Sermons

MINISTRY TO THE CITY AND NATIONS

Dear Church Family,

We addressed several significant developments for our church in the service this past Sunday. First, the elders presented Brent & Elizabeth McBurney as candidates to join our team of elders. Brent & Elizabeth have been at COSC for 25 years and have served in just about every aspect of church ministry during that time. We believe that they are called by the Lord to eldership at this time. Our Constitution stipulates that the congregation will vote to confirm this calling and we will have this vote by written ballot on Sunday October 7. Members who will not be in service on that Sunday are invited to email in their vote to affirm or not affirm to office@christourshepherd.org. Last Sunday we reviewed our statement of Vision and Values because the elders decided that we needed to keep that statement in front of ourselves and the congregation more than we have been. This past Sunday we also focused on an aspect of our life together that the elders want the congregation to be more aware of. This is the ministry of Stuart and Celia McAlpine that takes place outside of our congregation.

What was shared are not new initiatives or a change in the ministry roles of Stuart & Celia. Instead, this is what is currently taking place and has been happening for several years in increasing measure. It is the will of the Lord and an intentional decision of the elders, to support the expression of their Stuart & Celia’s gifts for the edification of the larger body of Christ. As the founding pastoral couple of COSC, their gifting has planted and built up our body. And the Lord has called for us to support them in a role of ministering in His church worldwide and in Washington DC. We purpose to do a better job of informing and involving the congregation in this calling. This is not primarily about the McAlpines or their work. It is the Lord’s work and it is an important aspect of our calling as a congregation.

Celia shared about ASK and how the Lord is impacting the world through this ministry. Most of the times that Stuart and Celia are away, they are attending ASK conferences for this worldwide organization that they founded and provide ongoing leadership for.

The other major area that Stuart & Celia are involved in is what we have labeled City Wide ministry. Stuart has always had a heart for meeting with other pastors for mutual encouragement and for the promotion of church unity. But this has become more central to his life and ministry as the elders have instructed him to prioritize City Wide ministry in how he spends his compensated time. The truth is that while virtually all churches and pastors will talk about the value of church unity, the demands of local church pastoring leave very little room for the time needed to pursue and express church unity. On the priority list, relationships with other pastors and churches gets squeezed out.

We realized that Stuart & Celia are uniquely gifted to gather and minister to a wide variety of pastors from different theological camps and backgrounds. So, our commitment to church unity needed to be expressed by freeing a significant amount of time from COSC pastoral needs for the promotion of church unity in our City. Stuart shared some of the current fruit from this endeavor, exciting and significant developments of relationships amongst pastors.

We also welcomed Pastor TL and Mable Rogers, who will be sojourning with us for a season, bringing their gifts and experiences to mature us as a body. This is one of the relationship fruits of the City Wide ministry. We look forward to how the Rogers will help us with racial reconciliation and greatly desire to be a blessing to them in this season of their lives.

If you missed Sunday’ service, be sure to listen online to Celia, Stuart, TL and Mable and get caught up on Church life.

Pastorally Yours,

Bo Parker

REDEEMING TIME

Dearest Family,
(trusting you take precious time to read this as I took precious time to write it!)
In the second message of our summer series, ‘IT’S ALL ABOUT TIME’, my comments were grounded in Paul’s admonition to redeem the time, and his repeated exhortation to “make the most of every opportunity” (Ephesians 5:17; Colossians 4:2-5).When we hear the word ‘stewardship’ the first thing we tend to think about is money. We have all heard the truism: ‘show me your checkbook and I will tell you what your priorities are.’ The idea here is that our use of money is one of the best measure of our values. But it is not just about your check-book but about your calendar, that I would argue is an even more fundamental measure. Is the matter of time in most people’s asset analysis? It never is about a few organizational techniques, or schedule manipulations. Time is a creational measurement but it does not often feel like a gift, more like a demanding bill that we have to pay. More often than not it is an enemy not a friend. So why does time need to be redeemed?

Why does it need redeemed? For the reasons that Paul gives to the Romans, Ephesians and Thessalonians. It is a precious commodity. Because the days are evil, the opportunity for good is diminishing, and because the day of reckoning is coming, the availability of time to live and serve God is also diminishing. Why is it precious?

  1. Because of its value.

  2. Because there are eternal consequences. Our eternal destiny and welfare is dependent on our stewardship of time. (2 Corinthians 5:10; Romans 14:12; Hebrews 4:13, 9:27

  3. Because it is short. Like any commodity, its rarity and brevity enhance its value. Scripture is full of images that present this fragile reality to us. We are uncertain of our time’s continuance. Three score years and ten are not guaranteed. The fact of its shortness provokes many things for a Christian: cool affections to worldliness, timely repentance in order to keep short accounts; humility; a valuing of grace.

  4. Because it cannot be recovered when it is past.

  5. Because it is not our own: a gift but also a loan for the sole purpose of serving the purposes of God. Wasting the gift of time insults the giver of time.

  6. Because the days are evil: Paul acknowledged that there were unredeemed challenges to a godly use of time: limitations, temptations, distractions. There are so many invitations to a wasted life. Given the direction and current of culture we need to be pro-active against the tide.

  7. Because there are enemies that oppose our stewardship of time. There are thieves of time. I mentioned about 20 of the more obvious ones. Do your own A-Z, starting with Anxiety, and make it a combative prayer list.

Christians are presented “as wise” and told to “be wise” (sophoi), marked by these two things:

  • Making the most of the time, making the most of the opportunity. Our word comes from the Latin ob portu which described a ship out of port waiting for the moment that the tide came in and it could go into safe harbor and unload and load and fulfill its mission. This implies watchfulness, commitment, effort and work, creativity, fruitfulness, understanding of calling.

  • Discerning the will of the Lord. Also James 4:17 “Instead you ought to say, If it is the Lord’s will, we will.” It is about being a wise son and daughter (Word saturated, thoughtful, listening, biblical problem solving, prayer, wise counsel) not foolish ones (governed by feelings, by personal desire, impulse, instincts, inconsideration of consequences, immediate returns and needs, acting out of impatience.)

The Greek word for measureable time is chronos, from which we get words like chronology, and chronometer. It is used to describe the succession of minutes, clock time, the time passing. However, there is another word for time, used 80 times in the NT, kairos, that has more to do with the content, the significance of what happens in chronos. It can refer to a point in time, a period of time, like the right time, a favorable time, a convenient time, an occasion, a window of opportunity, a season. If chronos is about time spent, kairos is about time invested. If chronos is clock time, then kairos is kingdom time. Scripture is clear that we cannot have a spiritual handle on chronos, if we do not have a spiritual character, and manifest the fruits of the Spirit (especially self-control, longsuffering and patience), Jesus’ character no less. The fact is that if you do not manage yourself you will not manage your time. If you do not value yourself you will not value your time. If you are short on purpose you will be long on procrastination. If you were listening carefully on Sunday you would have noted the relationship between a right understanding of time and personal holiness.

Lest we minimalize and sentimentalize this matter of patience and treat it as if it is just a nice social tool, we should note that time is presented in scripture as a principality and a power and appears in two of Paul’s most strategic lists of antagonistic spiritual powers (1 Cors.3:22 “the present or the future”; Roms.8:38 “neither the present nor the future…will be able to separate us from the love of God” – but they will surely try!) Time is a spiritual power that wreaks great havoc and control and fear on people’s lives. It becomes an enemy that provokes people to do terrible things in their impatient rush to get the most out of life on their terms. This is why we are exhorted to experience the Lord’s presence in our experience of time “Surely I am with you always even to the end of the age” (Matthew 28:20); to experience the power of God to redeem the time, to know that we can indeed make the most of every God-given opportunity in a godly way (Ephesians 5:16; Cols.4:5). So patience is a spiritual power that takes on the invasive and intrusive, controlling and consuming agendas of time passing, of what has been termed “the tyranny of time”, or the “tyranny of the urgent”. Of course, it is the fear of death, the last enemy, that gives time such a spiritual power over the hearts of men and women. There is little to choose between the depictions of Father Time and The Grim Reaper, who both carry the scythe, the weapon of choice of Saturn, known by the Greeks as Chronus, and by the Romans as the Deity of Time. The scythe was the crescent moon representing the rise and fall of cycles of life. Thus patience is not some temperamental attribute of demure and spineless people. It is a necessary demonstration of the power of the Spirit, of spiritual strength, in the face of the enmity of time.

I pointed you to three simple things that every disciple needs in order to number their days aright, in order to be disciplined in their stewardship of time passing.

  1. Restoring the past

  2. Redeeming the present

  3. Remembering your end

Please listen to the download to revisit these important necessities for the discipleship of your time and its consequent redemption. If you got to here, thank you for taking the time to read this letter.

Patiently yours (!)

Stuart

Mission Trip Prayer..

HOSPITALITY: THE CROSS AND THE PINEAPPLE

Dearest Family,

If I had to give a title to my message on Sunday I would have called it: ‘The Cross and the Pineapple.’ I spoke about Christian hospitality, exhorted at the beginning of Hebrews 13. I reminded you that the church was born in homes. Hospitality was the DNA of the fellowship. They met house to house ((Romans 16:5); teaching reflects a home context (Acts 20:20); worship was clearly participation worship in the home including the manifestation of spiritual gifts (Colossians 3:16); the agape meal was served in the home (Acts 2:46); all the “one another’ exhortations assume a home gathering. We also noted that the Last Supper, in a home and around a table, expressed everything we understand to be basic to a church gathering: developing relationships, worshiping God, hearing the Word, asking questions, offering prayers, celebrating communion, serving others and reaching the world. Again, all this was in a setting of hospitality. Similar settings had been the contexts for massive breakthroughs and breakouts of the kingdom of God: at the wedding at Cana of Galilee; at the Samaritan village where the woman at the well lived and the good news came to the non-kosher rejected Samaritans; at the home of the Pharisee where the redeemed prostitute washed His feet and the power of forgiveness is demonstrated; at the home of Zaccheus where Jesus establishes what it truly means to be a son of Abraham; at Bethany where He shows that hospitality is not just about Martha Stewart’s great meal, but about Mary’s intimacy; at the home in Emmaus where He reveals His resurrection power when He breaks the bread.

