Deepening Our Relationship Through the Lord's Prayer

Devotional

Sermon Summary

Sermon Clips

"Jesus' opening certainly does that, right? Focuses directly on who we are talking to, our Father, which art in heaven. Here's the thing, pronouns matter, okay? Did you catch the pronoun Jesus uses here? Our. This is significant. But often gets overlooked. Not only is this pointing directly to the father-child relationship that God desperately desires to have with us." [00:41:05] (33 seconds)


"Yes, the opening of this prayer points to God's desire to have a relationship with us. But it also points to the humility and sacrifice of Jesus, son and only son, so we can be his brothers and sisters because we become children of God. I mean, wow. Okay, we're only six words in. I should have given myself a few weeks for this instead of just a single Sunday." [00:44:11] (35 seconds)


"Thy kingdom come, thy will be done, as earth as it is in heaven. Some view these sentences as a prayer of resignation. Thy will be done. what I'm hoping or desiring or wanting doesn't really matter. So, thy will be done. That isn't what's happening here. First, this is a way to put the Father's agenda before our own. Again, humility. We must decrease. He must increase." [00:45:59] (44 seconds)


"Using this as a framework protects us from the trap of consistently praying a constant stream of request after request after request. Again, this points towards dependency upon God and expectancy for what he will do. These sentences are not some resignation to whatever God's will is. These sentences are a prayer for the redemption of the created world and the continuation and the beginning with the work of Jesus." [00:47:03] (39 seconds)


"Give us this day our daily bread. If we're honest, this is where most of our prayers start. Here's where we bring our requests to God and our Father. Often we skip the earlier elements. We skip addressing him. We skip worshiping him. We skip seeking what he desires us to do and what our role is for whatever is laying in front of us." [00:49:03] (33 seconds)


"These words point us toward specific prayer. Give us... Give us this day, our daily bread. Point us toward specific prayer for ourselves, but not only for ourselves. Again, the pronoun here is our. And that's important. We need to look outward towards those who are hurting, those who are hungry, those who are living in fear, those who don't know Jesus yet." [00:51:09] (37 seconds)


"And forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors. Can we please skip this part? I mean, let's face it. We live in a culture that, for the most part, we don't know God. For the most part, has tossed forgiveness to the side with words like tolerance within society and within the culture or words like forbearance in the church." [00:52:30] (30 seconds)


"That's the example we are given by Jesus. That's the example Jesus decided and chose to give to us. The father running. While we sit here in our lives and we wait. Those who have wronged us to finally come around. We harbor grudges, resentment, They need to come to us. I was right, they are wrong. In doing so, we are blocking our ability to receive God's grace." [00:54:26] (45 seconds)


"deliver us from evil. These phrases, they can sometimes lead to confusion and questions. Is Jesus insinuating or implying that God leads us into temptation? No, he is not. As Chris Hodges writes in his book, we get there just fine on our own. Many scholars argue that a more accurate translation of this would be, do not allow us to be led into temptation." [00:55:29] (33 seconds)


"This portion of the Lord's Prayer, it acknowledges spiritual warfare. It acknowledges the existence of evil. It acknowledges God's power, and sovereignty, and ultimate victory over it. And we begin to allow other things to climb that hierarchy. Or we begin worshiping them, prioritizing them over God. We give them authority in our life." [00:57:03] (44 seconds)


"This is a cry for God to remain the supreme authority in our life. We would be vigilant. victorious in the face of temptation and be delivered from evil. There's all sorts of more connotation in that portion. And if you want a good book, I've got an awesome one if you want to dig deeper. For thine is the kingdom and the power and the glory forever. Amen." [00:58:06] (36 seconds)


"And Jesus is calling us here to not look to any earthly leader, but to acknowledge that the kingdom of heaven, and this earth, are God's. And all power, all glory, all authority are his. Forever, amen. That's what we're being called to here. Our Father, which art in heaven, hallowed be thy name. Acknowledge and worship who God is." [00:59:10] (61 seconds)


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