Sermon Tone Analysis

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Devoted to Prayer
* *
*January 13, 2008*
*Romans 12:12*
 
/“. . .
rejoicing in hope, persevering in tribulation, devoted to prayer . .
.”/
My simple and humanly impossible goal this morning in this message is that you would all be devoted to prayer in 2008.
It is the desire of my heart that Good Shepherd Community Church would be a house of prayer, that each one of us including myself would think of 2008 as a year of prayer.
Our mantra could be, “Prayer is great in 2008.”
Would you be willing to help me achieve this vision – to be a people of prayer?
This is my goal because this is what the Bible calls us to be.
My text is Romans 12:12 which is part of a longer chain of exhortations.
It says we are to be "rejoicing in hope, persevering in tribulation, devoted to prayer."
Your version might say, "constant in prayer" or "faithful in prayer."
Those all get at aspects of the word.
"Devoted" is a good translation.
The word is used in Mark 3:9 where it says, "[Jesus] told his disciples to have a boat ready for him because of the crowd, lest they crush him."
A boat was to be set apart - devoted - for the purpose of taking Jesus away in case the crowd became threatening.
"Devoted" - dedicated for a task, appointed for it.
Now, boats just sit there.
But people are not dedicated that way.
When the word is applied to a person it means devoted or dedicated in the sense not only of designation and appointment but of action in the appointed task, and pressing on in it.
So for example in Romans 13:6 Paul talks about the role of government like this/: "You also pay taxes, for rulers are servants of God, devoting themselves to this very thing."
/That is, they are not only designated by God for a task, but are giving themselves to it.
What's remarkable about this word is that five of the ten New Testament uses apply to prayer.
Listen, besides Romans 12:12 there are:
Acts 1:14 (after the ascension of Jesus while the disciples were waiting in Jerusalem for the outpouring of the Spirit), /"These all with one mind were continually devoting themselves to prayer, along with the women, and Mary the mother of Jesus, and with His brothers."/
Acts 2:42 (Of the early converts in Jerusalem), /"They were continually devoting themselves to the apostles' teaching and to fellowship, to the breaking of bread and to prayer."
/
Acts 6:4 (The apostles say), /"But we will devote ourselves to prayer and to the ministry of the word."
/
Colossians 4:2 (Paul says to all of us), /"Devote yourselves to prayer, keeping alert in it with an attitude of thanksgiving."
/
So we may say from the New Testament scriptures that the normal Christian life is a life devoted to prayer.
And so you should ask as you turn from 2007 to 2008, "Am I devoted to prayer?"
If your answer is no, would you be willing to become dedicated to increasing your prayer time?
It does not mean that prayer is all you do - any more than being devoted to a wife means all the husband does is hang out with his wife.
But his devotion to her affects everything in his life and causes him to give himself to her in many different ways.
So being devoted to prayer doesn't mean that all you do is pray (though Paul does say in another place, "pray without ceasing," 1 Thessalonians 5:17).
It means that there will be a pattern of praying that looks like devotion to prayer.
It won't be the same for everyone.
But it will be something significant.
Being devoted to prayer looks different from not being devoted to prayer.
And God knows the difference.
He will call us to account: have we been devoted to prayer?
Is there a pattern of praying in your life that can fairly be called "being devoted to prayer"?
I think most of us would agree on some kinds of praying that would not be called "being devoted to prayer."
Praying only as crises enter your life would not be a pattern of devotion to prayer.
Praying only at meal times is a pattern, but does it correspond to Paul exhorting the church to "be devoted to prayer"?
A short "Now I lay me down to sleep" prayer at the end of the day is probably not "being devoted to prayer."
Hit and miss "Help me, Lord" in the car as you need a parking place is not "being devoted to prayer."
All those are good.
But I think we would agree that Paul expects something more and different from followers of Christ when he says, "Be devoted to prayer."
Let us not forget in all of this that the cross of Christ - his death in the place of sinners - is the foundation of all prayer.
There would be no acceptable answer to WHY or HOW we pray if Christ had not died in our place.
That's why we pray "in Jesus name."