All these observations raise the necessary and non-negotiable matter of the practice of hospitality as fundamental to our understanding of the character of a Christian disciple, and therefore of Christian community, Christian relationships, but also of the church’s relationship with the world. We noted some things that relate hospitality to the foundations of community (you will have to download for all the details):

1. Hospitality is the basis for communion and community with Jesus and the Father. It is the image of spiritual relationship and salvation. “We will make our home with him” (John 14:23)
2. Hospitality is the non-negotiable means for the proclamation and propagation of the gospel. When Jesus commissioned His disciples to go into the nation and preach and heal he added this instruction: “Whatever town or village you enter, search for some worthy person there and stay at his house until you leave” (Matthew 10:11). Hospitality was the sign of receptivity. It is the hospitality of a Gentile to Peter the Jew that breaks open the mission to the Gentiles. Hospitality is the key bridge to racial reconciliation, and here, the greatest irreconciliation of Jew and Gentile is overcome by the power of the Holy Spirit. Hospitality shatters social and racial boundaries, and invites a deep sharing of cultures, as expressed in how we live and how we eat and what we eat, and how we decorate and what we hang on our walls. Talking of world-shaking breakthroughs that began with hospitality. It was in the home of Philemon that reconciliation was effected when a slave became a brother. It started with hospitality. It was there too that Paul could write with confidence, “Prepare a guest room for me.” It is Lydia’s hospitality in Philippi (“she invited us to her home” Acts 16:15) that led to a church in her home that became the door for mission to barbarian Europe.
3. Hospitality was the context for discipleship and training. In Acts 18: 24-26 we read that when Priscilla and Aquila heard Apollos teaching, “they invited him to their home and explained to him the way of God more adequately.” Paul’s summary of his ministry in Acts 20:20 was that he taught “house to house.”
4. Hospitality is the key to relating to fellow believers and to reaching your neighbors and the world. My heart and my home become the building blocks of the church. It is hospitality and not the building fund that accommodates the work of the church. How accessible is your home. Can people come in? Are people invited in? The privatization of the home has deformed the life of the church. John writes in his epistle “we ought to show hospitality” (3 John 1:8). He is writing to Gaius who has already been referred to in Romans 16:23 “Gaius, whose hospitality I and the whole church here enjoy”. Paul’s thinking is clearly presented in Romans 12:13 “Share with God’s people who are in need. Practice hospitality.” Peter writes, “The end of all things is near … Love each other deeply … Offer hospitality to one another without grumbling” (1 Peter 4:9). But there is a cost to hospitality, a sacrifice. It requires generosity. Why does he say “without grumbling”? Because it is seldom what we want. It is bothersome, intrusive, time consuming. Taking both the Romans 12 and Petrine text together let’s make the point. Hospitality is a non-negotiable expression of our faith working through love. Perhaps most telling are the words of Jesus. “When you have a dinner … do not invite your friends … invite the poor” (Luke 14:12-14) How much more reconciliation, how many more conversions would there have been if we were hospitable. Most discomforting are the words of Jesus’ parable in the words of the judging King: “I was a stranger and you did not invite me in.” Hospitality is a sign of kingdom ministry which attracts the blessing of God. Its absence attracts words of judgment. God takes our lack of response to others personally – it is a failure to welcome Him, befriend Him, bless Him, invite Him. Just one important scriptural observation. “The overseer must be … hospitable … Since an overseer is entrusted work … he must be hospitable” (1 Timothy 3:2; Titus 1:8). This is the most neglected qualification for leadership in the church. It should be noted that hospitality comes after the requirement that a leader be “self-controlled”. Someone has written that this is because: “self-mastery makes self-giving possible.” If there is no hospitality there is no church growth.
5. Hospitality was a moral, an ethical issue for everyone, not just a possible practice for those who felt so inclined or gifted. In the ancient world, hospitality was incumbent on all, was always regarded as a sacred duty. The moralism of hospitality is not difficult to understand given the way that it affirms human dignity and equality, and seeks another’s good, and gives rather than takes. Someone put it like this: “Christian hospitality was a subversive act that obliterated societal barriers involving gender, race, economic condition, and citizenship status, and also directly attacked the often deadly devaluing of the personhood of 'undesirables'. The extension of hospitality was a moral statement with moral overtones.”

Of course, there are obstacles that we all have to deal with. What would be on your list? Would it include: Too much to do, too little time, too little energy, too little money, too much bother, too much work, too intrusive on private space, too much shame, too little skill and experience, too insecure, too shy. These hindrances explain why hospitality is a command, a discipline. Hospitality is a conscious decision because it involves a conscious obedience, and a conscious commitment and a conscientious effort. We should begin by asking for two things:

  • For a prepared heart for Christ’s concerns and affections and perceptions

  • For a prepared home – for others not just oneself. Asking not only for those we want but for those who need us

Take some first achievable steps. Open your home for something, to someone. Jesus was sensitive to how hospitality was shown to Him, or not shown to Him. Get intentional about community building through hospitality. When I did premarital counseling I asked couples to accept one particular discipline: once a month do a dinner party, inviting Christian friends one month, nonChristian friends the second month, and a mix the third month. Repeat every quarter. We cannot be sure of the guarantees of the continuance of public worship in church buildings. But no matter. As long as we understand that the church in the home is the basis of community life, we will not miss a beat. Hospitality is also a corporate discipline, which will determine how we are as a place of welcome and incorporation. Hospitality requires that we be a community for all nations, that we be committed to be a reconciled and reconciling community. How are we expressing hospitality corporately? How are we doing at it?

We are invited to co-host the church and the world with the supping and serving Christ. May His grace as a guest and His generosity as a host, be our example as we cultivate and preserve our obedience to scripture. “Pursue hospitality.” And by the way, while you are doing that, He is also still in the hospitality business. “I go to prepare a place for you … In my father’s house are many mansions” (John 14:2). The Bible began with hospitality and it ends that way with the presentation in Revelation 19 of the marriage feast of the Lamb for a reconciled crowd. It never ends … He will not be outdone. His reward is with him. Let the discipline of hospitality recover its meaning and its joy in all our homes, and may it become the clearest expression of the presence of Jesus in our domicile, for as He said, when you invited them, you invited me to be present. And when you didn’t invite anyone, guess who else did not show up?

This is a costly discipline, but it is powerful to the pulling down of strongholds like marginalization, privatization, institutionalization, separation, isolation, irreconciliaition and loneliness, and it is powerful to the building up of relationship, friendship, trust and shared joy … in a word, building up God’s house of living stones. May our tables be the extension leaves of the table of the Lord. May the cost of our hospitality be a willing sacrifice, given the cost of the meal of bread and wine that we share every eucharist that brought us into this household. I raise my glass to hospitality! Cheers to bread and wine, to loaves and fishes, tacos and salsa, to burgers and fries, soup and salad, cheese and crackers, to dessert and coffee – cheers to your house that is the truest expression of God’s house. Practice hospitality.

Hospitably yours,

Stuart

MEMORIAL DAY: TO THE UNKNOWN SOLDIERS

Dear Family,

The Book of Hebrews, the substance of Bo’s present series, has a well-known Memorial passage. Chapter 11 is an illustrious roll of honor for deceased heroes of the fight of faith, including many of the great patriarchs and leaders – all among the soldiery in the Faith Hall of Fame. The fact is that Memorials, most of them anyway, celebrate well-known events or well-known people. Our city is full of such: The Lincoln, The Jefferson, The FDR, the Veterans of the Vietnam and Korean Wars, The Washington Monument. But we have another Memorial in the Arlington Cemetery, whose history is rooted in the grave of a British soldier who died on the Western Front in WW1. The Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Westminster Abbey and at the Arc de Triomphe became the precursors of such tombs in so many nations. The one in Arlington was established by an Act of Congress in 1921, and is called ‘The Tomb of the Unknowns’. Written on it are these words: “Here rests an American soldier known but to God.”

This Memorial Day weekend, we looked at the closing verses of Hebrews 11: 35-40 and read words like these: “women … others … some … still others … they … these … them…” The people referred to by these general designations were equally worthy of memorializing, but we just don’t know who they are. They are nameless, and they appear on the pages of scripture unknown, and unknowingly. But in some strange way, more than the heroes, they speak in a relatable way to our own unpublicized lives. For every memorial to a well-known hero of faith, there are thousands of unknown and unidentified faithful, and that counts us in to be members of the Faith Hall of Fame too. Paul understood this. “Not many of you were wise by human standards; not many were influential; not many were of noble birth” (1 Corinthians 1:26). But the fact is that “He chose the lowly … the despised … the things that are not.”

When you read scripture, be on the look out for these kind of unknowns. On Sunday, I referred in more detail to several of them just from the Gospel records, who fought the good fight of pure faith. There was:

  • the little guy in John 2 who served the miraculous wine to the master of the wedding feast;

  • the guys in Mark 2:3-5 who tested the homeowner’s house insurance policy and lowered their friend through the roof;

  • he unknown boy with the now well-known lunch in John 6: 5-10;

  • the nameless, penniless widow in Mark 12:43 who is mentioned just every time anyone teaches about a Christian view of giving and stuff;

  • the leper, Samaritan, foreigner in Luke 17:15 who should never have been known by anyone;

  • the guys called “they” and “them” in John 11:41, who engaged the corpse of Lazarus by ignoring all the religious prohibitions, all the social and aesthetic protestations about bad odors, all the argumentations of natural reason that denied that dead men can live again;

  • the unknown, outcast, untouchable woman in Mark 5:24-34 who ends up being renamed a “daughter”, an intimate because of her faith;

  • the “guy with a water jar” and “guy with a house” who seemed to have been prepared for that strategic moment in Holy week when they facilitated the Last Supper no less and May 29, 2018 were simply at the right place at the right time for Jesus, despite appearing to be happenstance bit players, walk on’s, extras.

A bunch of nameless and unknown men and women were faithful and obedient and they are memorialized in scripture, the ultimate Book of Remembrance, and are memorialized today as you read this!

Like those nameless characters in the gospels, all of whom had nothing whereby to commend themselves, we come too – unknown. The gospel unknowns did not have the resources to commend themselves: they had no wine, no food, no legs, no money, no skin, no breath, no future, no hope. They had no leverage and they had no resources to buy in. But everyone of them ended up having an encounter with Jesus, and discovering that he had taken care of everything including the cost. They just arrived at His feet, put all they had into His hand, just simply trusted Him and obeyed what He spoke to them against the rational odds. Yes, they were on the fringe but they found out that touching the fringe of His garment and His life was enough. And despite the fact that their faith was unformed and uninformed, fragile and imperfect and even immature, the saving, healing grace of Jesus transformed them, and they were all memorialized, joining the roll call of Hebrews 11:39 – the myriads of unknowns who have found a place in God’s Faith Hall of Fame, not because they were voted in there by man’s approval, but planted there because of God’s personal remembrance of their faith and works of faith.

We are unknowns and there are plenty of reasons for us not to be included in the company of the faithful in the Faith Hall of Fame. No one is planning a memorial for us, or even writing about us in a book of remembrance. Our grave stones will mark the resting place of unknowns, but in the words of the Arlington Tomb, “known but to God.” We choose to be remembrancers of the Lord in our worship as we remember His works and His ways and His wonders; as we kneel at the altar and receive the eucharist; as we remember the way He has led us, as we recall the meanings of what He has done, and inventory afresh the requirements these memories make of us. But we are also provoking a remembrance of God through our lives and testimonies, making memorials like Cornelius (Acts 10), through our prayers and our generosity. We’re not just being memorials but making memorials.

There was one Memorial on the Mall I did not mention at the beginning. Did you notice it? It is the Martin Luther King Memorial, commemorating the death of a soldier in a battle for the image of God in all men. Would it ever be possible to imagine or believe that there could be sufficient memorials of prayer and giving that would attract God’s attention and invite His intervention to build a memorial as He did in Caesarea, to the breaking of the bondages of our racially rooted irreconciliations by the power of the same gospel?

Though you are unknown to the world at large, your prayers and your obedient works of faith, your daily trust in the Lord, your entrustment of your loaves and fishes assets into His hands, your gifts to the poor – all of these are a memorial offering and like Cornelius, you are thereby known to God and memorialized by Him. In the fight of faith, waging our warfare, armed and armored, we may live and die unknown by men – like those in Hebrews, we are the nameless others, the “these” and the “them”, but in the words of the Tomb to the unknowns, “known to God.” And may reconciliation be His reward to us as it was to Peter and Cornelius.

