Oct 22, 2024
Sermon - Prayer - What is it good for?
If God is God, then what is the use of prayer? God must know
what we need before we even need it. Telling God about things is
surely useless. I can imagine God looking down on me and saying.
“There he is, “personsplaining” to me again. I already know all
this, better than he does. In fact I know everything!” Surely God
does not need our prayer, to be made aware of things or in order to
do something. It is not as though our prayer will make God more
powerful.
I believe that in the story of Job and our Gospel reading and
also the Hebrews reading we see a number of the purposes of prayer
revealed.
Job loses all his children all his wealth and then becomes
terribly and painfully sick. While we get some sort of explanation,
Job is never given a reason for this. He is a very good man, like
all of us imperfect but if anyone deserved to have a good life
based on their character and care of family and neighbours
including those less well off it is Job. Job spends most of the
book begging for God to give him a chance to defend himself and
state his case. Job never curses God but he certainly gets angry
and upset. In the end God speaks to him and still gives him no
answer. God basically just says - how dare you question me. I am
the one who made and sustains the universe. ““Where were you when I
laid the earth’s foundation?... [when]“the morning stars sang
together and all the angels shouted for joy?” (Job 38:4,7
NIV)
In today’s reading responding to God revealed in such a
powerful way, Job humbly says “...Surely I spoke of things I did
not understand, things too wonderful for me to know.” (Job 42:3,
NIV)
But God does not punish or tell Job off for crying out, for
questioning God’s justice, for being angry and upset. In fact God
says to Job’s religious friends that Job has spoken the truth about
God’s character.
This is the first purpose of prayer. God is someone to cry out
to. God has pretty broad shoulders. Not just Job but David & Psalm
writers and Moses, Ezekiel, Hagar, Hanah and a number of others cry
out to God in anger, despair and frustration and none of them are
condemned for it. When you cry out to God in faith even if it is
mixed with doubt and full of pain or anger or fear, God will not
condemn us.
Bartimaeus cries out loudly from the roadside. “Son of David
have mercy on me.” It annoys and embarrasses the crowd. They tell
Bartimaeus off. But Jesus is not embarrassed any more than he is
embarrassed by the mums bringing their small children. And as an
aside I don’t think you should ever be embarrassed by the Uniting
Church’s practice of baptising Children, for Jesus welcomes all the
children who are brought to him.
Even if you don't believe that God does, or any longer does
the miraculous; who better to cry out to than God? This applies not
just to those like Job or Bartimaeus who are suffering some
terrible loss or illness, it applies to those who know they need
mercy and forgiveness.
So the first purpose - someone to cry out to. God is someone
we can offload to, spit the dummy to.
Second prayer reminds! Prayer declares to God and to you and
to others God's Character and it also reminds you of others’
needs.
Job's confession speaks of how God is too wonderful for words.
Much of Job is prayer, it speaks of God's justice, God's power, God
is not domesticated or tame but God is good. God’s Character is
revealed in prayer.
Bartimaeus’ plea for help reveals his need to others. It also
reveals God's healing power and merciful character. “Jesus, Son of
David, have mercy on me.”
Prayers of praise remind us of God’s power and love and
provision and awesome character. Prayers of confession remind you
that God is merciful and forgiving. Prayers of intercession,
prayers for others and yourselves remind you that God heals and
provides and as others pray if it is a public prayer, it makes you
aware , reminds you of the needs of others. Thanksgiving reminds
you of how God has provided, in creation, in daily life and most
wonderfully of all in the life of Jesus and in the puring out ot
the Holy Spirit.
First prayer gives you someone to cry out to. Second it
reminds you of God’s character and others’ needs.
Third it draws you into relationship.
Public prayer, prayer with others in church or in Sunday
School or a Bible study brings you into the lives of others and
others into your lives. But in our Hebrew’s reading you also have
this picture of being drawn into the divine relationship. You are
brought by Jesus into the relationship which he shares with the
Father and with the Holy Spirit. Jesus a human being like us but
also God’s eternal Son brings us into the presence of God the
Father. The Contemporary English version puts it like this: “He is
forever able to save the people he leads to God, because he always
lives to speak to God for them.” (Hebrews 7:25, CEV) Or as Romans
8:15-16 put it, his Spirit joins together with our apirit and we
are able to Cry out to God “Abba (“Dad”), Father!” and so you know
that you are brought onto a new relationship with God - You are
God’s adpted children.
First prayer gives you someone to cry out to. Second it
reminds you of God’s character and the needs of others. Third, it
draws you into relationship with God and with the church community
.
Fourth it gives you an opportunity to receive. Again in public
prayer Bartimaeus’ need becomes known as does Jesus’ response and
he his able to receive (help) an invitation through the crowd to
meet Jesus. He receives word from Jesus - “Call him... What do you
want me to do for you” Job also receives God’s word and through the
witness of the Bible so do you. You hear the wonderful image of the
beginning of creation, when the morning stars sang together and all
the anges shouted for Joy. In answered prayer in the Boible and in
your own prayer you receive the word of God. I believe you
can also receive the miraculous. Job is healed and his fortune is
restored. Bartimaeus receives his sight back. A little baby in the
Tannum congrgation was prayed for and his bowel unblocked avoiding
surgery in what doctors descibed as the worst blockage they’d ever
seen cleared without surgery. In prayer you also receive
forgiveness, the Holy Spirit and when you first come to faith you
receive Jesus himself.
Prayer gives you someone to cry out to, it reminds us of God’s
character and other’s need, it draws us into relationship with God
and others, it gives us the opportunity to receive and
fifth...
It gives you an opportunity to give. Often you are the answer
to prayer. If we pray for lonely people perhaps God is asking you
to be a friend. If you pray for the needy perhaps God is asking you
to give. If you pray for the church or the community, perhaps God
is asking you to lead or serve. People are so grateful to know that
others pray. If only Job's friends had done what Job does for them
and prayed for him instead of piling judgmental advice on him
perhaps the book of Job would be shorter and less challenging.
Sometimes you are the answer to prayer, sometimes God answers or
provides and someime there is no answer you can see. You can not
fix the problem or meet the need but you can take it and
those who are in need to God. Ifyou can give nothing else you can
still give prayer.
So what is prayer good for? What is its purpose? It gives you
someone to cry out to, it reminds us of God’s character and other’s
need, it draws us into relationship with God and others, it gives
you the opportunity to receive and fifth it gives you an
opportunity to give.