|
| |
What would happen if you read
the Bible for five minutes a day?
Here's your chance to find out. Join people around the world as they go
through the entire New Testament in one year with the Year of the Bible
program. |
go to
YearoftheBIBLE |
| Gospelcom's searchable online Bible in multiple
languages and translations. |
BibleGateway |
| Bible Gateway's AUDIO BIBLE ONLINE |
Audio Bible |
| Bible Gateway's King James BIBLE ONLINE |
KJV Bible |
| Our Daily Bread, daily and monthly calendar of prayer. |
Our
Daily Bread |
Food for thought hmmmmmm......
We Christians learn to pray through Jesus Christ, who not only
teaches us to pray, but prayed himself. The Gospels are filled with examples of
his prayer.
Did Jesus himself have to learn to pray?
Yes, he did. True, he was the Son of God who knew all things. But as one like
us, he had to learn to pray while growing up. In the village of Nazareth Mary
and Joseph guided his first steps in prayer. At home, in the synagogue at
Nazareth, in the temple of Jerusalem he learned the rhythms and words of Jewish
prayer.
Yet even in his earliest years, Jesus prayed to God with a distinct intimacy.
God was his Father and he was God's son. There was a childlike, filial quality
to his prayer.
Jesus prayed regularly, his first disciples recalled. He prayed before decisive
moments, beginning with his baptism and as he faced his passion and death. He
prayed in times of human weakness and death, as he did at the grave of Lazarus.
He frequently prayed to give thanks. His prayer was steady, thankful, and
confident that God's will was for his good.
His prayer was heartfelt. Nowhere is that more evident than when he prayed on
the cross. "Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do." "I thirst." "
Woman, behold your son. Son, behold your mother." "My God, my God why have you
forsaken me?" "It is finished" "Father, into your hands I commend my spirit."
They were prayers that came from the heart. They reveal him tender towards those
he loved and forgiving to those who wronged him; he is human in weakness and
strong in faith. Never did a human heart reach out to God more eloquently than
when Jesus prayed on the cross.
He ended his life with a loud cry. Even that last rending cry was a heartfelt
prayer to God, issuing from the depths of his being and summing up what could
not said.
And his prayer was heard. God raised him up. We Christians believe the prayer of
Jesus teaches that prayer is always heard. In his prayer is our hope.
What can we learn from the prayer of Jesus?
First, that true prayer should come from the heart. He prayed from within, not
with just words or gestures. His prayer was not based only on feelings or
passing emotions. Prayer comes from within, beyond level of feelings, from
ourselves. " Go into the inner room, " Jesus says, " and there pray to your
Father, who hears you." Sometimes prayer from the heart, from the "inner room"
takes the form of words, at other times it may be like his own wordless cry.
Secondly, prayer is fed by faith. Jesus prayed with an unwavering faith in his
heavenly Father, a faith that lasted till his death. He taught us to pray also
with childlike faith in God, believing that our prayers are heard by One who
loves us.
Thirdly, prayer should be steady and persevering as his prayer was, even when no
answer comes or when no relief is in sight. "Watch and Pray," he says, "Seek and
knock," till the door that reveals God's holy will be opened.
His disciples asked Jesus to teach them to pray. He did, and he teaches us too.
Yet Jesus is more than a teacher. As Christians we believe that Jesus prays for
us; he is our intercessor before God. As Savior he gathers our prayers, our
needs, the cries of our hearts to make them his own and offers them to God who
hears our prayers in the prayer of his Son.
That is why we complete our prayers so often with the beautiful phrase: "Through
Jesus Christ, our Lord. Amen." Jesus is our teacher and he is our Savior, who
takes our prayers and makes them his own.
Taken from article by Victor Hoagland, C.P.
|