Pastorally yours,

Stuart

HOPE: AN ANCHOR OF THE SOUL

Dear Family,

On Sunday we dropped anchor, as it were, and looked at the metaphor that the writer to the Hebrews used for hope. Download the message for a full treatment. I pointed out that the anchor was one of the key symbols for the early Christians and used as a secret sign, possibly even more than the icthus, the fish. If we are going to exegete the metaphor we have to know what purpose an anchor serves for those who sail the seas.

It keeps them in place: That means that there is something about this biblical hope that helps us to hold our position despite prevailing ungodly winds and waves that would sweep us off our bearings. Clearly then, hope is the vital contribution for the maintenance of spiritual faithfulness. If the anchor is not connected to something that will hold it fast, there will be no fixity or security. Our anchor of hope is secured in the ground of history, in the mighty acts of God. The remembrance of the historical works and miracles of God recovered hope for the psalmist when he was tempted to think that God’s love had faded or His promise had failed (Psalm 77:8-11). When hopelessness caused his spirit to faint he “remembered the days of long ago.” Remembering that the anchor was deep in history recovered his hope: “You are my God … I have put my hope in You” (Psalm 143: 5-11). Thus, the anchor of hope connects and secures our relationship with God and saves us from two main things:

  • Drifting: This is when the currents, whether of external conditions or internal emotions, whether of cultural persuasions or relational influences, determine our direction and movement. This may end up in us going backwards, an image of backsliding, or of returning to a place that we came from. So, an anchor does not only protect against the effects of external weather and water conditions but it is also strong enough to hold the weight of the vessel. Regardless of the weight of what we are bearing that would appear to threaten spiritual drowning or sinking, we can still maintain our place of safety, of surety, of stability. Hope is the great anti-drift virtue.

  • Driveness: To be drifted by contrary currents is one thing, but to be driven by contrary winds is another. There are undertows that we can choose to submit to, but there are external winds of circumstance that we did not choose that can drive us away from our mooring. Potentially the worst outcome of drifting is the slow slide into an exposed place where we are vulnerable to that which would make shipwreck of us. Remember Paul’s reference in to those who “have shipwrecked their faith” (1 Timothy 1:19). The anchor of hope, if held on to, serves to protect us from being driven by the forces of temptation or falsehood, specifically because it keeps us so focused on the gospel of hope, both its wonders and its warnings. Yes, future hope includes the redemption of our bodies, but also the judgment seat of Christ.

• It keeps them in peace: Our passage tells us that those who have this “hope as an anchor” experience a “strong consolation” (Hebrews 6:18-19). There is no peace where there is no hope. The prophet Isaiah understood that perfect peace was the experience of those who hoped in the Lord (Isaiah 26:3). The prophet Jeremiah lamented that he had been “deprived of peace” April 24, 2018 (Lamentations 3:17). A few verses later we learn that the only thing that restored it was the recovery of hope, specifically because of God’s great love and great faithfulness (3:21). The peace that is the fruit of hope is the antidote to fear. Despite the exterior conditions that might assail and rock the vessel, there is a protection from fear, because our hope is anchored in the outcomes that God has promised. Faith that looks forward in hope to God’s future, overcomes the fear that looks only toward the present immediate outcomes. When hope withers then fear flourishes (Zechariah 9:5). Again, was there any greater hopelessness than that experienced by the disciples after the crucifixion of Jesus? They huddled behind locked doors “for fear of the Jews.” Jesus appears to them, the risen Christ the hope of glory, and His first word to them is “Peace” (John 20:19). The peace of recovered hope dispelled the fear. Spurgeon wrote this: “The condition of every believer in Jesus is very similar to that of the landlubber on-board ship, who, when the sea was rather rough, asked, ‘Captain, we are in great danger, are we not?’ He received no answer, and so he said, ‘Captain, don’t you see great fear?’ Then the old seaman gruffly replied, ‘Yes, I see plenty of fear, but not a bit of danger.’ The ship was safely anchored.” Hope overcome fear; despite the threat there was peace.

Although some may think that hope is a fluke in the sense of that word when it means an unlikely or chance occurrence, that is clearly not the sense I am using it here. It is important that an anchor has sufficient substance and weight to secure in place, and in peace, what it is attached to. From being just a bag of heavy rocks, the anchor soon developed into having two arms, or flukes as they are known, that can dig and lodge into the seabed. It is really interesting that the anchor of hope in our passage has two such strong flukes, representing the double certification that God gives to hope:

  • The promise: “God made His promise … what was promised” (6:13, 17). This is the guarantee of the inheritance, the promise of the completion of our salvation which is firmly secured.

  • The oath: “He confirmed it with an oath” (6:17). This is the sheer grace of God that would give man what he needed for his assurance. As God cannot swear by a higher authority, He swears by himself. Thus, the hope for the future is sealed “By two unchangeable things in which it is impossible for God to lie” (6:18).

There are also two words used to describe the two flukes:

  • Sure: our anchor hope is outwardly strong, it is attested, and safe against external threat

  • Steadfast: our anchor of hope is internally unalloyed; it is pure, integral because integrous. We have a grip on hope but this is not about being clear about an idea, but being connected to a person, to Christ. Spurgeon put it best: “Be sure you have a secure hold on your sure anchor.” How unsafe is it not to be in the place of refuge, the anchorage of hope, with the conviction and assurance of our eternal destiny and hope.

Holding on to the anchor that holds us
This is a two-way street. You see, as much as it is about our hold on hope, the other part of this truth is that the anchor at the other end of the rope has a grip on us, because it holds us. It has the effect, against all the conditions and currents, of pulling us toward itself. It is this invisible hope that is hidden like an anchor beneath the surface of the sea, but nonetheless doing its assuring and securing work. Of course, the more the pressure and strain, the deeper the anchor goes. Even so, the more that the storms challenge our hope, the stronger hope becomes as it holds us firm and steady against that which would pull us away. Instead of a defeat, it gives us another victory. In one of his sermons on hope, Spurgeon had a lovely thought: “Our anchor will never return to us but it is drawing us home; it is drawing us to itself, not downward beneath devouring waves but upward to ecstatic joys. Do you feel it? You who are growing old, do you not feel it drawing you home?” He then quotes the lines of an old hymn: “O that we now might grasp our guide / O that the Word were given / Come Lord of Hosts, the waves divide / And land us all in heaven.” The writer longed for hope to give the final pull. He then drops this gorgeous but poignant line. “My cable has grown shorter lately.” That is true for all of us. We too are losing some links as we get closer to where the anchor is holding us fast.

The anchorage But what about the anchorage?
This is what everything has been leading up to. As we grasp God’s promises, as we lay hold of our future hope and choose to follow the rope to see where it leads and where the anchor actually is, what do we find? The text tells us that the anchor is “within the veil” (6:19). Our anchor is in heaven. We have no need to drop anchor anywhere else. We have no other anchorage. We need worry no more about our security. We can go anywhere and minister anywhere, and there may be some swells and even sea-sickness but wherever we are harbored by the leading of the Holy Spirit, we will be able to minister and live with authority and surety, because the end of the rope is secure. The anchor of our hope is already in the presence of God and that is where we are already moored and attached and being drawn to. To emphasize the point, Jesus is described as the “forerunner” – He “went before us” (6:20). He has already entered there for us. Since Jesus is there and He is our hope, our anchor is inseparably linked with Him. He is not going anywhere so nor are we, other than to be where He is. He will not slip or lose His grip and nor will we. We cannot be separated, we are secured, there is a place prepared. What a brilliant hope! Because He is the forerunner, we will follow. Truly He has gone to prepare a place for us, so that we may be where He is. In the end, our hope is all about who Jesus is, and where Jesus is. It is not primarily about our secure position, though that is surely true. It is all about the person we are secured by. Our hope is not something but someone.

Fully hoping,
Stuart

ABRAHAM: OUR FATHER OF HOPE

Dearest Family,

Normally my pastoral letters are either a summary of what I taught about on Sunday or a focus on a particular point that was raised. This week, I am going to do something different and give you the gist of what I did not have time to complete. So here goes. If you remember, I was talking about Abraham, our father of hope, out of Hebrews 6. In Romans 4 he is described as our father in the faith, and how he is presented there gives us an anatomy of biblical hope.

Our father in the faith and in the hope.

1. Hope is about a Person: Everything is “in the sight of God, in whom he believed” (4:17). Our hope is all about who God is.
a. before Him: hope is utterly related to the dependability of God. It is not about my insight but about being in His sight. It is not about my perspective on the future but on the assurance of God’s presence there as well as here.
b. In whom: this is not about the grade of our hope or faith, but about the goal of our hope, to believe in Him, and to forever be with Him. Hope limits itself only to what God Himself promises.

2. Hope is about a Promise: “I have made you … Abraham in hope believed.” (4:17-18) Our faith is first in the One who promised, and then we exercise our hope in what was promised, but the ‘what’ never displaces the ‘who’. When there is nothing to go on, there is something to stand on. In the words of the hymn: Standing on the promises that cannot fail / When the howling storms of doubt and fear assail / By the living word of God I shall prevail / Standing on the promises of God. “I have made you…” (promise) is followed by “in whom he believed, the God who gives life to the dead” (hope) and concludes with “Abraham … became” (fulfillment).

3. Hope is about a Persuasion: “Being fully persuaded” (4:21). Where there was no conceivable hope (literally!) Abraham did not allow the facts of what he saw by sight (“that his body was as good as dead”) to overcome the holy facts of faith. The text says that he “faced the fact” but did not weaken or waver. It was a matter of fact, not a matter of fate. Hope did not deny the reality or the state of his virility or Sarah’s fertility. The New Testament nowhere plays down suffering and trial in order to elevate hope. On the contrary, as we have seen, they so often seem to be found in the same context. We are called to an unthreatened examination of the facts and to the unintimidated exercise of faith in the future facts that God has promised for us. As the saying goes, “Weak faith on thick ice is better than strong faith on thin ice.”

4. Hope is about a Provision: This deserves a full treatment, but there are endless products of hope in God’s future promise that are reaped in our present life. Strength and effectiveness of present discipleship is utterly contingent on our biblical hope. Abraham reaped present blessings as a result of his future hope. The birth of Isaac was not the full fulfillment of the promise. You could argue that until Jacob was born it was all up in the air. How interesting then that Isaac and Rebekah had trouble conceiving and also had to learn first-hand what it was to hope in nothing but the promises of God about their future. We cannot spare ourselves this calling to hope. We were saved in hope, have entered a living hope and so will never be apart from it. A study of the provisions of hope in the present will reap great benefits for you. For example:

a. Listen to Peter: He is committed to serve “as long as I live in the tent of this body because I know I will soon put it aside” (2 Peter1:13). It is because of the hope of what is to come that he is aware of the temporary nature of this life and therefore the need to escape the corruption of the world caused by evil desires and live a cleansed life. Hope provides both a motivation to change our life but also an empowerment to do so. Peter is also motivated to serve the Lord with “every effort.”

b. Listen to Paul In Titus 2:1-13, Paul lists many manifestations of godliness in those who seek to adorn the doctrine of God our Savior. The common mark of these people is that they are “looking for the blessed hope”. Biblical hope will totally affect how we steward our lives – “our talents, our time and our treasures.” You could argue that the differing qualities and strengths of believers’ discipleship are calibrated by their convictions about biblical hope.

c. Listen to Jesus: “Lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven” (Matthew 6:19-20). The hope of heaven as a spiritual habit of mind, a “supernatural orientation” as Harry Blamires described it, settles the issues about what we value, and how we make decisions about what we invest in. It will also help us decide what we divest as of no usefulness in the work of the kingdom of God.

