Author: Daniel Westfall
Praying the Lord’s Prayer 02: In Heaven
Hi, I’m Daniel Westfall on the channel “Pray with Me”.
Today, we continue praying the Lord’s Prayer. We will focus on the word “heaven” from the phrase, “Our father in heaven.” First, the whole prayer:
Our Father in Heaven,
Hallowed be your name.
Your kingdom come.
Your will be done on earth as in heaven.
Give us today our daily bread.
And forgive us our sins as we forgive those who sin against us.
Save us from the time of trial,
And deliver us from evil.
For yours is the kingdom and the power and the glory, now and forever,
Amen.
Our Father in Heaven,
Today we address you as our Father who lives in heaven. But as Solomon prayed at the dedication of the temple, “Will God indeed dwell with man on the earth? Behold, heaven and the highest heaven cannot contain you…” (1 Kings 8:27, ESV)
When we pray to you in heaven, we remember that “In the beginning, you created the heavens and the earth.” Your scope of activity is not limited like ours, to a short time on a small planet in a big universe. You made time and space, and you sustain it all. We are less than a heartbeat in the ages of time, less than a grain of sand on the shore of the oceans.
We take our place under the heavens, under the heaven in which you dwell. Here we are servants of time, as it marches us onward to death. But we feel that you have put eternity in our hearts.
We are servants of place, which limits where we go and how we get there. But we feel you have called us out of this place into the Kingdom of Heaven, where you are the ruler and where you are not ruled by place.
We are servants of the world, for here we labor and eat and sleep and sorrow. But we hear you call us to heaven where you will wipe away every tear, where death is no more, where the Lamb in the midst of the throne will be our shepherd, where he will guide us to springs of living water.
Oh Lord, we hear your call from afar. We look beyond our meagre, scrabbling lives to the heaven where you dwell, to the wider life to which you have invited us. A life where righteousness trumps politics, where love is more important than money, where being is valued above image, where truth is honored above lies.
Our Father in heaven, we ask you make us good citizens here on earth for the few years we spend here, and we ask you to prepare us to be good citizens of your eternal country.
Amen.
I’m Daniel on the channel “Pray with Me.”
Warning about Collecting Books on Prayer. Podcast.
Warning about Collecting Books on Prayer
Hi, I’m Daniel Westfall on the channel “Pray With Me.”
Occasionally on this channel, I will review books about prayer. I want to tell you about some of the books that have been the most help to me on my journey into prayer. But today, instead of reviewing a book about prayer, I want to WARN you about the danger of trying to develop your prayer life by reading lots of good books. What’s the danger? If you read each of the books I review in the next few months, your head will be packed with information about prayer. But where will your prayer life be?
Here’s how Ian Rankin, a Scottish author of mystery novels, describes the reading habits of his detective John Rebus: “Rebus collected unread books. Once upon a time, he had actually read the books that he bought, but these days he seemed to have so little time. Also, he was more discriminating than he had been then… These days, a book he disliked was unlikely to last 10 pages of his concentration. His books for reading tended to congregate in the bedroom, lying in coordinated rows on the floor like patients in a doctor’s waiting-room. One of these days he would take a holiday. . . and would take with him all of these waiting-to-be-read-or-reread books, all of that knowledge that could be his for the breaking open of a cover.” (“Naughts and Crosses”, pp. 38-39).
Maybe you too have lots of good books around your house — dusty and unread. And maybe that’s a sign you don’t need more books — you could spend some time praying instead.
If you want to try some of the books I review, but don’t want to buy them, here’s how to keep costs down. Borrow from the library. The Edmonton library where I live has lots and lots of books on prayer. If they don’t have the book I want, they can usually get it with an interlibrary loan. Many churches have libraries. Can’t find any other source? Talk to friends. They probably have books they’ve borrowed and haven’t returned!
Another option: check Amazon.com or Indigo.com. They have a feature where you can look inside a book. Usually, you can read the first 10 pages. Inspector Rebus would approve.
Finally, after my stern warnings about not building a library you don’t use, here are some comforting words from author Lauren Winner: (“Still: Notes on a Mid-Faith Crisis,” p. 75)
“Because it is easier to read about prayer than to pray, I have shelves full of books: meditations on the Lord’s Prayer by a dozen authors; scholarly accounts of prayer in the twelfth century, the eighteenth century; Hasidic wisdom on prayer; manuals for knitting a prayer rug, a prayer shawl, a prayer blanket, a prayer tree. (I don’t, alas, know how to knit.) Sometimes I think all this reading gets in the way, that the books become excuses, something to do in lieu of praying. Other days, I know that to read about prayer is at least to indulge my desire, to acknowledge that I want this thing, that I long for it, even if this afternoon the closest I can get is reading voyeurism, greedy spying on other people at prayer.”
