|
||||
|
"A
Shameless Path" The poets have a high view of prayer—some of them anyway. The mere
mention of the subject seems to send them running for the card file
marked "sublimity" where they pull out adjectives: sweet
hours, precious moments, privileged meetings. Before you know it, we're
all caught up ... the violins are swelling and we're wending our way
through a rose garden, walking and talking with a certain Someone whose
"voice is so sweet the birds hush their singing," as one
beloved gospel song puts it. Prayer to a poet—or a gospel song writer—is
like romance to Barry Manilow, an irresistible topic. I don't know about you, but much as I love the poets and especially
the gospel songwriters, as much as I want to know the presence of the
"nearer than hands and feet" God —I have to say it—my
prayer life is not much like a dewy walk through the rose garden. On
your average day, not only does Jesus not come to the garden alone to
meet me, not walk with me and talk with me, not meet me in the garden—but
lots of times, I wonder if I'm even in the right zip code. My prayer
life is not much like a dewy garden path. And that's why I come to
today's Scripture lesson with high hopes. After all, I believe—many of us instinctively believe—that there
is something to this thing called prayer. We know about what happens in
foxholes. We are glad if a person whose faith we admire says she will
pray for us. We see prayer working in other peoples' lives and we
believe Mother Teresa—don't we?—when she puts it to her novices so
pithily: No prayer, no faith, no faith, no love, no love, no devotion,
no devotion, no service. Yes, we say, we need that. For once we are
right there on the front row of the classroom with the disciples, saying
"Lord, teach us to do this thing!" And Jesus says, in the translation of the New Testament scholar, Anne
Wire, "Everyone who asks receives. The one who seeks finds. And the
one who knocks, gets in the door." The gospel according to Luke is
not easy to hear today—not easy to preach—because it is not easy to
believe. "Ask and it shall be given to you"?! I How could
Jesus have said such a thing? How can a thinking person make sense out
of that? How can that be true? If it were true, of course, all the eight year old girls in the world
would be braiding pink satin ribbons into the tails of their very own
ponies. If it were true, all the eight year old girls in the world and
their brothers and sisters would go to bed every night with just the
right blend of fats and carbohydrates and proteins in their
bloodstreams. If it were true, all the children of the world would at
the least—at the very least—be living in peace. How could Jesus say
such a thing? The first thing we notice when we look closely at what Jesus said to
His disciples in the text in Luke 11, was that he did not say, "Ask
and you will get what you ask for." What he said was something more
like, "Ask and you will receive something good." The second
thing we notice is that there is something lost in the translation of
the Greek into English. The New Testament Greek does not say "Ask
and you will receive." It says "aaaaassssk and keep on
asking...seek and keep on seeking...knock and keep on knocking."
The Greek verb implies ongoing action. Be persistent, Jesus is saying.
Be shameless. Run right up to that door and pound on it and keep on
pounding on it. Make a fool out of yourself with your asking. Finally, the thing that is sometimes overlooked in this story is that
this is primarily a story about intercessory prayer. One friend goes to
another friend on behalf of someone else. This is not a story about
little girls who pray to get a handsome husband when they grow up or
even about older believers bringing their legitimate health concerns
before God. This is primarily a story about intercessory prayer. It is
this kind of shameless, persistent, intercessory prayer that Jesus
guarantees. I hope you have known a prayer warrior. I have. When she died some
years ago at the age of eighty-eight, I took the plaque that had hung in
her house for more than sixty years and hung it in mine. It says,
"Prayer changes things." I fussed and puttered for a while
over the question of just where to hang it. The front hall seemed so
public. The dining room? Too preachy. The den? Well, it looked quite out
of place over the big screen TV. I wondered what the people who visit my
house would think. Such an old-fashioned thought. Such an
unsophisticated idea—the words not even attributable to a respectable
theologian. Ultimately, I hung the plaque in my old-fashioned kitchen. I
do see people eyeing it sometimes as they chat to me before a dinner
party. I do wonder what they think. It's not easy to believe. But if you've known the kind of prayer warriors I have, you have to
stay at the table with this asking and receiving question. Because
beyond coincidence and synchronicity, beyond luck and happenstance there
is something that prayer warriors know, something that changes people if
not things. Answered prayer. On my grandmother's prayer list there were
lots of them. The alcoholic son who finds his way home against all odds,
the troubled community able to mend its fences despite the outrageous
things that were said on both sides, the word of forgiveness that comes
at the last possible moment. "What is the secret of answered
prayer?" the disciples asked Jesus. Asking. Little by little, and
here and there, and now and then, the kingdom of God is breaking in
through the efforts of those who ask. Yes, in the lives of all the prayer warriors I have known there are
unanswered prayers, even prayers that stay on the list for decades.
