario Jesus paints is that of a man surprised by a friend who arrives very late at night from a long journey. The man wants to feed this tired and hungry traveler, but there is nothing in the “fridge.”
Even though it is late, he goes to his neighbor, who is also a friend. And, although this neighbor and his entire family have long since blown out the lamps and gone to bed, our guy pounds on the door.
“Please lend me three small loaves for a surprise visitor!”
“What? Are you serious? We are all in bed! I can’t get up to give you any bread!”
Knock, knock, knock. “Please! Just a few loaves!”
“Go away!”
Knock, knock, knock. “Please, I have nothing to give him at all!”
Silence.
Knock, knock, knock. “Please, neighbor! I am desperate. I have nothing!”
Silence.
Then a click and a creak as the door is opened. A basket of bread is shoved out. Our man takes it and begins to thank his neighbor profusely, but the door closes.
Nevertheless, he joyfully returns home. He has something to feed his exhausted and hungry long-distance visitor.
(No, this is not teaching us to simply “bother God” with constantly repeating requests. Or that God is begrudging with His answers. But with another’s need in mind, and with a selfless, dependent attitude, we are to be persistent before the throne of grace.)
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Vss. 11:8-10.
So, Jesus encourages His disciples in TWO WAYS to –
“Ask, and it will be given to you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you.
“For everyone who asks, receives, and the one who seeks, finds, and to the one who knocks, it will be opened.”
That almost seems like ‘carte blanche’. But note the examples of requests that Jesus gives in the next section.
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Vss. 11:11-13.
“If a son asks for a FISH (to eat), will the father give him a snake instead?
If a son asks for an EGG, will the father give him a scorpion?
If you then, who are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will the heavenly Father give THE HOLY SPIRIT to those who ask Him?”