I’m Daniel on the channel Pray with Me, encouraging you keep alive that desire for prayer, even if the best you can do right now is to listen to other people talk about praying.
Praying the Lord’s Prayer 01: Our Father. Podcast.
Praying the Lord’s Prayer 01: Our Father
Hi, I’m Daniel Westfall on the channel “Pray with Me”.
Today we start praying through the Lord’s Prayer, in the manner suggested by Martin Luther, where we pray one phrase at a time. I’ll start by saying the whole prayer, then today I will pray around the first two words from the prayer, “Our Father.”
Our Father in Heaven,
Hallowed be your name.
Your kingdom come.
Your will be done on earth as in heaven.
Give us today our daily bread.
And forgive us our sins as we forgive those who sin against us.
Save us from the time of trial,
And deliver us from evil.
For yours is the kingdom and the power and the glory, now and forever,
Amen.
Our Father,
We have not seen you. We feel we hardly know you, but we call you by the name Father. You are our Father because you made us, and we have inherited some of your genes, for we are made in the image of God.
We call you Father because you have cared for us. You made us from the dust of the earth, and breathed into us the breath of life, and we became living beings. Our every breath reminds us that you still breathe into us. Each time we wash dirt from our hands, we remember it is your grace that keeps us from turning back to dust.
When we call you Father, it reminds us of our earthly fathers. For many of us, this triggers the fear and rejection and family dysfunction we grew up in.
Some of us have never known our fathers, for they abandoned us before we were born.
Some of us had fathers addicted to alcohol or drugs or violence or sex. They abused and mistreated us.
Some of us had fathers who had post traumatic stress syndrome. They left us a legacy of fear and depression and mistrust and instability.
Some of us had fathers who provided clothes and food and schooling, but never gave affection or a sense of belonging or love.
So when we call you Father, which of these Father-names belongs to You?
We come to you in Jesus’ name, because he taught us that you are not like the fathers we have known. As a father has compassion on his children, so you have compassion on those who know you. Moses said, “In the wilderness, you saw how the Lord your God carried you, as a father carries his child.” Jesus said, “How much more will your father in heaven give good gifts to those who ask him?” Jesus also said that not even one sparrow will fall to the ground outside the Father’s care.
When we pray, “Our Father”, we set aside the dysfunction and fear we learned in our birth family, and we present to you our deep longing for a father who will
know us
and love us
and teach us to grow up and make us wise.
Our Father,
take our broken lives,
take these wandering paths,
take these lost minds and mixed up emotions.
Carry us through this wilderness of life, as a true father carries his children.
Oh you who were Father to Jesus in the days of his life on earth, we hear his invitation for us to call you Father as he did. And we share his confidence that you will do us good and not harm, that you will lead us safely through our joys and trials on earth until at last we join your one glad family in the city of God.
Amen
I’m Daniel on the channel Pray with Me.
Luther’s Barber Learns to Pray. Podcast.
Luther’s Barber Learns to Pray
Hi, I’m Daniel Westfall on the channel “Pray With Me.”
You may have guessed from the channel name, “Pray with Me,” that we are actually going to pray.
So … let’s find a starting point for praying together. I suggest we consider an exchange between Martin Luther and his barber, Peter Beskendorf. Peter asked Luther to teach him something about prayer, so Luther wrote him a short letter that said “I will tell you as best I can what I do when I pray. May our Lord grant that you do it better than I!”
Here’s the simple method Luther gave Peter for praying the Lord’s Prayer. Expand and personalize each phrase of the prayer and make it your prayer. For example, Luther started with “Hallowed be your name,” and used it as his jumping off point to ask God to destroy and root out all sorts of abominations perpetrated by people who misuse his name, and to pray that God will help his people praise him by believing the truth and living holy lives.
Now that sounds like a Martin Luther prayer, definitely not mine. But I like his basic method. Take a small section of the Bible, think on it, and chat with God about it in your own words. Not difficult.
And what will the outcome be? Do you imagine that Luther’s barber used Luther’s good advice to become a mighty man of prayer? What actually happened was not long after Luther wrote him about prayer, Peter the barber got drunk and stabbed his son-in-law. Luther intervened on his behalf to get his death penalty commuted into a life-long banishment.