The biblical presentation of the challenges and choices of Abraham when it came to trusting the promises of God, believing in hope, hoping against hope and being persuaded that God had power to do what was promised, remains the curriculum for our own walk of hope. As his spiritual progeny, we should expect the same fruit in our lives as he experienced in his: strengthening in our faith and an explosion of continual glory to God. Hope fuels our work for God and our worship of God. Not only was his obedience at Mount Moriah a prophetic preview, a pre-run, of the sacrifice that would secure the hope of our salvation in and through Jesus’ death, but his refusal to lose his mind in response to the incursion of potential hopelessness, meant that he “reasoned that God could raise the dead.” Thus Abraham’s hope not only foresaw the cross, but also the resurrection, the conviction that was the ground of his hope, and the ground of ours. With Abraham, we will share the experience of what the resurrection of Jesus secured – our secure hope that we too shall be raised. Here’s hoping!

Hope fully,
Stuart

UNCIRCUMCISED EAR

Dearest Family,

The ministrations of Moses (the Law) and Elijah (the Prophets) to Jesus on Mount Tabor, recorded in Matthew 17 and Luke 9, mark the beginning of Jesus’ final assault on the hill, Golgotha. On Sunday I drew your attention to the words that the Father spoke out of the heavens, the same word that inaugurated Jesus’ ministry at His baptism. Before the experience prophetically foreseen and described by Isaiah in his 53rd chapter, of absolute rejection and absolute despising and contempt, and absolute desertion, He needed absolute acceptance and absolute affirmation and absolute assurance.

And is that not what that voice is all about. “This is my son, whom I love; with him I am well pleased. LISTEN TO HIM!” I have always been gripped by those last words. “LISTEN TO HIM!” The Father is drawing attention to the necessity not to miss, not to misunderstand, not to mistake, not to misinterpret a single word that is about to come out of his mouth in this final stretch to the cross. It should strike us as strange. Wouldn’t you expect it to have said, “Look at Him!” Think about it! They’re in the moment. There was already the “glorious splendor” of Moses and Elijah to rivet the gaze, but the text says of Jesus: “the appearance of his face changed, and his clothes became as bright as a flash of lightning.” It says, “they saw his glory.” Was this what John, who was there, described when he saw it again on Patmos: “His head and hair were white like wool, as white as snow, and his eyes were blazing like fire…His face was like the sun shining in all its brilliance.” (Rev. 1:14-16) But the voice didn’t say “Look at Him!” but “Listen to Him!” And there’s the rub. Our hearing. Our listening.

Following the Transfiguration it’s interesting to note that Jesus immediately delivers a demonized boy and everyone is wowed. “They were all amazed at the greatness of God” (Luke 9:43). Then we read this. “While everyone was marveling at what Jesus did, he said to his disciples, Listen carefully to what I am about to tell you.” Listening then becomes a repeated theme, a repeated request and encouragement. Of those who were the 72, not just the special 12, Jesus says: “He who listens to you listens to me” (Luke 10:16). It is Jesus speaking through them so it is credited by Jesus Himself as the word of the Lord. At the end of that discipleship training session, Jesus speaks privately to the 12, saying that there were many prophets and kings who wanted “to hear what you hear” (10:24). The chapter ends with the incident at Bethany with Martha clanging pots in the kitchen to get attention to how hard she is working for Jesus to serve Him supper. Mary was quietly sitting at Jesus’ feet. This is always used as a picture of devotion, and that’s true but why is that so? Just because she happened to be with Jesus, close to Him? Often the point is missed. The text says she was “listening to what He said” (Luke 10:39)

John’s narrative leading up to Palm Sunday is a little different, with a different selection of key exchanges, but interestingly enough, on His final journey to the cross, and He’s getting very close now, after His extraordinary explanation of why He is the bread of life, and why eternal life is utterly predicated on our relationship with His flesh and His blood, Jesus hears something. The text says he was “aware that His disciples were grumbling” (John 6:61). John reported earlier grumbling from the Jews as Jesus spoke. How interesting that Jesus described the experience of receiving “everlasting life” like this: “Everyone who listens to the Father and learns from Him comes to me” (6:45) Five verses after His disciples’ grumbling we read: “From this time many of His disciples March 18, 2018 turned back and no longer followed Him.” In my lifetime I don’t think I’ve ever witnessed more people doing the same thing for the same reason. “On hearing it, many of His disciples said, This is a hard teaching. Who can accept it?” (v60)

I gave plenty of scriptural examples on Sunday of the kind of ears that the Bible say make for both good and bad hearing. The calls to hear, to listen, are the bookends of Jesus’ ministry in the New Testament, as incarnate Christ in the Gospels and glorified Christ in Revelation. The very last words addressed by the Spirit to the reader of the Bible are: “Let him who hears, come” (Revelation 22:17). But I concluded by drawing your attention to what God said through Jeremiah, describing the people’s “uncircumcised ear” that took offence at what they heard, and to Jesus’ similar response to those who could not listen to what He was saying: “Do I offend you?”

You will have to re-listen to the message to get the meat of what I shared but let me repeat this. If we are going to pursue the hard conversations, if we are going to press through despite failures and wounds in the pursuit of racial reconciliation in the church, then we have to have circumcised ears that listen, that hear then commanding voice of Jesus, that hear both the words and the hearts of others, and ears that refuse to take offence, tutoring our speech that learns not to give it – that will admit it when it happens, that will confess and forgive it when it happens, that will minister to it when it happens in the way Jesus told us to in Matthew 5:34-35 – love, bless, do good and pray. There’s going to be a lot of praying coming down. Receive this 40 days as just a warm up practice.

So COSC, how is our hearing? What would the results be of a spiritual hearing test? Is there hearing loss in our spiritual life? Is spiritual hearing blocked, injured, infected? Are we showing symptoms of hearing loss in our discipleship, avoiding the counsel of friends and family and the Lord? Do we listen? What is the Lord saying to you these days? Do you hear only what you once heard and are now living off old conversations long since over? Does the Lord speak to you? Do you expect him to? Do you really want him to? Do you invite him to? Do you need him to? Do you need a word from heaven? Is there something he has said that you have refused to hear? Is there something you have heard that you have chosen to pretend was not spoken? Is your hearing selective? Have you got good at tuning him out? Is your ear itching for something that suits your desires that will justify your choices and support your preferences? (Stop confronting us with the Holy one of Israel…tell us pleasant things!) Do you need the oil of the Holy Spirit poured in to your ears this morning to clear the passage to your heart? We hear what we want to hear. I think it was Marshall McLuhan who reminded folk that we have no ear lids yet we are practiced at selective listening. Do we need our deafness healed?

So let’s take heed to what the Bible teaches. From beginning to end, it gives reason after reason why we either don’t listen or cannot hear: pride, untruth, self-satisfaction, rebellion, disobedience, idolatry, unbelief, cynicism, shame, unconfessed and unrepented sin, unteachableness, distraction, loving the sound of our own voice more than his, unbelief, willfulness, stubbornness, offence. The Lord is telling us to hear what the Spirit says in these days, so we cannot afford to be dull of hearing for any of these reasons. A uncircumcised ear is evidence of an uncircumcised heart. Let’s put the ear back in heart!

Listening with you,
Stuart

EFFECTIVE ASKING

“What various hindrances we meet
When coming to the Mercy Seat.”
William Cowper

“The prayer of a righteous man is powerful and effective.”
James 5:16

ASKING: INEFFECTIVE OR EFFECTIVE?

READING: JAMES 1: 5-8; 4: 2-3; 5:16

In one of his discourses on the Sermon on the Mount, John Wesley dealt with the discouragements and frustrations that attend the efforts to live righteously and witness engagingly. After suggesting some ways to respond he said that there “is yet another remedy left; and one that is frequently found effectual when no other method avails … ask and it shall be given you.” We should never be ashamed to state the obvious. To be effective in anything, especially in your asking you first have to be “effectual” by just asking! You only learn to ask by asking.

As we embark on 40 days of asking it would seem a reasonable, not to say advisable, matter to affirm what makes for effective asking, assuming that is what we are hoping our asking will be. I’m going to stand you in front of a hydrant and give you a broad but condensed multipoint presentation of some things that will make for ineffective asking and some that will make for effective asking. Does that sound like a helpful thing to do on the eve of this 40 day commitment to asking?

A qualifying word from James
One of the most commonly cited verses on prayer is James 5:16 “The prayer of a righteous man is powerful and effective.” What is meant by ‘effective’? In our mind, the word implies that something is successful because something is working, but what, and who? Translators have argued and disagreed about the participle of the verb ‘energeo’ (‘energoumene’) used here. Is it to be understood in the middle voice as “is able to do” or in the passive voice, “is enabled to do”? Is the emphasis on what we do to make it effective, or on what we are enabled to do to make it effectual.

There does seem to be a conditioning of the possible effectiveness of asking by the designation of the asker as “righteous.” Unrighteousness does not make for effective asking. What is clear is that whatever the reason for the effectiveness, the end result is a powerful prayer, most likely because a righteous person is operating in the will of God, including of course God’s will that they live a holy life. But even as true as that is, it will not do to read this verse as though effectiveness ultimately had to do with our state of righteousness while we are asking. We know where this can lead, as affirmed by Jesus’ parable of the Publican and Pharisee. The problem is with the word “effective” (NIV, NRSV), particularly as it is commonly used now, having to do with results and getting things done.

The emphasis here is not on what needs to be done according to our asking, but on how it is being done and who is ultimately doing it. For certain, it is not the righteous asker. The translations that use the word “effectual” (AKJV, KJ21) help us to get nearer the meaning, and nearer to the meaning of my message. Though less used now, the word “effectual” is perhaps better, because it suggests a different nuance. It is usually used of inanimate or abstract things that attain a desired result. This puts the emphasis less on what we do to make asking effective, and more on the idea that asking is a means for someone else’s desire to be effected.

Furthermore, the root of the word that James uses is the Greek word ‘energeo’ which explains itself in the key contexts in which it is used. It conveys the idea of something “working in” or to put it another way, something “inwrought”. This is how Paul describes faith (Galatians 5:6), the Word (1Thessalonians 2:13), and grace (Ephesians 3:7) in believers’ lives. They have been “inwrought” and if not by them, by who? What is this “inwrought” power of Ephesians 1:19 but “the working of His inner strength”? Paul makes this clear in another decisive statement about asking:Now to Him who is able to do immeasurably more than all we ask or imagine, according to His power that is at work in us” (Ephesians 3:20). That which is “inwrought” in us when we are asking, the power that is effectual, and that consequently makes our asking effective, is exactly what Paul has just talked about and asked for: “I ask that out of His glorious riches He may strengthen you with power through His Spirit in your inner being.” So Paul and James are totally agreed. So are the asking saints, like E.M.Bounds, who knew that our ability and our power to ask was “dependent on the measure of the Holy Spirit received by us, dwelling in us and working through us.” There is no effective asking without the “inwrought” working of the Holy Spirit.

