Guest Devotional by D.G. Hart: For what do we pray?    (January 31, 2010)

Obviously, we are in for another interesting weekend, weather wise.   We have already postponed the officer's retreat until Feb 20th, and I pray that worship on Sunday will not be too badly affected.   As always, please pay attention to email on Saturday evening, but our usual policy is likely to stand:  we will try to have worship and Sunday School for those who can make it, while urging those who cannot, to stay safe and worship God at home.
 
SERMON TEXT:  Romans 12:1-10 ("God's pleasing and perfect will").  We will also hear the children sing a hymn and then enjoy a children's lesson.

SUNDAY SCHOOL & ADULT CLASSES:  Winter Session continues (Lord willing).   Jump on in!

SUGGESTED FAMILY WORSHIP TEXT:  Ecclesiastes 4

HYMNS:      ~ Ye Servants of God (Trinity 165)
                       ~ This is My Father’s World (children)
                      ~ Who is On the Lord's Side (Trinity 588; tune:  Rachie)

SONGS:       ~ Holy is the Lord
                     ~ May the Mind of Christ My Savior
                     ~ Take My Life (a new one for us to learn!)

DEVOTIONAL:  Guest Devotional by D.G. Hart:   For what do we pray?

I am thankful for a few weeks' delay on our officers retreat so that I may pray more for God's leadership and direction to us as a church.   I am mindful that we are often caught up in the hurry of life and the physical needs which surround us.   I was struck by this blog entry I ran across this week by Darryl G. Hart, a professor in a sister denomination, the Orthodox Presbyterian Church.  He asks a simple question:  for what do we most pray?   I think he raises some great questions, and makes some profound points from the model of prayer given to us by Jesus:  the Lord's Prayer.

It is my own opinion that we must have balance in such things -- to pray for both the visible and the invisible, souls and bodies.   And yet, do we pray enough the "kingdom" prayer which is found in the Lord's Prayer?   I would personally like it if every week in worship we remembered out loud at least one of our missionaries and one sister congregation in Blacksburg or in our Presbytery.   At the same time, I do not want to be legalistic about it, so we have not "forced" into the liturgy.

But what if such prayers -- as well as prayer for the Kingdom and the Gospel to advance more broadly -- just arose "naturally" from us as the Holy Spirit sanctifies us in the truth, in those things which are not as clearly seen as illnesses, and jobs and numerical growth?   Those are the questions I am asking as I prepare for the officers retreat.  And those are the questions I think are answered for us each week as we gather to hear the Gospel preached.  That more good is done in our worship and in God's Word going out than in almost anything else we can do.  Real, lasting, eternal good.  Do you believe this?  Then let us begin to pray that way, more and more, as a body.   With that introduction, here then is Dr. Hart's meditation:

For What do we Pray?


Reformed Protestants are generally dismissive (or worse) of prosperity gospels. They know, at least intuitively, that suffering is part of the Christian life and that calculating God’s favor on the basis of material well being is not good theology. Max Weber, the sociologist who interpreted capitalism as the republication of the covenant of works, never read the psalmist who wrote,

Be not afraid when one becomes rich,
when the glory of this house increases.
For when he dies he will carry nothing away;
his glory will not go down after him.
Though, while he lives, he counts himself happy,
and though a man gets praise when he does well for himself,
he will go to the generation of his fathers,
who will never more see the light.
Man cannot abide in his pomp,
he is like the beasts that perish. (Ps. 49: 16-20)

And yet, when Reformed Protestants pray, or at least when they make prayer requests, our desires generally run along the lines of Joel Osteen. Which sort of upends Benjamin Warfield’s remark that every Christian on his knees is a good Calvinist. His point that when praying every believer is acknowledging the sovereignty of God. But he didn’t ask what believers were praying for and whether it conformed to God’s revealed will. We pray for surgeries, broken ankles, test results, catastrophe survivors, and the unemployed. None of these concerns are of themselves illegitimate. Jesus does tell his disciples not to worry about their physical needs, not because they are unimportant but because if God provides for the lilies of the field then he’s likely to care even more for his children. And yet, that passage in Matthew 6 concludes with the importance of seeking first the kingdom of God and then all these other things will be added.

Not to be missed is what the Lord’s Prayer says and teaches. Whether Reformed Protestants actually use it to the degree that Lutherans and Anglicans do, our catechisms do go into some depth in explaining the Lord’s Prayer and usually begin the instruction with words to the effect that this prayer is a model or example for how to pray.

If that is the case, then by my count only one of the six petitions has to do with material needs – “give us this day our daily bread.” The others concern God (his glory, church, and will) and man’s sin (forgiveness, and temptation). By my math that works out to roughly 17 percent of our prayers being devoted to physical needs.

And yet, when we listen or read the requests for prayer in most congregations, the percentage tilts almost in the exact opposite direction, with God and sin receiving about 17 percent of our requests. Now, some of the problem here is that requesting prayer for Aunt Bessie’s gallbladder surgery is a lot less embarrassing than asking for prayer for my struggles with lust. Also, not to be missed is that some physical afflictions actually threaten life, and prayers for the living as they approach death is surely appropriate.

Even here, though, I wonder if our prayers are filled more with petitions for healing and prolonged life rather than God’s will. Indeed, most of our prayers for the physical well being of believers, at least publicly, are on the order of asking God for what we want – lives without suffering, pain, and death. We would need to be locked up if we prayed for more suffering, pain, and death, or more hunger, poverty, and unemployment. But again the point is for what do we pray and what does it say about our understanding of the gospel’s consequences for the lives of Christians. When we pray are we endanger of endorsing implicitly a prosperity gospel? Is prayer effective when it brings the results we want? Or is prayer accomplishing its purpose when through it our appetites conform to God’s will?  ~ D.G. Hart (from http://oldlife.org).