Text: Luke 11:1-13 Other texts: Genesis 18:20-32
You haven’t lived until you have watched a bunch of children dancing and gesturing and singing as loud as they can: G R E A T B — I B L E. Great Bible Reef. You haven’t lived until you’ve seen an equal number of adults, so called, doing the same thing, all singing and waving their arms. Singing: We’re gonna go where the word is, And the word is God’s love. We’re gonna dive into the ocean. We’re gonna swim in God’s love. And you really haven’t lived until you are doing that all yourself.Faith held a great vacation Bible school last week. It was called the Great Bible Reef. G R E A T B — I B L E. It was amazing. It energized everybody who came and everybody who helped. Each day eight or so children and often their parents came for singing, dancing, hearing stories, making crafts, eating, learning about God’s love. At coffee hour today you’ll see all the decorations, which are still up, and a video of pictures of some of the events and people. It could not have been better. It was all we had prayed for.
I want to talk today a little about prayer, and about getting what you pray for. And about swimming in God’s love. And about trusting God.
If God is perfect and unchangeable and knows all that is going to happen, there is not much use to prayer. At least prayer that asks God for things. If God is already going to do what we pray for, then it doesn’t matter if we pray. If God is unchangeable, there is not much point in our asking God to change. If God knows all that is going to happen, then there is not much our prayers can do about it. But fortunately for us, this kind of God is not the God we read about in the pages of the Bible.
God appears to Abraham, according to the story we heard this morning from Genesis. God has some plans about the city of Sodom. God’s plans include destroying the city; sweep it away, as the text has it. But Abraham begins to bargain with God. What if there are fifty good people in Sodom, Abraham asks God, what about that? Will you destroy fifty good people, to “slay the righteous with the wicked, so that the righteous fare as the wicked?” God says to Abraham, No I guess not. For the sake of the fifty, I’ll save the city.
God has changed God’s mind. The plan was destruction, but because of Abraham’s plea, Abraham’s convincing prayer, God does something different. Something unplanned-for until Abraham spoke up. Abraham, seizing the moment, says: So what about forty people. Would you kill forty good people? God says, No, I guess not. Not forty. And so it goes: Not thirty, either. Not twenty, either. Not even ten. Abraham, maybe figuring he has pushed things far enough, stops there. But I sometimes think he could have gone on. How about five? how about one? How about none? Could Abraham have convinced God to not destroy Sodom at all? We’ll never know. But we do know that Abraham prayed in the certain knowledge that God would listen and that God might change God’s plans as a result.
Jesus prays to God as if he expects that he will be heard and his views considered. And Jesus advises his followers, his disciples then and now, to pray. In Luke, the Lord’s Prayer asks for a godly and good world, for food to eat every day, for sins to be forgiven, for freedom from being tested. And Jesus tells them, through a parable of a sleepy-but-in-the-end-willing host that first, God will pay attention and that second, we ought to be persistent and bother God a lot. And that we should expect favor for our prayers, for God loves us as a good parent loves a child.
You might argue that God does not answer all our prayers and in particular has not answered your prayers. You might argue that, but we are not really having an argument here. There are all sorts of explanations about this, none of which I personally have found convincing, but we are not explaining anything here. Nor was Jesus. Jesus is talking about the question: does God listen? does it make any difference? Jesus says the answer is Yes! and Yes!
Every Sunday we pray that God bring to this church people who will be nourished here and who will nourish this church. This is a prayer of hospitality and need. Providing nourishment—primarily in spirit but in fact also in body—to all who find themselves here is our reason for being and guides all that we do here as a church. Being nourished by those same people is how it happens. We borrowed this prayer from [a local pastor] of the [a local church] down on [street] Street. That church is a vital and energetic place, but it was not always so. And when I asked him what they did to become the church it is now, he said that they had tried all the sorts of things you read about in books about growing healthy churches. But none of them worked. So then they started to pray that God would bring people to the church to be fed. And so God did. As God has done also here at Faith.
We as a church had hopes for vacation Bible school. And we included those hopes in our prayers during the past few Sundays and in people’s personal prayers. We prayed that about ten children would come, and more than a dozen did. We prayed that children from the neighborhood who had never come to this church would attend, and three families did. We prayed that all the worshipping groups of the Community of Faith—the Eritrean fellowship, Calvary, and the Lutherans—would participate, and all did. We prayed that lots of members of Faith would help, and lots did. We prayed that everyone would have a great time, and learn something, and make new friends, and have an amazing experience, and it was clear that everyone did. Were these things answers to our prayers? I can not say for certain. I do know that that is what we prayed for. And that is what we got.
The Lord’s Prayer is like a conversation with God. In it we say hello, we ask for things we need, we talk a little about our hopes, we express our admiration in and trust for God, to whom we speak.
Prayer is a conversation. And not a trick conversation, like when you are chatting someone up to get something you want or to sell something. Like when someone calls you on the phone during dinner and asks “how are you doing today, Mr Stain,” it sounds like the beginning of a conversation, but you know it is not. It’s a transaction. Prayer is not a transaction.
The favorite song among the children at The Great Bible Reef was one called Trust the Lord. And it goes like this:
Trust the Lord, Trust, trust the Lord. Be strong and take heart, And wait on the Lord. Trust the Lord, Trust, trust the Lord. Sing alleluia, Sing alleluia, Trust the Lord!
It was a favorite of the adults, too. That should not be a surprise. Trust is the basis of prayer. Prayer begins in this trust. Trust is the foundation of a real conversation. Prayer emerges from trust. Trust emerges from the love God has for all us God’s children.
That’s the word. And We’re gonna go where the word is, And the word is God’s love. We’re gonna dive into the ocean. We’re gonna swim in God’s love.
Thank you, God.