Our asking is the evidence, not primarily of our formulations, but of the Spirit’s utterance in and through us. It is not the result of a few prayer techniques that we have mastered in order to be a really effective asker, but of the Spirit’s help and instruction. Our effectiveness has to do with the power that works in us and therefore enables us to ask powerfully, not with our ability to develop a method and means to ask effectively in our own strength and wisdom. In any case, did not James begin his epistle with the need to ask for wisdom from God in order to ask aright for anything?

Why is all this important? Because I am not using the word ‘effective’ this morning in a way that implies that because we do certain things we can guarantee the effectiveness of our asking, and thus make a work out of it, or think we have the means to assure its success. Nothing could be further from the truth. However, I am going to be suggesting in the first part of my message that there are some things that we are responsible for and that we do that can definitely render our asking ineffective.

PART 1: INEFFECTIVE ASKING
Having established that God is a God who hears our asking, scripture presents not just what God chooses to hear, but also what He refuses to hear. This has huge implications for our assumptions about prayer, and our expectations of our asking. It is quite salutary to go through the scriptures and discover how many times God explicitly says He will not listen to what is asked of Him, or He will choose not to hear. Sometimes His choice not to hear is a response to our choice not to listen or heed His word and commands. Just as Jesus said that our refusal to forgive runs interference with our own reception of forgiveness, so God makes clear that there is a divinely reciprocated response in His hearing, to our refusal to hear. After all, is it not true that we cease to speak to someone who has ceased to listen to what we are saying, and cease to listen to someone who repeatedly fails to respond to what we have said? Surely then, before we ask for 40 days, it is worth checking if there are any reasons which might contribute to our asking being in vain, simply because God will choose not to hear. It will feel to us that He has not heard or cannot hear. No, God hears. What he does is refuse to hear for specified reasons; He chooses not to listen.

The following scriptural examples that I am going to give you are important because they affirm that God is a Person and not some cosmic impersonal slot machine where certain input gets certain output; as if we ask and out pops the answer, custom wrapped for our fleshly consumption. We are not heard simply by virtue of our asking. Scripture, including our reading from James, identifies reasons for unanswered asking: asking for wrong things, asking of wrong sources, asking in wrong ways, asking when in the wrong. What follows will be a helpful list to check two things:
1. the possible presumption in our asking;
2. the continuance of those things in our lives that are not consistent with those whose asking is meant to be an expression of their intimate relationship with the Lord.

Some requests may have a reasonable and laudable face value when verbalized, and may even pass theological muster, but the Lord not only hears our words, He sees our heart. While I am asking for and about those things that affect my relationship with my world, God is concerned about what affects my relationship with Him. Here are some of the biblical reasons given for God’s refusal to hear what is asked, so it would be helpful for us to go into these 40 days without bearing any of these hindrances and impediments that will render our asking ineffective.

1. Choosing other lordship: “Give us a king to lead us … you will cry out for relief from the king you have chosen, and the Lord will not answer you in that day” (1 Samuel 8:18). Divine lordship has been abandoned in favor of human leadership. Trusting men has been preferred to trusting God. Human security and protection is more desired than the presence of God. If we serve other lordship God will not hear.
2. Willful disobedience: “The Lord was angry with me and would not listen to me” (Deuteronomy 3:26). God’s anger was because of Moses’ disobedience. Basically, God is saying: “That is enough. Do not speak to me any more about this matter.” Or in other words, “There is no point in asking me again. Do not ask for something that I cannot and will not do.” If there is willful disobedience God will not hear.
4. Living a double life: “Do not plead with me for I will not listen to you” (Jeremiah 7:16). This is God’s response to His people’s private worship of the Queen of Heaven, while paying public lip-service to the temple. They were asking while they were “two-timing” God. “Will you steal and commit adultery and follow other gods and then come and stand before me in my house and say, ‘We’re safe – safe to do all these things’” (vs. 9-11). You can ask for blessing and immunity all you want but God will not bless what you are asking for, because of the conditions of the asking heart. “Has this house, which bears my name, become a den of robbers to you?” This is a chilling passage because it is the same one that Jesus quotes when He casts the money-changers out of the temple and re-establishes it as a house of “asking” (Matthew 21:12-13). It is clear at the end of the chapter that God is responding in kind because He says to Jeremiah, “When you tell them all this, they will not listen to you; when you call to them they will not answer.” They do not answer God about what He is asking of them through the prophet, yet they expect Him to answer what they are asking of Him. When there is the deception and duplicity of a double-life God will not hear.
5. Refusal to be compassionate to others: “Administer true justice; show mercy and compassion to one another … But they refused to pay attention … When I called they did not listen; when they called I would not listen” (Zechariah 7:13). The specific issue is their refusal to heed when the Lord speaks about justice. The chapter begins with God answering something they had asked about (“should I mourn and fast?” v3) with asking of His own (“Was it really for me that you fasted?” v5). The problem is that their asking is utterly self consumed and self-enhancing. It was all about “feasting for themselves” (v6). Despite what God was asking of them, it says “they refused to pay attention … they stopped their ears” (v11). This is what provokes the divine response to “not listen.” When a compassionate response is asked for while with-holding compassion, God will not hear.
6. Disregard for injustice and denial of justice:If a man shuts his ears to the cry of the poor, he too will cry out and not be answered” (Proverbs 21:13); “On the day of your fasting you exploit all your workers … you cannot fast as you do today and expect your voice to be heard on high” (Isaiah 58:4); “Should you not know justice? They will cry out to the Lord but He will not answer him” (Micah 4:2-4). The deliberate avoidance of the afflictions of those who are the victims of injustice, results in a divine refusal to hear what they ask for. A lack of generosity is also implied here as there is a contradiction between asking more for oneself while denying what another needs. When Paul tells the Philippians that God will supply their needs when they ask, it is clearly because they have already been generous in supplying the needs of others. Effective askers are usually those with generous and giving spirits. Freely we receive in response to our asking, therefore freely we give. If God’s justice is willfully disregarded He will not hear.
7. Appearance without reality: They seek me out; they seem eager to know my ways as if they were a nation that does what is right … They ask me for just decisions and seem eager for God to come near them” (Isaiah 58:2). They appear to be concerned and desirous but there is a divine “YET!” (v3) What they “seem” is not what they are and it negates their asking. God explains that the answers to their asking are conditional on their choice of what He has chosen, not their self-oriented choices. He clearly spells out what that will require of them (vs.6-7). “THEN … you will call and the Lord will answer, you will cry for help and the Lord will say ‘Here I am’”. Where there is appearance without reality, God will not hear.
8. Unconfessed and unrepented sin:If I had cherished iniquity in my heart the Lord would not have listened” (Psalm 66:18). The problem here is the expectation that God will be responsive to anything we ask while we persist in ignoring the things that interfere with relationship, and that are an offence to God. “Your sins have hidden His face from you so He will not hear” (Isaiah 59:2). This is referring to a habitual life-style of sin that results in God not listening to what is asked, so there will be no answers. Where the eyes of God are covered, the ears of God are covered too. If iniquity is harbored, God will not hear.
9. Failure to acknowledge and accept God’s wisdom: “Wisdom calls aloud … since you rejected me when I called … since you ignored all my advice … and would not accept my rebuke … they will call to me but I will not answer” (Proverbs 1: 20-28). You have to listen in order to be listened to. Fools will not be given a wise answer. “Answer a fool according to his folly” (Proverbs 26:5). The answer to the fool’s asking is silence. Those addressed did not choose the fear of the Lord, and they would not accept the advice of wisdom. In the New Testament, the book of James is like a commentary on Proverbs and it makes clear (James 1:5) that if we are humble and admit our need of God’s wisdom, then an amazing invitation is extended: “let him ask of God who gives generously.” Submission to the wisdom of God attracts a generous and a gracious response to our asking. Where there is a failure to submit to God’s wisdom, God will not hear.
10. Deliberate rejection of God’s law:If anyone turns a deaf ear to the law even his prayers are detestable” (Proverbs 28:9). Again, here is an example of God’s refusal to respond to what is asked for by someone who insists on shutting their ears to the holiness and justice of God, rejecting truth and disdaining God’s laws. In such a case, God will not hear.
11. Pride:If my people … will humble themselves and ask … then will I hear from heaven” (2 Chronicles 7:14). Humility opens the ears of God. Pride therefore closes them to our asking. “I will break down your stubborn pride and make the sky above you like iron” (Leviticus 26:19). There is no responsiveness from heaven to the prideful, because God will not hear.
12. Idolatry:These men have set up idols in their hearts and put wicked stumbling blocks before their faces. Should I let them ask of me at all?” (Ezekiel 14:3). “You continue to defile yourselves with all your idols … Am I to let you inquire of me? ... I will not let you inquire of me!” (Ezekiel 20:31) The only answer the Lord says He will give is to separate Himself from anyone who separates themselves from Him by their indulgence in idolatrous thinking and living. That separation is a break-down of communication which means no possibility for asking, so God will not hear.
13. Ritualistic repetition:Do not keep on babbling like the pagans, for they think they will be heard because of their many words” (Matthew 6:7). Vain, superstitious verbosity and volubility is not the way to ask if you want to be heard. God will not hear it.
13. Ritualistic repetition:Do not keep on babbling like the pagans, for they think they will be heard because of their many words” (Matthew 6:7). Vain, superstitious verbosity and volubility is not the way to ask if you want to be heard. God will not hear it.
14. Unforgiveness:If you do not forgive men their sins, your father will not forgive your sins” (Matthew 6:15). Our asking for forgiveness will go unheeded if we bear unforgiveness in our hearts. There may be many things that are maintaining the unforgiveness, like bitterness, unhealed pain, continuing strife, the vindictive desire for punishment, or the ongoing wishing of ill upon the offender. If we willfully retain unforgiveness in our hearts, God will not hear.
15. Disunity:If two of you agree about anything you ask for it will be done” (Matthew 18:19). If unity is a condition for asking effectively, then lack of agreement and dissension will invalidate our asking. Disunity, irreconciliation and disagreement render our asking null and void. God will not hear.
16. Enmity: Jesus addresses the consequences of anger and enmity in His teaching, and points out that the posture of worship, whether we are giving or asking, is rendered ineffective, unless we first “go and be reconciled to your brother” (Matthew 5:23-24). Wesley taught that if asking was “to have its full weight with God” then it was imperative that we be living “in charity with all men” 5 or God will not hear.
17. Hypocrisy:They love to pray … to be seen by men … I thank you I’m not like other men … God have mercy on me … this man rather than the other went home justified before God” (Luke 18: 9-14). The Pharisee in Jesus’ parable did not leave justified like the asking Publican, but left just the same. The Pharisee was not heard. Insincerity was not heeded. Where there is hypocrisy, God will not hear.
18. Double-mindedness:When he asks he must believe and not doubt … That man should not think he will receive anything from the Lord” (James 1:6-7). Where there is double-mindedness and doubt there will be no authority in asking. Equally, there will be no capacity to receive, even if answered. Jesus was so clear that the one who asked for a mountain to be moved should have “no doubt in his heart.” Although some of the things we ask for are staggering, we are exhorted to heed Abraham’s example who “staggered not at the promise of God through unbelief, but was strong in faith giving glory to God” (Romans 4:20). Where doubt persists, asking eventually ceases. As Calvin remarked, “If you doubt you do not pray.” Where there is double-mindedness there will be no authority in asking and God will not hear.
19. Broken marital relationships:Husbands … be considerate as you live with your wives … treat them with respect … so that nothing will hinder your prayers” (1 Peter 3:7). Inappropriate, un-Christlike behavior and sins against spouses run interference with our asking. Trading presumptuously on a sense of intimacy with God, when marital intimacy is not being cherished or protected, is inviting a hindrance to our asking. If we are sinning against our spouse God will not hear.
20. Condemnation: If our hearts do not condemn us, we have confidence before God and receive from Him anything we ask” (1 John 3:21). Where there is condemnation there is a block both on the freedom to ask with assurance, and on the reception of what we ask for. If our hearts condemn us, God will not hear.
21. Not asking according to His will:If we ask anything according to His will He hears us” (1 Jn. 5:14). God cannot be asked to act against His own character or purpose. If we do not ask according to His will, God will not hear.
22. Asking with wrong motives: “”You do not receive because you ask with wrong motives, that you may spend it on your pleasures” (James 4:3). When asking is fueled by wrong motives rooted in the lust and covetousness, fighting and warring that James refers to, there will be no answers. It is clear that the motive for asking is utterly self-serving and good things can be requested for bad reasons. Simon Magus asked for the Holy Spirit, a good thing, but with godless motives (Acts 8:18-19). If the motivation for the request is not to delight oneself in the Lord, then the asked-for desire is unlikely to be given (Psalm 37:4). The Lord searches the heart and discerns the motivation behind our asking. The litmus test for our motives in asking is simple but direct: is what we ask for to gratify ourselves or to glorify God? If wrong motives are present, God will not hear.
23. Asking wrong sources:My people ask counsel of their stocks, and are answered by a stick of wood” (Hosea 4:12). Asking of wrong sources, from God’s perspective, is “a spirit of prostitution”. When they do have a need to ask, “they will not find Him” (Hosea 5:6). The divine pain is explicit whenever Israel appointed prophets, priests and kings of their own making, and ceased to inquire of the Lord. “They have not asked at my mouth” (Isaiah 30:2). “They didn’t ask, ‘Where is the Lord?’” (Jeremiah 2:6) They carried out their own plans, asking counsel of unholy consultants and forming alliances other than relationship with God. When Saul chose to ask of the witch of Endor instead of the Lord, he lost his kingdom (1 Samuel 28:7). When Ahaziah sent messengers to consult BaalZebub, the god of Ekron, God told Elijah to ask these emissaries, “Is it because there is no God in Israel? ...You will surely die!” (2 Kings 1:3). When wrong sources offer themselves, the need to ask of God is imperative. “When men tell you to consult mediums and spiritists, who whisper and mutter, should not a people inquire of the Lord?” (Isaiah 8:19) Getting direction from others displaces asking of God. The consequences are dangerous and disastrous. God will not hear.
24. Asking for wrong things:They put God to the test by demanding the things they craved” (Psalm 78:18). This is rooted in the same lust that James speaks about. When Solomon asked for wisdom, the difference between asking for right and wrong things is made clear. “The Lord was pleased that Solomon had asked for this … and not for long life or wealth for yourself … I will do what you have asked” (1Kings 3:10-11). If we ask for wrong things God will not hear.
25. Asking that is really accusing: The prophet Isaiah foresaw Jesus as a lamb that was dumb before its shearers: “so He did not open His mouth” (Isaiah 53:7). There was plenty of asking going on, and in any other context they would have been good questions to ask. “Are you the one who was to come?” (Luke 7:20) when asked of Jesus by John the Baptist, is very different to: “Are you the Christ?” (Mark 14:61) when asked by Caiaphas. As with all these points, it is not that God is deaf. He chooses not to hear. The silence of Jesus, as if he did not hear, is the divine response to that which is asked in anger and contempt, in mockery and accusation. It is not genuinely interrogative but deliberately derogatory. How much asking is addressed to God from the place of bitter cynicism, or challenging defiance, or personal enmity? Asking that is accusing will not be heard.
26. Failure to ask: “You have not because you ask not” (James 4:2-3). It is important to state the obvious. God cannot and will not hear what is not spoken. God presents Himself, time and time again in scripture, as the God who wants to be addressed, wants to be asked. “Ask of me!” (Psalm 2:8) Go to God and “take words with you” pleads Hosea (14:2). If we will not ask, God will not hear, because He has nothing to hear! It has been said that the greatest tragedy of life is not unanswered prayer but unoffered prayer.

