Showing posts with label Prayer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Prayer. Show all posts

Thursday, May 6, 2010

Our Father

"Every time we say the Lord's Prayer, every time we open our mouths and say, "Our Father," we should be reminded of our adoption, that we have been grafted into Christ and have been placed in this intimate relationship with God, a relationship that we did not have by nature. It is a relationship that has been won for us by the perfect obedience of the Son, who received an inheritance that was promised to Him from the foundation of the world, which inheritance He shares with His brothers and sisters who are in Him."

R.C. Sproul, The Lord's Prayer

Sunday, October 11, 2009

Why I have been absent...

I have been absent from posting any blogs for the last few weeks due to family circumstances. I am currently on a leave of absence from my church to help my wife deal with some health issues. Please pray for her healing and for God's glory in Sovereign Grace. We are exceedingly thankful for our church body. I look forward to returning to the work Jesus has given me in ministering to his bride when my bride has been sufficiently ministered to that she is ready to share:).

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

“A Chink in My Armor”

A Humble Call for Praying with Your Wife

Husbands, love your wives, as Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her, that he might sanctify her, having cleansed her by the washing of water with the word, so that he might present the church to himself in splendor, without spot or wrinkle or any such thing, that she might be holy and without blemish.—Ephesians 5:25-27

A little over two years ago, Teresa and I were being interviewed and assessed by the Evangelical Free Church. The interview was going quite well. In fact, I was feeling pretty good about myself. They had asked me all sorts of questions about my spiritual disciplines, and I was getting puffed up about how disciplined I was. Then came the question that humiliated me. They asked, “How often do you pray with your wife?” I responded that I pray for her often. I told them that I also pray with her and our children fairly frequently. They responded, “What we are asking you is how regular your prayer life with your wife is.”

I remember feeling like I had been exposed. I could not answer one of their questions with a sense of self-satisfaction. I now felt as naked as I did in those terrible childhood dreams where I was at school only to find I had no clothes on. I remembered the multiple times Teresa had said we should pray more together. I remember the pride in my heart that led to me not wanting to pray more because she had pointed out that we needed to. Finally, I responded that we don’t pray together regularly enough. I was humiliated!

In my pride, I tried to quickly put that incident out of my mind only to have it brought before me again this week. During our church planting boot camp, one of the trainers said he remembered stumbling over the question of how much he and his wife prayed together. Teresa innocently responded, “That happened to us too.” I was angry. I could not believe she would tell everyone this. I wondered why she would expose my failing in this area. Of course, she had done nothing wrong. She was merely stating a fact. On the way to lunch, I asked her, “Why would you expose me like that?” I continued, “You let everyone see a chink in my armor. At least, you could have let me tell them, so I would look humble as the one confessing it.”

God was gracious enough to let me hear the stupidity and ego-driven nature of my comments. I was not concerned with the fact that I was neglecting one of my duties as a husband. Instead, I was concerned with my reputation. I actually thought I had “armor” that only had one “chink” exposed. (Of course, I knew that others recognized some weaknesses, but they were weaknesses that I had some control over them seeing. This weakness was exposed by another). Immediately after I said this, Teresa and I both began laughing at the sheer arrogance of it.

We are called as husbands to love our wives as Christ loved the church. There are so many different lessons I could extract from this command given by God through His apostle. I want to focus, however, on the necessity of a husband praying for and with his wife. What keeps us from praying with our wives? Why is it that we do not participate in such a simple exercise that has such powerful implications? I think there are three reasons for this.

First, I think we do not pray with our wives because of sheer neglect of the command to love our wives as Christ loved the church. We do not really understand or take seriously our responsibility to be used of God to sanctify our wives. We are happy to call them to submit to our authority. However, we do not care to fulfill our responsibility. We treat our wives as if they are just another person who exists to help us arrange our lives in a manner that makes us most comfortable and self-satisfied.

