Teach Us to Pray, Part 4

For a few weeks now, I’ve been looking at the Lord’s Prayer in my sermons, and today we’re going to study the very important words, “Forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors.” The first thing we debts, while our Methodist and Episcopal and Roman Catholic brothers and sisters say trespasses. This is mostly because the first Anglican prayer book was published before there was a widely used English Bible, and the translation that prayer book was working from used trespasses instead of debts. Once the Geneva and King James Bibles came out, those who wanted nothing to do with the prayer book began using the biblical version of the prayer. Thus, to this day, some say trespasses, and some say debts, while others simplify

Teach Us to Pray, Part 3


I’m continuing my series on prayer today. A couple of weeks ago in the park, I talked about how the Book of Psalms can help teach us to pray. Other than that, I’ve been talking about the Lord’s Prayer in this series:

For example, last week I talked about the nature of God’s Kingdom, the fact that Jesus brought heaven and earth together, and how important it was to pray first, foremost, and always, not that our own will be done, but God’s.

And then the first week, of course, I talked about how the way we begin the prayer is important, because saying “Father” tells us

Teach Us to Pray, Part 2




INTRODUCTION

Last week in the park, I talked about how praying the Psalms of David can help us understand prayer and become more fluent in the language of prayer. I even talked about how praying prayers that we don’t necessarily want to pray might be good for us, because they remind us that it’s not always about us.

Two weeks ago, I opened this series on prayer with a sermon on the Lord’s Prayer. Specifically, I talked about the opening words: Our Father. It’s rare for me to preach a sermon on two words, but these words are important for three

Teach Us to Pray: Interlude

PRAYING THE PSALMS
 
A few minutes ago, the presiding elder read to you
a piece by a poet I quoted in my sermon last Sunday.
So, since Wendell Berry
seems to be a theme as we talk about what prayer is,
let me begin my sermon with another one of his poems:
What stood will stand, though all be fallen,
the good return that time has stolen.
Though creatures groan in misery,
their flesh prefigures liberty
to end travail and bring to birth
their new perfection in new earth.
At word of that enlivening

Enough with Our Thoughts and Prayers!

This is a re-publication of a prayer I prayed in October 2017, following the Las Vegas massacre in which 59 people were killed and over 800 injured.

Enough with our thoughts and prayers, O God.
Our thoughts are clouded by arrogance
and our prayers are tainted by hypocrisy.

We’re lost, Lord. We are a violent people.
We have chosen to be led by violent leaders.
And we live in a land that is wracked by violence.
We profess love for all.
But grandparents are shot dead in the grocery store