It would be easy to be disheartened by all this and limit our asking to the question: what hope? But that would be to completely miss the point. God is not trying to make Himself less approachable but more so. If we are going to ask rightly and effectively, it makes sense that we know as much as possible about wrong kinds of asking. God has a vested interest that nothing hinders our asking, because He wants to relate to us. Thus the practice of asking is such an invitation of grace to live in a manner that is worthy of our confession of Christ. Not to ask God is actually not to ask some crucial questions of ourselves. The neglect of asking turns out to be a neglect of personal spiritual health.

PART II: EFFECTIVE ASKING

We began this message by noting many scriptural reasons for why God chooses not to listen to what we ask, or chooses to refuse to hear what we ask, as unwelcome as this feels. It follows then that to ask effectively we should ensure that we are heard and that none of those exclusions or hindrances that were mentioned apply to us. If they do, you can deal with these this morning at this altar rail and walk out of here ready to begin these 40 days as an asker who can be confident that God hears you. All recovered asking begins with the asking for forgiveness. But just as there are so many possible impediments and interferences to asking, so there are also many godly factors that help our asking to be more effective.

If you want to get more effective at something, you have to begin by engaging it. Just start doing it. You can read all the books you like about tennis but you will never have an effective volley if you never get onto the court and get to the net. All the books in the world about prayer may be encouraging, but if you are not asking personally they are ineffective. So what makes for effective asking? Beginning to ask and then keeping on asking. Isn’t that how Jesus put it?

The next 40 days, if you choose to participate, will be like a 40 day discipleship course, a 40 day personal spiritual renewal experience. Haven’t we just seen how convicting, cleansing and sanctifying it can be by just dealing with those things that hinder our asking being heard? Why will these 40 days be like this? Because asking, by its very nature, activates the context in which so much is matured and changed in our lives, precisely because it relates us to God, and in that relationship we are confronted and convicted, nurtured and nourished, taught and touched. Asking forces us to stop and think about what we really want for life and godliness, and thus purifies our future asking. Yes, it convinces us how much we need, and how far we are from asking effectively, but that revelation in itself is a tremendously effective first-fruits of asking. Just asking becomes a bondage-breaker: breaking the silence in our communication with God, breaking the fear about asking specifically, breaking the lies of the enemy about why it’s no use for us to ask, breaking the deception that we can get by without it, breaking the pride of our independence. As Forsyth put it, just the act of asking serves to “relax the tension of our self-inflation.” Asking is a holy end in itself, before it is ever about answers. So if you just start asking, you are on your way to effective asking.

However, there are some considerations, and perhaps conditioning factors, that we should be aware of when we come to ask of God. When we pay heed to these, we will find that our need and desire to ask becomes what I have just suggested, a huge contribution to our sanctification, to our maturing godliness, to our maturing discipleship. Asking is what disciples of Jesus do, and as we ask the Father, because it is such a means of grace, we will find ourselves in the classroom of the Holy Spirit, learning of Christ, and we will continue to receive the blessing of something that Paul asked for disciples: “I keep asking that the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the glorious Father, may give you the Spirit of wisdom and revelation, so that you may know Him better.” (Ephesians 1:17) Is that not the learning (to know him better) that discipleship is all about? We will continue to note that all three persons of the Godhead are actively involved every time we ask. We ask of the Father, through the mediation of the Son by the power of the Holy Spirit. How can we feel short of help? What follows now on the power-points are some scriptural encouragements for your engagement in effectual asking.

1. Knowing Jesus as personal Lord and Savior
“Believe me when I say that I am in the Father, and the Father is in me … I tell you the truth, anyone who has faith in me will do what I have been doing … And I will do whatever you ask in my name.” (John14:11-13) The invitation to ask and the promise to respond is made especially to those who put their faith in Jesus. We are confident in our asking, because our confidence is in Jesus Christ. Because we have acknowledged Jesus as our Savior, as the one who bore the penalty of our sins, then we who were once separated from God and incommunicado, can now draw near and ask, not as strangers, but as sons and daughters of His Father, because as an earlier verse in John’s gospel says, “all who received Him, to those who believed in His name, He gave the right to become children of God.” (John 1:12) Knowing Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior conditions our asking.

2. Knowing God’s acceptance
“… so that you may know that you have eternal life. This is the confidence we have in approaching God … that if we ask” (1John 5:13). We have been forgiven and cleansed by the blood of Christ, which gives assurance about our acceptance and therefore our access and our asking. Our asking is accepted because we have been made acceptable to the Father through Christ. “We know that we are children of God” (1John 5:19). Where there is acceptance there is assurance. Where there is assurance there is access. Where there is access, there is asking. Knowing we are accepted and acceptable conditions our asking.

3. Confessing sin
We have seen that “iniquity in my heart” (Psalm 66:18) is a barrier to asking, thus choosing to live a life that keeps short accounts with God makes for effective asking. We have just seen that James 5:16 is explicit that the asking of a “righteous” man is effectual. The debris of unconfessed sin blocks the spiritual arteries, and silences asking. It is the confession of sin that restarts asking by first asking for forgiveness. Confession conditions our asking.

4. Humility
Asking, that is a true confession of need, requires humility. If people will “humble themselves” then God says that He “will forgive their sins” (2 Chronicles 7:14). “But the tax collector stood at a distance. He would not even look up to heaven, but beat his breast and said, ‘God have mercy on me a sinner … this man went home justified.” (Luke18:13-14) The pride of the Pharisee at prayer, and the prideful asking of Herod before Jesus, are met with silence. “Stubborn pride” encounters heaven that is “like iron” (Leviticus 26:19). Asking will not be answered. G. Campbell Morgan used to say that “all God’s thrones are reached by going downstairs.” “He hears the cry of the humble” (Psalm 10:17). Humility asks and pride does not. Humility conditions our asking.

5. Believing
“Whatever you ask for, believe that you have received it” (Mark 11:24). “If you believe you will receive whatever you ask for” (Matthew 21:22). “He who believes in Me, the works that I do shall he do also … Whatever you ask in My name, that will I do” (John 14:12-14). “When he asks, he must believe and not doubt, because he who doubts is like a wave of the sea, blown and tossed by the wind. That man should not think he will receive anything from the Lord.” (James 1:6) William Carey, the father of modern mission, said: “Believing prayer lies at the root of all personal godliness.” Believing conditions our asking.