Second, I think we do not pray for our wives because we do not want to submit ourselves to Christ’s headship in our home. We want to carry out our own will. We want to buy the items we desire. We want to make the decisions that please us. As in every other area of life, we want to be sovereign, rather than letting Christ be sovereign.

Third, I think we do not pray with our wives out of a sheer lack of personal humility. Biblical prayer may be the most humble position we ever take. In prayer, we express complete reliance upon God for everything. In prayer, we recognize that we are completely at the mercy of God. So when my wife tells me we should pray more, I begin to wrestle with doing it, lest I admit my dependency on God. Some may conclude that we can respond in this manner because we do not want our wives to be right. They argue that our response is motivated out of a lack of humility toward our wives. This is true in part. However, the full story is that we lack humility before God. God is using our wives to point out sin, and we struggle with this. We want to come to these realizations on our own. We do not want God to use others to point it out. If we do not come to the realization of our sin on our own, we can become quite embarrassed and angry because this robs us of the pride of figuring it out by ourselves. How perverse we really are!

Men, it is clear that God has called you to be the spiritual leader in your home. However, your spiritual leadership is submitted to the Lordship of Christ. You are to model your leadership after His. His leadership is a completely sacrificial one. His leadership is a radically humble one. His leadership has the sanctification of His church in mind. Our leadership needs to be likewise. We need to sacrifice our lives for our wives. We need to be humble before others, our wives, and before our God. We need to seek the sanctification of our wives. So, let us pray not only for our wives, but also with them. When we humble ourselves before God with our wives, they will see the head of their home whom they rejoice in submitting to!

Monday, February 9, 2009

How to Pray for Deliverance from Temptation to Sin

9 truths we should recognize and pray in the area of temptation and tests:

1. We have a fundamental distrust of ourselves and we pray to God to not lead us into trials that Satan will use to bring us into sin. Matt. 6:13

2. We recognize we can’t stand against him alone and we pray for God to deliver us from evil! Matt. 6:13

3. We thank God for our trials recognizing they will make us more like Jesus. James 1:2-4

4. We ask God in faith for wisdom in the midst of trials, so that Satan cannot turn the trial into an occasion for sin. James 1:5

5. We trust the faithfulness of God amidst trials and temptation and pray he will show us the way of escape he promises to provide. 1 Cor. 10:13

6. We submit to God’s Word and ask him to help us to rightly apply it in all circumstances. James 4:7, Eph. 6:17, Matt. 4

7. We pray for one another to stand strong in temptation and never think we are unable to fall into the same sin our brother has. Gal. 6:1, Matt. 6:13

8. We pray for God’s will to be done in every circumstance and not our own, no matter the temptation to want our own way. Matt. 26:39

9. We thank God continually for the fact that Jesus was faithful under every trial and in every temptation. Heb. 4:15

Monday, January 26, 2009

The Trinitarian Nature of Supplication in the Lord's Prayer

As I have been studying the Lord's Prayer, I have been struck by the Stott's insight into the Trinitarian nature of supplication in the Lord's Prayer. Each of the requests can be ascribed to a role filled by a member of the Godhead.

1. "Give us this day our Daily Bread," can be ascribed to the Father's role in creation and providence.

2. "Forgive us our debts as we also have forgiven our debtors," can be ascribed to the Son's role in atoning for our sins and bringing us forgiveness.

3. "Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil," can be ascribed to the Spirit's role of indwelling us and empowering us to be holy.

How to Pray for our Daily Needs

As I preached this week on the fourth petition of the Lord's Prayer, I thought through 3 requests that should be made for our daily needs:

1. Ask God for what is necessary for each day. He knows what you need and promises to provide. Matthew 6:11, Matthew 7:7-11, Matthew 6:25-34, Phil. 4:19.

2. Ask God for what is necessary to keep you humble and bring him glory. He has provided you with abundance so you can enjoy it and be generous to others, not so you will trust in it and deny Him. Proverbs 30:7-9, Luke 12:13-21, 1 Timothy 6:17-19, James 4:2-3.