Wow. I don’t know what it is about barbers. At the end of one haircut, my barber said to me, “Did you know that barber and surgeon used to be one combined trade? I’m thinking of claiming back some of the old territory.” And he took out a large pair of scissors, held them in front of my face and said, “How are your tonsils today?”
I said, “My tonsils are feeling really, really good today, thank you.”
Anyway, back to Luther’s method for prayer. That is exactly what we will do when we pray. Take a little Bible section and pray it back to God. In the next episode we start by using the method Luther suggested to pray the Lord’s prayer phrase by phrase. I hope you’ll tune in and pray the Lord’s prayer with me.
Let us pray. Jesus, your disciples said to you, “Teach us to pray.” We invite you to do the same for us. Teach us to pray.
I’m Daniel, thanking you for joining me on the channel “Pray with Me.”
Resources
Printable PDF of Luther’s suggestions for his barber, organized in booklet form: https://wmpl.org/filed/resources/public/Literature/ASimpleWaytoPray.pdfPrintable PDF of Luther, with pages in order: http://online.nph.net/media/SampleFiles/PDF/0600751.pdf
Best article, which includes the sad ending: http://themelios.thegospelcoalition.org/article/a-lesson-from-peter-the-barber
Abraham Creates a Problem. Podcast.
Abraham creates a problem
Hi, I’m Daniel Westfall on the channel “Pray With Me”.
Today, a simple question: “What is prayer?”
I start with the Bible, a holy book, shared in part by Jews, Protestants, and Catholics. The Protestant Bible I use is made up of 66 shorter books. The first book is “Genesis”, which means “Beginnings”, and has the famous stories about creation, Adam and Eve, and Noah and the flood.
Genesis first uses the word “pray” in the story of a man called Abraham. The story goes like this: God called Abraham to go to the Promised Land and God made a bunch of big promises to Abraham. But as Abraham wandered around the new land and got rich herding sheep and goats and camels, it didn’t look like God was going to deliver on the big promises any time soon.
A king saw Abraham’s wife, Sarah, and Abraham could see that the king found his wife attractive. Abraham introduced her as his sister, not as his wife, and the king conscripted her into his harem. A messy and inconvenient situation! But Abraham didn’t have to sort out the mess, because God stepped in. God appeared to Abimilech, the king, in a dream and said,, “You’re like dead meat, man, because that woman you took? She’s married to one of my favorite people.”
Abimilech says, “Whoa, I didn’t mean it! He told me they were brother and sister, not husband and wife.” “I know,” says God, “that’s why I kept you from touching her. But now, return this man’s wife for he is a prophet. He will pray for you and you will live.”
Did you hear the word “pray” in there? It’s God telling Abimilech in a dream: “Return this guy’s wife, and get him to pray for you.”
A summary: Abraham creates a problem for himself, for his wife, and for Abimelech. God sorts things out, and Abraham gets to pray for the person he caused trouble for.
There are some helpful lessons in this story, not all of them about prayer.
- The first lesson is, Hey! If you’re in a relationship, don’t pretend your partner is your sister.
- The second lesson is, Even if you do something stupid like that, God might choose to protect you and her anyway, like he protected Abraham and Sarah.
- The next lesson is one of the most important lessons in the Bible about how God works and how to understand the Bible. The Bible is not all do’s and don’ts. It’s not just a bunch of instructions on how to live the right life. Lots of the Bible is stories–complicated stories–about complex characters who did good and bad, and about people who told the truth, half-truths, and sometimes outright lies that got them into trouble. The Bible doesn’t explain what all the stories mean. Sometimes it just tells the story. The amazing and encouraging thing is that sooner or later God shows up in most of the stories.
- And finally, remember this about prayer: When you get yourself or someone else into deep trouble, and are clueless about how fix the mess you’ve made, guess what? God is prepared to show up in the middle of the mess and help.
That’s it for today’s topic, “What is prayer?” If you’re strong on logic, you are probably thinking, “But he didn’t answer the question. He didn’t tell us what prayer is. He just told us a weird Bible story that has the word “prayer” in it.
Instead of trying to figure it out, why don’t you pray with me my prayer that comes from the story: “Dear God, I’ve made a mess of my life and I know it’s my fault and I don’t know what to do. Can you please show up in the middle of my story, like you did in the middle of Abraham’s, and start to set things right?”
I’m Daniel, signing off this episode of the channel “Pray with Me”.