6. Faith
“According to your faith be it unto you … If you have faith as small as a mustard seed … if you have faith and do not doubt … Have faith in God … whatever you ask … Increase our faith …” (Matthew 9:29; 17:20; 21:21; Mark 11:22; Luke 17:5) Our personal faith is not in our asking, but in the one we ask. Our discipleship is about our fitness to ask and the faith to ask. “The best thing in prayer is faith!” commented Luther. At the end of the day, it is our asking that is perhaps the clearest way that our faith expresses itself. Forsyth put it like this: “Petition is the form your faith takes … Faith is what turns need into request. It is what moves your need to need God.” Little faith, little asking. We may be tempted to stand in fear before our needs, but faith gathers those needs from the basement of helplessness, and instead of allowing them to fester and decompose the soul, presents them to God in our asking about them all. “Let us draw near to God … in full assurance of faith” (Hebrews 10:22). Fear is the antithesis of faith and will silence asking. Faith conditions our asking.

7. Abiding in Him
“I am the vine, you are the branches … If you abide in me … ask what you wish” (John 15:5-7) This proves that asking is all about relationship. The invitation to ask is not unconditional here. It is not about anything you want, any way you want it, any time that works for you. It is conditionally premised. Asking is the fruit of abiding, the manifestation of our union with Christ. Abiding results in asking. We ask of those we are intimate with. Does this not make sense of your experience? Is it not when spiritual intimacy with the Lord wanes that asking evaporates? Where abiding is shallow, so is asking. At the moment we think our asking is our invitation to God to move, to get involved, to do what we want or need, we find that it is His invitation to us to a deeper, more faithful, pleasing, expectant, intimate, abiding relationship with Him. It is His invitation to be changed into His likeness, before it is about our need for our circumstances or needs to do the changing. The changes effected by our asking will always be secondary to the changes effected in us. Abiding conditions our asking.

8. Forgiving
“And when you stand, if you hold anything against anyone, forgive him …” (Mark 11:25) Why were they standing? That was the posture for prayer. Jesus is speaking directly about what needs to be taken care of before we ask about anything. Usually, we find this first requires us to ask forgiveness for ourselves, given the delay in forgiving others, or for the contrary attitudes and feelings that have hardened in our hearts. Forgiving conditions our asking.

9. Knowing He hears
“And if we know that He hears us, whatever we ask, we know that we have what we asked of Him.” (1John 5:15) We have acknowledged that sometimes there are reasons that God refuses to listen, but that does not mean he does not or cannot hear. Questioning His hearing is often a cover for questioning ourselves. When we are waiting for an answer, God’s silence is not an inability to hear. John’s argument is simple and clear. To know He hears is to know that everything consequent to our asking is in His hands, because it is in His ears. If we are not sure that He hears, then everything is unsettled and uncertain. Knowing that God hears conditions our asking.

10. Knowing His Word
“Preserve my life according to your Word … Strengthen me according to your Word … May your unfailing love come to me according to your promise … Be gracious to me according to your promise … Direct my footsteps according to your Word … May my cry come before you O Lord; give me understanding according to your Word” (Psalm 119: 25, 28, 41, 58, 133, 169) “If …my words remain in you, ask whatever you wish …” (John 15:7) The psalmists’ asking is totally Word-based. The precepts, the promises, the proclamations and the prayers of the Word are the premise for all asking. The Word tutors our asking, giving us the matters to ask for, and giving us the very words to use. Knowing His Word conditions our asking.

11. Waiting and listening
“Those who wait on the Lord will renew their strength.” (Isa. 40:31) This is perhaps the best-known verse about waiting but it is addressed to people who are tempted to give up asking and waiting for an answer. “My cause is disregarded by God.” (40:27) The idea here is of someone bringing their case to be heard but having it continually dismissed. It is the end of their asking. But then God asks them over twenty questions. In a strange way, these divine questions are God’s answer. He is not asking in order to add to their despair, but as the God of hope, He asks them to think about what He has done until they recover their lost faith in who He is. Just like us, when we need our answer now, all these people can see are the problems that demand an answer, but as they wait, they are told to see something else.See, the sovereign Lord comes in power … See, His reward is with Him … Lift your eyes and look to the heavens” (40:10, 26). All the people can hear are the sounds of war and the cries of helplessness, but they are told to listen to something else: “A voice of one calling … the glory of the Lord will be revealed … Say to the towns of Judah, ‘Here is your God’ … Have you not heard? The Lord is the everlasting God” (40: 3-4, 9, 21, 28). 40 days helps establish a waiting posture.

By the way, was not Jesus’ last word to the disciples before His ascension, “Wait…” (Acts 1:4)? And was not that waiting a time of asking? “They all joined together constantly in asking” (1:14). Waiting on the God of hope and listening to what He says to us while we are waiting will strengthen us to keep on asking. “I wait for God my Savior; my God will hear me.” (Micah 7:7) Waiting and listening conditions our asking.

12. Asking in Jesus’ Name
Get a copy of my booklet for this time (downstairs) but suffice it to say by way of summary that asking in Jesus’ name is an expression of assurance. We have been given His name so we are accepted by Him. We have been appointed as his name-bearing representative to ask the Father. We have been fully authorized by that name and given all the rights of access and claim that he has. Again, no wonder we can be bold and expectant. Asking in Jesus’ Name conditions our asking.

13. Not depending on our own understanding
To ask is to acknowledge that we do not have it all together. Asking ensures that we do not “lean on our own understanding” (Proverbs 3:5) It is precisely our lack of understanding that should provoke us to ask: “If any of you lacks wisdom, he should ask God, who gives generously…” (James 1:5) As long as we are asking we are not claiming that we have the measure of everything. By spending 40 days post-resurrection opening the disciples’ minds to “understand the scriptures” (Luke 24:45) Jesus laid the foundation for their asking. Our asking is “in the Spirit so whenever we ask, we are engaging the “Spirit of wisdom and understanding” (Isaiah 11:2; Ephesians 1:17) Asking for understanding was one of Paul’s major concerns: “We have not stopped praying and asking God to fill you with the knowledge of his will through spiritual wisdom and understanding … I pray … so that you will have a full understanding of everything good” (Colossians 1:9; Philemon v6). Daniel’s experience illustrates all the moving parts. It was because he “understood from the scriptures” that he was moved to “plead with Him in prayer and petition”. The outcome was the understanding that he needed: “I have come to give you insight and understanding.” (9:2-3, 23) Not leaning on our own understanding conditions our asking.

14. Fasting
“When you pray … When you fast” (Matthew 6:5, 16). Jesus teaches asking and fasting as related subjects. Scripture describes them as a combined action, both in the Old Testament (Ezra 8:23) and in the New, as practiced by the early church (Acts 14:23). In scripture, turning from food was always representative of turning to the Lord, and asking of Him. Asking with fasting is one of God’s means to encourage us:
• To be heavenward: “He answers him from His holy heaven” (Psalm 20:6). There is such a focus and consciousness of heavenly presence and purposes, and a deliverance from earthly distractions (Nehemiah 9:6). The asking-fast called in Joel (1:14; 2:15) brought a revelation of God on His “holy hill” (3:17) and what was going to take place in the heavens (2:29-30).
• To be holy: “They stood and confessed their sins” (Nehemiah 9:1-3). The sense of heavenly presence brings conviction of sin: “Our sins are higher than our heads and our guilt has reached to the heavens” (Ezra 9:6). As a result of a “chosen” asking-fast “your righteousness will go before you” (Isaiah 58:8).
• To be humbled: “I humbled my soul by fasting” (Psalm 69:10). “I proclaimed a fast ... that we might humble ourselves before our God” (Ezra 8:21). It is the clothing of humility that acknowledges that there is no other ground for sustenance other than asking for intimacy with God.
• To be heard: “So we fasted and petitioned our God about this, and He answered our prayer” (Ezra 8:23). “They declared a fast … He had compassion and did not bring upon them the destruction He had threatened” (Jonah 3:5-10). “Declare a holy fast … Let them say ‘Spare your people’ … The Lord will reply to them” (Joel 2:17-19). Empty barrels ring loudest!
• To hear: Daniel pleads with God: “In prayer and petition, in fasting” (9:3). He asks to be heard: “Hear the petitions of your servant … Give ear O God … O Lord listen” (9:17-19). But while he was asking he heard an answer. “As soon as you began to ask an answer was given, which I have come to tell you …” (9:23). Kierkegaard articulated the need here: “The true relation of prayer is not when God hears what is prayed for, but when the person praying continues to pray until he is the one who hears, who hears what God wills.” Asking with fasting is not just in order to be heard by God, but in order to hear what God is saying.
• To be helped: The loss of natural energy through fasting is a picture of the desperate need for the Lord’s help to supply what is needed, as human resource has failed. In response to asking-fasting God said, “You will call and I will answer” (Isaiah 58:9) and this is affirmed by the avalanche of active verbs that describe his response: “I am sending … I will drive out … I will repay … I will pour out … I will gather … your light will break forth … the Lord will guide … He will satisfy … you will be like … you will be called … you will find … I will cause you to” (Joel 2-3, Isaiah 58)
• To be healed: In some circumstances there seems to be a necessary relationship between the bodily discipline of fasting and the physical experience of healing, as well as the spiritual experience of deliverance. “Your healing will quickly appear … This kind only comes out with prayer and fasting” (isaiah 58:8; Mark 9:29) Fasting conditions our asking.

15. Desiring
“May He give you the desire of your heart … May the Lord grant all your requests” (Psalm 20:4-5). “Whatsoever things you desire, when you ask …” (Mark 11:24). “My heart’s desire and prayer to God …” (Romans 10:1) There is a relationship between desire and asking, affirmed by David, Paul and Jesus Himself. Notice that in every case, the expression of asking is preceded by the experience of desire. All the logistics of asking (when we ask, why we ask, what we ask for) are evidence of the longings of the heart, most particularly, the desire for God. Catherine of Siena taught that effective asking was “not attained by the use of many words but through the affection of desire.” Augustine understood that “God wishes our desire to be exercised in prayer.” So if we are not asking much for spiritual things, then it is evidence that we do not desire much. Murray confirmed this: “Desire is the soul of prayer, and the cause of insufficient and unsuccessful prayer is very much to be found in the lack or feebleness of desire.” Desire conditions our asking.

16. Seeking and submitting to His will
“If we ask anything according to His will He hears us.” (1John 5:13) This is best exemplified by Jesus in Gethsemane, at the moment of His greatest need to have God answer what He asked for: the cup of judgment to be taken from Him. He was not answered according to His need but according to God’s will. How effective was this? The outcome was not that He was personally saved from the cup of judgment but the whole world would be offered the taste of the cup of His blessing. Seeking and submitting are two constituents within a single response. “Your will be done” (Matthew 6:10) “He listens to the godly man who does His will.” (John 9:31) Seeking and submitting to his will conditions our asking.

17. Loving the believers
“If our hearts do not condemn us we have confidence before God and receive from Him anything we ask because we do His commands … and this is His command ...to love one another as He commanded.” (1John 3:21-23) John’s memory of Jesus’ last words was clear. Jesus, after giving the disciples the new command, that they love one another (John 13:34), goes on to talk about asking in His name. Not to live with love for other believers runs interference with our asking. Love is an effective incentive to ask with others and for others Is the size of a prayer meeting the true indicator of the level of love in the community? Loving the believers conditions our asking.