3. Ask God for the needs of others. Jesus did not teach us to pray, "Give me this day my daily bread," but "Give us this day our daily bread." Matthew 6:11

Monday, January 5, 2009

The Logic of God's Loving Self-Exaltation

As I was preaching on the first petition of the Lord's prayer this week, it struck me that Jesus tells us to pray for God's Name to be hallowed. In other words, God wants us to pray that his Name will be set apart as holy, glorified, crowned with all praise! In fact, all of Scripture demonstrates that everything from creation to redemption is for the glory of God's Name. God is relentlessly pursuing the praise of his own glory. He wants his character to be displayed and rejoiced in. This begs a question:

How God can be loving and yet so self-exalting? How can God be relentlessly self-interested and still be love? Doesn't the Bible tell us love is not self-seeking (1 Cor. 13)?

Yes, the Bible does tell us love is not self-seeking. For any man to seek his own exaltation and glory would be the ultimately unloving act. So, how can it be loving for God to pursue his own glory?

Let me answer this by giving you a series of 7 questions that provide the biblical logic for God's loving self-exaltation:

1. What is more loving than providing the object of your love joy?
2. What provides more earthly joy than that which transcends self, is grander than us, more beautiful than us, more awe-inspiring than us? (Just think of the joy you receive in a sunset on the beach, or the birth of your child, or your wedding day, or a great sports moment, or a great sacrificial act).
3. What is the consummation of your moments of earthly joy, if it is not praise? Is your praise not the fulfillment of your joy? (Simply think of the spontaneous praise offered during a great sports moment).
4. If the moments of joy we experience on earth are temporal, would it not be superior to receive that which can bring eternal joy?
5. What can bring eternal joy, which consummates in praise, other than the only eternally praise-worthy Lord of all? If you can experience the only eternally joy-inducing and most glorious, majestic, beautiful, and awe-inspiring God of all, why would you settle for some lesser and temporal joy?
6. What would be more unloving than to point the object of your love away from the all-sufficient, eternal joy of God, so that they can rejoice in a temporal moment alone?
7. What could be more loving than for God, in whose right hand is found joy forevermore, to continue to display his glory, so that the objects of his love have the privilege of consummating their joy in eternal praise?

Therefore, for Jesus to bid us to pray, "Hallowed be Your Name," is the most loving prayer in which he could direct us. For it is in God answering this prayer that we receive eternal joy which consummates in the praise of his glory!

Monday, December 22, 2008

Jesus' Last Prayer and Its Implication for our Prayers

As I was meditating on the prayer life of Jesus, I recognized that everyone of his recorded prayers show him addressing God as Father, save one. Jesus' last prayer is recorded in Matthew 27:46:

"And about the ninth hour Jesus cried out with a loud voice, saying, 'Eli, Eli, lema sabachthani?' that is, 'My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?'"

As the natural son of God, Jesus had every right to address God as Father. However, Jesus prayed the prayer of those who are eternally separated. He prayed the prayer of the damned so that we can pray the prayer of the Son. We can pray "Abba, Father" because Jesus gave up the right to on the cross. He redeemed us so that we could be adopted as sons and he sent his Spirit into our hearts crying "Abba! Father!"

Sunday, December 14, 2008

5 Reasons God being "in heaven" gives me confidence in prayer...

As I am preaching through the Lord's Prayer, I have spent much time on the subject of the God to whom we pray. I was meditating on some reasons why God's being "in heaven" or transcendent and wholly other gives me confidence in prayer. I wanted to list 5 of them I was meditating on:

1. He is omniscient and knows perfectly what we need. Matt. 6:8
2. He is omnipotent and able to do more than we can ask or think. Eph. 3:20
3. He is good and will give us what is best for us. Matt. 7:7-11
4. He is holy and cannot fail to keep his promises. Heb. 6:17-18
5. He is sovereign and nothing is out of his control. In fact, everything is being worked together for our good and his glory. Rom. 8:28