The following is from Doug Hood's Heart & Soul, Vol. 2
“Jesus was praying in a certain place.
When he finished, one of his
disciples said,
‘Lord, teach us to pray, just as John taught his disciples.’”
Luke 11:1 (Common English Bible)
In the late 60’s and early 70’s The Newlywed Game was a popular
television show. The show would place newly married couples against each other
in a series of revealing question rounds that determined how well the spouses
knew or did not know each other. There would be two rounds; the wives taken off
stage first while the husbands were asked three questions. The wives were then
brought back into the studio and asked for their answers to the same three
questions. Once the wife gave her answer, the husband revealed the answer he
gave – written on a blue card - in her absence. Five points would be awarded to
the couple that shared the same answer. The roles were reversed in round two,
the wives asked to answer questions about their husbands. The couple that had
the highest score at the end of the show won.
Imagine a similar game that put
to the test how well we know God, how well we understand God’s purpose for our
lives. I suspect many of us would be embarrassed. Here, in Luke’s Gospel, the
disciples came upon Jesus when he was praying. Tremendously moved by what they
saw, the disciples asked Jesus to teach them to pray. There is no hint in this
passage that the disciples witnessed answers to Jesus’ prayers. Results weren’t
what caught their imagination. There was something else. Something that went
much deeper.
If we dispense with the notion
that prayer is only about answers, that prayer is simply presenting pleas when
we are in need, in danger or a crisis, our eyes are cleared to see what the
disciples saw when they came upon Jesus at prayer. In Jesus’ prayer the
disciples saw a concentration and absorption into a relationship with God of
which they had no experience. Jesus’ prayers demonstrated a deliberate and
sustained cultivation of a relationship with God that would put Jesus in the
winner’s seat of The Newlywed Game. What
is clear in this passage is that the disciples wanted the same.
Perhaps the greatest difficulty
with prayer today is that many are simply out of touch with God. Prayer is
reduced to instinct rather than habit, to approaching God out of need rather
than a regular cultivation of a personal relationship with our creator. And
that is our deepest need - to renew our acquaintance with God. Prayers that
flow from instinct tend to be self-centered. The prayer of Jesus is
God-centered. It is prayer that takes time to cultivate and requires
extraordinary perseverance. But once this fresh approach to prayer is mastered
don’t be surprised if another approaches you and asks, “Teach me to pray like
that.”
Joy,
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