18. Unity in agreement:
In John 17 Jesus asks His Father “by the power of Your name – the name You gave Me – so that they may be one as we are one.” (17:11) It is the unity of the Father and Son, of whom we ask, that calls for the unity of those who ask of them. “If two of you on earth agree for anything that you ask for, it will be done for you by My Father in heaven.” (Matthew 18:19-20) We are asking together of the Father, in the unity of sons and daughters, consequently now brothers and sisters, agreed about each other’s request but also about who the Father is. It is interesting to note that the two or three who are gathered are not praying for unity. The key to that experience of unity was the asking. Paul knew the power of this united agreement of brothers: “I urge you, brothers … to join me in my struggle by praying to God for me” (Romans15:30). Agreement and unity condition our asking.

19. Boldness
“We may approach God with freedom and confidence” (Ephesians 3:12). “And this is the confidence that we have in Him, that if we ask …” (1 John 5:14-15). “Having therefore boldness to enter the holiest by the blood of Jesus” (Hebrews 10:19). Charles Wesley understood it: “Bold I approach the eternal throne!” The Greek word used for ‘bold’, ‘parrhesia’, was the word used to describe how Jesus talked about His Father (John 16:25) and how He walked about the country (John 11:54), so much so that on one occasion Peter tried to “rebuke” Him for it and tone Him down (Mark 8:32). Not surprisingly, it is the word that describes the early church in its preaching (Acts 2:29; 13;46) and in its praying (1 John 5:14). Is it surprising that this was something they asked for (Acts 4:29) and received (Acts 4:31)? The word describes confident asking of God that originally had political usage, describing the freedom of speech of those who were citizens and did not need to fear when they shared their convictions. It is the word used to describe how we approach God when we ask (Hebrews 4:16, 10.19; 1 John 5:14) When we ask we are never speaking out of turn so we need not be self conscious in His presence, but bold. The scepter has been extended to us in the throne room, so we can come with a firm tread, not mistaking humility for servility (Esther 5:2).
John Newton wrote:
My soul, ask what thou wilt
Thou canst not be too bold
Since His own blood for thee he spilt
What else can he withhold?

Boldness conditions our asking.

20. Knowing God as our Friend
Jesus’ parable of the ‘Friend at Midnight’ tells us that God’s fatherhood is a reason for our boldness (Luke 11: 2-13) But He speaks of God’s friendship as well. “Suppose one of you has a friend, and he goes to him at midnight ...” For anyone who thinks that a father has to give to his asking child because that is what he is obliged to do, Jesus affirms that our Father is also our Friend, assuring us that His response is not reluctantly paternalistic but freely and kindly altruistic. Friendship gives a boldness to asking, with its assurance of being loved and cared for, and with its expectation of a responsiveness that does not require argument and persuasion. Knowing God as Friend conditions our asking.

21. Expectation
“Ask and it shall be given you.” (Matthew 7:7) It is Jesus’ teaching and His invitation to ask that is the foundation for our expectation. Again and again, He invites His followers to ask with the expectation that what they lack they will receive, that what is lost to them they will find, that what is closed to them will be opened. This same expectation is taught by Paul. “To Him who is able to do immeasurably more than all we ask or imagine” (Ephesians 3:20). Melanchthon wrote about Martin Luther that he insisted on the promises in the Psalms “as if he was sure his petitions would be granted.” Is that how we ask? According to E.M.Bounds: “The reason why we obtain no more … is because we expect no more.” Our expectation conditions our asking.

22. Experience of the Holy Spirit:
“According to His power that is at work within us …” (Ephesians 3:20) All asking is both ‘in’ and ‘with’ the Holy Spirit, thus it follows that in order to ask effectively, we need the work of the Holy Spirit in our lives. Without that reception, asking will be just a recitation. Our asking cannot be a spiritual work unless it is energized by the Holy Spirit. “Would we pray efficiently and mightily?” asks E.M.Bounds. “Then the Holy Spirit must work in us efficiently and mightily… Would you pray with mighty results? Seek the mighty workings of the Holy Spirit in your own spirit.” The measure we receive will be evident in the manner in which we then ask. The relationship between the Holy Spirit and prayer is inviolable. We ask for the Spirit and then we ask in the Spirit. So when it comes to asking “according to His power” let us ask for the Holy Spirit. When it comes to praying in the Holy Spirit, let the Spirit ask through us. Any which way … ASK! Our experience of the Holy Spirit conditions our asking.

23. Pleasing him with uncondemned hearts:
“I will do the very thing you have asked because I am pleased with you” (Exodus 33:17); “If our hearts do not condemn us, we have confidence before God and receive from him anything we ask, because we obey his commands and do what pleases him” (1John 3:22). Where there is no condemnation, John says that our hearts will be “at rest in His presence.” Condemnation, like a dripping tap, erodes our sense of being qualified to ask. It sidelines us and we feel spiritually benched, excluded from the huddle that asks about life on the field of play. Its nagging accusation subverts assurance and therefore boldness. Freedom from condemnation is basic to our confidence in asking boldly and effectively. An uncondemned heart conditions our asking.

24. Importunity
“Ask and keep on asking … knock and the door will be opened … to show them that they should always pray and not give up…” (Matthew 7:7; Luke 18:1) According to Jesus, the only possible alternative to persistent asking would be to quit altogether, to “give up”. Jesus encouraged persistence in His teaching (Luke18) and in His practice (Luke 22). This is about asking that is consistent, insistent and persistent.

The willingness to see how far we can go in our pursuit of God’s will is vital, but it will feel uncomfortable, as it did for Abraham, who asked again and again for Sodom against ridiculous odds. This is the kind of asking that goes all the way. He says, “Now that I have been so bold as to speak …” (Genesis 18:27) Is this precocious, or presumptuous? It is not treated by God as such.

We are submissive in heart but not necessarily in tone. But it is our ignorance that persists in pursuing His knowledge about the matter; our continuing hopelessness that persists in pursuing His help; our continuing pains that persist in asking for His poultices of healing and deliverance. The persistence has its own rewards other than that which is sought after, as importunity purifies our own nature, provoking sanctifying changes in us that bring us to a place of preparedness where the answer is now possible. Persistence conditions our asking.

25. Unceasing
“Give him no rest” (Isaiah 61:2). “Pray without ceasing … Prayer was made without ceasing” (1Thessalonians 5:17; Acts12:5). The asking that is needed to be instant (Romans 12:12) may also have to be constant (Romans 1:9). Our persistence is serial – there is a time component. Our persistence needs to be unceasing. Forsyth called unceasing prayer “the bent of the soul.” The gap between our asking and God’s answering is more asking. This is neither filling time (as if life stops until we are answered on our terms) nor doing time (as if the waiting was an imposed limit on our freedom). The Greek word for asking (ektenes) that describes the early church’s praying, means extended, really stretched out. Asking is literally a stretch, in two senses: in that it requires extended time and effort, but also in that it seems to be beyond our capacities and capabilities, and a stretch for us to do. But this is the same word that is used to describe Jesus’ asking in Gethsemane (Luke 22:44). He was stretched to the limit of comprehensible tautness of spirit and intensity of emotion. No wonder we need the Holy Spirit as our helper when we ask, not only to get us to the place of asking but also to help us to stay there. Unceasing asking is also necessary for those situations in which we can no longer continue to act, having engaged them at one time. Paul planted the church in Thessalonica but he could not stay there to grow it. Instead, he continued to nurture it by watering it with his unceasing asking “night and day asking exceedingly for you” (1Thessalonians 3:10) Incessant constancy conditions our asking.

26. Personal holiness
We cannot ask God for his name to be hallowed if there is no place for holiness in our lives. Asking (as in the Lord’s prayer) is a frisk test for discipleship. Asking fails “when the desire and effort for personal holiness fails.” There is a symbiotic relationship between asking and holiness. Not only does unholiness hinder and impede our asking but Wesley noted that the neglect of asking “is a … grand hindrance to holiness.” Pere la Combe, the Spiritual Director of Madame Guyon, was attributed with this maxim: “He who has a pure heart will never cease to pray, and he who will be constant in prayer shall know what it is to have a pure heart.” Personal holiness conditions our asking.

27. Being specific
“What do you want me to do for you?” (Luke 18:41) Our specific asking is what Jesus asks of us. Though his blindness was obvious to all, Jesus wanted the blind man to acknowledge his personal and particular need, and confess his desire for Jesus to answer Him. There is often an evasion, even a dishonesty, possibly a cover-up in our vague and generalized prayers. As the old saying goes, ‘We aim at nothing in particular and hit it every time!’ We confess sin in general but do not ask for forgiveness for anything in particular. We pray for everyone in general but no one by name and need. We ask God to bless the world but do not engage the nations. Hedging and fudging are what we do best. This may be an indication that we are not as zealous for God’s work, or as desperate for ourselves and others as we should be. “It is most proper in prayer, to aim at great distinctness of supplication.” Spurgeon went on to talk about all the prayers that are uttered that contain “a great deal of very excellent doctrinal and experimental matter uttered, but little real petitioning, and that little in a nebulous kind of state, chaotic and unformed. But it seems to me that prayer should be distinct, the asking for something definitely and distinctly because the mind has realized its distinct need of such a thing, and therefore must plead for it. It is well not to beat round the bush in prayer, but to come directly to the point.” If you are hungry you will ask specifically for food! Nothing else will do. Our asking must be definite and explicit. Spurgeon always emphasized this: “We greatly need to be more definite in our supplications than we usually are. We pray for everything in such a way that we practically pray for nothing. It is good to know what we want”. Asking brings the facts as they are, fearful or challenging as they are, into the presence of God. When you ask in broad brush strokes, it is no wonder that you are skeptical about the answers some people get that are the finest of bristles: the exact answer needed, at the exact time. One reason that specific asking begins to decline is simply because busyness has overtaken our time to meditate, to reflect, to consider, to inquire about what is going on, and specifically needs to be asked about. A sound-byte world reduces our asking to the same shallowness. If we are ignorant of God’s will, if we are distanced from God’s heart, it is unlikely that we will be specific, especially about what God himself specifically cares about. We can and should ask ‘straight-out’ and ‘allout’. If our assurance about asking is wavering, we will be less sure and less direct in our asking, and because there will be a lack of boldness, assurance will give way to ambiguity and uncertainty. According to John Rice, “Where there is no definiteness in prayer … there is no burden, no urgency, no heart desire.” Spurgeon taught against what he called “indistinct generalizing prayer” which “fails for lack of precision. It is as if a regiment of soldiers should all fire off their guns anywhere. Possibly some-body would be killed, but the majority of the enemy would be missed.” Nor is Murray: “Our prayers must be a distinct expression of definite need, not a vague appeal to his mercy or an in-definite cry for his blessing.” Being specific conditions our asking.

Hopefully it is clear that every conditioning factor mentioned, at the end of the day, conditions the specificity of our asking and its effectiveness. You could do no worse than take each of the above points and begin by making them your asking-list. Ask for each of these characteristics to be distinctive in your asking.