As I have weighed the obstacles to prayer that I could address, some of them fall under the question, WHY pray?
And some of them fall under the question HOW pray.
I want to focus this morning on the HOW.
Not that the question WHY is unimportant, but it seems to me that we can have all our theological answers in place as to why pray and still be very negligent and careless in the life of prayer.
So I will give a short answer to the question WHY, and then focus on practical HOW questions that I pray will stir you up to venture new levels of "being devoted to prayer" in 2008.
I start with three brief answers to WHY we should be devoted to prayer.
1.
The Bible tells us to pray and we should do what God says.
This text, along with many other says, "Be devoted to prayer."
If we are not we are disobedient to the scriptures.
That is foolish and dangerous.
If prayer doesn't come easy for you, consider yourself normally fallen and sinful with the rest of us.
Then fight.
Preach to yourself.
Don't let your sins and weaknesses and worldly inclinations rule you.
God says, "Be devoted to prayer."
Fight for this.
2. The needs in your own life, and in your family, and in this church and other churches, and in the cause of world missions, and in our culture at large are huge and desperate.
In many cases heaven and hell hang in the balance, faith or unbelief, life and death.
Remember Paul's grief and anguish for his perishing kinsmen in Romans 9:2, and remember that in Romans 10:1 he prays for them earnestly, /"Brothers, my heart's desire and prayer to God for them is that they may be saved."/
Salvation hangs in the balance when we pray.
You will not know what prayer is for until you know that life is war.
One of the great obstacles to praying is that life is just too routinely smooth for many of us.
The battlefront is way out there, but here in my tiny bubble of peace and contentment all is well.
O may God open our eyes to see and feel the needs around us and the great potential of prayer.
3. A third reason why we should pray is that God acts when we pray.
And God can do more in five seconds than we can do in five years.
O how I have learned this over the years.
What an amazing thing to bow my head repeatedly and plead with God during sermon preparation, or during some counseling crisis, or some witnessing conversation, or some planning meeting, and to have breakthrough after breakthrough which did not come until I prayed.
What an important lesson to feel fretful and eager to get to work immediately because I have so much to do I don't know how I can get it all done, but to force myself to be biblical and reasonable and take time to pray before I work, and while in prayer, to have ideas tumble to my mind for how to handle a problem, or shape a message, or deal with a crisis, or solve a theological problem - and so to save myself hours and hours of work and the frustration of beating my head against the wall trying to figure out what came in five seconds of illumination!
I don't mean that God spares us hard work.
I mean prayer can make your work 5,000 times more fruitful than you can make it alone.
There are more, but these are three answers to WHY pray: 1) God commands us to pray; 2) the needs are great, and eternal things are at stake; 3) God acts when we pray and often does more in seconds than we could do in hours or weeks or sometimes years.
There are many other questions to be answered about prayer I can't deal with here.
That's why there are books titled “A Hunger for God: Desiring God through Prayer and Fasting” and “A Life of Prayer”, and “With Jesus in the School of Prayer” and “When God’s People Pray” (which is being offered now in a women’s Bible study).
But for the rest of our time this morning I want to talk about the HOW of prayer.
I want to try to inspire you with practical, Biblical possibilities that you may have never considered, or perhaps tried and then failed to persevere - failed to "be devoted to prayer."
This is my effort to sketch what it means to be devoted to prayer without a narrow my-way-or-the-highway mentality.
We are all very different.
Our schedules are different.
Our families are different.
We are in different stages of life with different demands on our days.
We are at different levels of spiritual maturity, and no one matures over night.
What you may be doing in five years in your devotion to prayer may make you look back and wonder how you survived this season of leanness.
But all of us can move forward.
Paul loves to write to his churches and say, /"You are doing well, but do so more and more"/ (Philippians 1:9; Thessalonians 4:1, 10).
And if there is any place where the "do so more and more" applies, it is in our devotion to prayer.
I will put these practical suggestions in five pairs each beginning with a different letter that together spell "F A D E S." There is no significance to the word "fades."
That's just what they happened to spell.
But if you wanted to force it, you could say without these pairs, devotion to prayer "fades."
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