There are public failures but there not much shame. Not much shame. Not
much spiritual shyness. Instead, there is a gung-ho-ness—a readiness
to ask. A willingness to throw themselves headlong into a situation of
need—to jump out of the porch rocker and take off across the back
yard, skirts flying and apron flapping, through the fence and up the
back steps to that oh-so familiar door. A willingness to beat a path,
beat a shameless path to God's door...and the asking, the prayer
warriors tell us, is the secret. Last year, I set my foot on an ugly path—a path not entirely my
own. I was keeping company with my friend Lucy as she followed out the
last twelve months of her life. During those months I learned what I
suspect many of you who have walked with cancer already know—what a
privilege it can be to join your prayers with a woman of faith who is
facing death. Time and time again last spring, Lucy urged me to
accompany her to heaven's door as she rang its bell, rattled its gates
and slammed its knockers, not on her own behalf, but in prayer for those
she would leave behind. We prayed for her husband, her little girl, her
mother and her father. We prayed. Some of us for lack of anything better
to do. Some of us out of hearts full of faith. Some of us because we
believed Lucy when she said she could feel our prayers. She was buoyed
by them, she said, reminding us of what Charles Williams called the
intercessory prayers of believers: "the glorious web." We did
form a kind of a web with our prayers. Me praying for Lucy in Atlanta
from my home in San Francisco, Ron from Indianapolis, Gene and Joan from
St. Louis, Pam from Toronto and countless others. In the last few months of her earthly life, Lucy's own prayers were
filled with a deep sense of God's presence. It often came to her, she
told me, wrapped in the words and music of a hymn. She came out of
surgery with the words rolling up, filling her, coming through her—The
Lone, Wild Bird, one time, Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring,
another. Toward the end, she told me, it was the gospel songs that
sustained her. As they welled up through her, she gathered visitors
around her bed to sing them. This web of song and prayer sustained Lucy
until the morning last July when her feet were lifted off the path and
she was ushered through the door. The word of Lucy's death went out
quickly through the well-established grape vine and by the time the
hearse came to take the body, fifty-five friends had gathered. They
flanked the walk and filled the porches of the little house and they
sang the body out. They sang I'll Fly Away. In the lives of all the prayer warriors I have known there is heart
break and loss—but there is not much despair. There is instead an
invisible web that buoys them up and ultimately, carries them home. What
did Lucy get for all her praying? Did she get remission? Did she avoid
pain? Did she see an angel or was she offered a sign in the heavens? No,
what Lucy got was what we all get. She got God. The God who is nearer
than hands and feet. God's own presence is the answer to every prayer—the
answer that surpasses anything we could ask for. Ask, Jesus says, and it
shall be given you. Interview with Floyd Brown: What an interesting topic that you talked about today. Many people view prayer differently. Should we consider answered prayer to be a miracle? Jana Childers: A tough question! I suppose it depends on how you define "miracle" and what you expect in terms of answered prayer. I would say that, yes, answered prayers are in some sense a miracle. The same kind of sense that the beauty of nature is a miracle or the same kind of sense that the love between a mother and a child or between a husband and a wife or between friends are miracles. Brown: People viewed many of the prayers and the acts of Jesus as miracles—the foundation of my question when I asked that. What about prayer, though. Does it help to have group prayer? Is it more concentrated? Do we get better results? Childers: There have actually been some empirical studies—scientific studies—trying to quantify the results of prayer. I don’t know that many of them have focused on the question of numbers. Certainly I think God is not particularly impressed by numbers since God sees the big picture of how big the world and, indeed, the universe is. I think that one believer’s heart moves God and you don’t need to back yourself up with dozens of your friends. Brown: You talked about intercessory prayer and group prayer which leads me to this, an expression I hadn’t heard before, "prayer warrior." Tell me, who and what is a prayer warrior and who is your favorite one of all time? Childers: It’s a very old-fashioned expression, I think. I have known a number of people that thought of themselves or were thought of by their communities as prayer warriors. The one I referred to in the sermon, of course, is my own grandmother. It’s interesting how often, when you ask people about women or men of prayer, it is their grandparents that they think of. That certainly was the case in my life. She was a quiet person. She was a very merry, warm, and loving person. She prayed constantly and she got answers. Brown: This is perhaps a little facetious, but when you have someone who is quite good at prayer, someone who gets answers, you probably want to lean on them. Did she find that people came to her and said, "Please pray for me"? Childers: I have seen that. And I have seen, in a sense, after her death, her mantle passed to my own mother. I see that all the time now—in our extended family, in my mother’s church community—that she is thought of as somebody to go to to get help in praying. Brown: It’s nice to have someone who you can count on there. How should we pray? Should we pray constantly? Should we have group prayer? Are there any guidelines here? Childers: One of my favorite scripture texts—because the Bible has quite a bit in several spots about prayer—sheds a little light on that. I’ve changed the wording in my own Bible to make it a bit more personal to me, but in James it says, "the effective, fervent prayer of a righteous woman availeth much." Now you know in the old King James version it didn’t say "a righteous woman." I fixed that part of it for myself! That’s what I believe for myself and for the folks in my own faith community. Effective, fervent prayer of a righteous person. Brown: That’s quite a statement. You do a great deal with the theater as well as from the pulpit. How has that helped you in delivering your messages and getting your points across? Childers: The thing that good actors know, I think, is how to embody somebody else’s words and how to do that with honesty. If good preachers could learn from or work with good actors, I think that would be a tremendous thing. Of course, in the church we are so concerned about phoniness, about artifice of any kind. The last thing we want is for our preachers to be phony. But the ironic thing is that good actors are not phony. Good actors know a lot about authenticity. I think we could learn from that. Brown: This is a tough question, I suppose, but it gives us a opportunity to look into your personality. Are there any prayers that you are really concentrating on these days? Childers: Oh, yes, that is a tough question! I have been teaching now for thirteen years and preaching for sixteen or seventeen years. You know how one’s vocational life goes in cycles, so for me I am praying fervently these days about my preaching ministry. To have a sense of how it is that God wants to use it and how I need to be for that to happen. Brown: That’s very interesting. It’s wonderful. Prayer is so personal and for me to ask you that here is really quite a challenge. I’ve learned a lot and I think our audience has learned a lot here today, too. We want to wish you the absolute best in everything that you do as you go on in your ministry. Is there anything in the future that we can expect from you? You do so much. Childers: I’m speaking at the Festival of Homiletics this spring, which will be in Orlando this year. I’m looking forward to that very much. Brown: Thank you so much for being a part of
our program and we look forward to your return. |
||||
|
|
||||
| Home | History | Program Schedule | This Week | Sermons | Publications | Related Links | Contact Us |