THE SECOND PART: A BIRD’S-EYE VIEW OF THE NEW TESTAMENT
The Gospel according to Luke
Message Four—The Man-Savior’s Teaching on Prayer
Scripture Reading: Luke 5:16; 6:12; 9:28-29; 11:1-13; 18:1-17, 25-27; 19:46; 22:31-32, 39-41
I. The Man-Savior was a man of prayer, who taught His disciples concerning prayer for the church as the Father’s house to be a house of prayer; when the disciples saw the Lord praying, they asked Him to teach them to pray—Luke 3:21-22; 5:16; 6:12; 9:16, 23-24, 28-29; 22:31-32, 39-41, 44; 23:34, 46-47; Psa. 102:7; 109:4; Luke 19:46; cf. 2:49; 11:1: (2008 ST, msg. 9)
A. To pray is to realize that we are nothing and can do nothing; prayer is the real denial and repudiating of our self for the enjoyment of Christ as our jubilee—Col. 4:2; Gal. 2:20; Phil. 3:3; 4:6-7, 11-13. (2008 ST, msg. 9)
B. Prayer means that we pray ourselves into God; to pray ourselves into God is to love Him by setting our entire being absolutely on Him according to Mary’s pattern of sitting at the Lord’s feet and listening to His word—Luke 10:38-42. (2008 ST, msg. 9)
C. If we pray according to the Lord’s instructions in Luke 11:2-4, the result will be that we pray ourselves into God—6:37; Matt. 6:12-15: (2008 ST, msg. 9)
1. Often in our experience we are distracted from God; we do not stay in God—we do not remain in Him; this is why we need to pray ourselves into God. (2008 ST, msg. 9)
2. Because we are easily distracted from God, we should spend time every morning with Him, praying ourselves into Him—Psa. 5:3; Isa. 50:4. (2008 ST, msg. 9)
D. When we pray ourselves into God, we receive His riches (represented by the loaves, the fish, and the egg) into our being for our supply—Luke 11:5-13: (2008 ST, msg. 9)
1. Loaves represent the riches of the land; fish, the riches of the sea; and eggs, the riches of something both in the air and on the earth; the Holy Spirit is the totality of these riches. (2008 ST, msg. 9)
2. When we have prayed ourselves into God to remain in Him, we receive the Holy Spirit as our life supply (signified by the loaves, the fish, and the egg) so that we can feed ourselves and all those under our care—cf. 6:45. (2008 ST, msg. 9)
E. When we pray ourselves into God and receive His rich supply, which is the bountiful supply of the all-inclusive Spirit as the reality of the unsearchable riches of Christ, we are filled and occupied with this supply so that there is no room in us for demons, evil spirits, or darkness—11:14. (2008 ST, msg. 9)
F. Because we are filled with the riches of the divine supply, we become persons whose hearts are full of light, not having any dark part, and we can illumine others—vv. 33-36; Matt. 5:8. (2008 ST, msg. 9)
G. This light then brings us into Christ as the One who has passed through death and entered into resurrection so that we may experience Him as the real Jonah and the real Solomon—Luke 11:29-32. (2008 ST, msg. 9)
H. By praying ourselves into God to be filled with the riches of His supply, we experience the Man-Savior in His divine attributes and human virtues so that we may live a life that is the highest standard of morality in order to enjoy and proclaim Christ as the reality of the New Testament jubilee—Luke 4:18-22; 9:54-56; 19:10. (2008 ST, msg. 9)
II. The Man-Savior teaches us in a parable about persistent prayer—18:1-8: (2008 ST, msg. 9)
A. In this parable the righteous God is likened to an unrighteous judge, and the believers in Christ are likened to a widow—vv. 2-3, 6. (2008 ST, msg. 9)
B. Although God does not seem to do anything on behalf of His persecuted people, we must learn to be a bothering widow, one who prays to God persistently—Luke 18:3-5; Isa. 62:6. (2008 ST, msg. 9)
III. The Man-Savior’s story of the prayer of the Pharisee and the tax collector instructs us how to humble ourselves before God in prayer so that we may be justified by God and enter into the kingdom of God— vv. 9-17: (2008 ST, msg. 9)
A. The Pharisee actually “prayed…to himself ” (v. 11), and in his prayer to himself he was accusing others and arrogantly boasting to God; such arrogant boasting is an utterly detestable sin (vv. 9-12). (2008 ST, msg. 9)
B. The tax collector realized how his sinfulness offended God; hence, he asked God to be propitiated, to be appeased toward him by a propitiatory sacrifice for sins, that God might be merciful and gracious to him—vv. 13-14; Rom. 3:25: (2008 ST, msg. 9)
1. To repent and confess our sins are to humble ourselves; we need to humble ourselves to such an extent that we consider ourselves nobody and nothing— Psa. 51; Gal. 6:3; cf. 1 Cor. 8:1-3. (2008 ST, msg. 9)
2. After humbling ourselves, we need to become like a little child; a little child, not filled with and occupied by old concepts, can easily receive a new thought; hence, people need to be like little children and, with an unoccupied heart, receive the kingdom of God as a new thing—Luke 18:15-17; 10:21-22; Matt. 5:3. (2008 ST, msg. 9)
C. By praying ourselves into God and humbling ourselves before God in prayer, we are empowered in Christ to repudiate ourselves, renounce all our material possessions, and follow the Man-Savior—Luke 18:18-30: (2008 ST, msg. 9)
1. By our human life this is impossible, but in the New Testament age whenever we touch God and have fellowship with God, all our impossibilities become possibilities, and all our inabilities become abilities—vv. 25-27; Phil. 4:11-13; John 15:5. (2008 ST, msg. 9)
2. By praying ourselves into God, we are empowered to overcome the stupefying effect of the self-indulgent living in this age, and we live in the reality of the economy of God to become rich toward God for the kingdom of God—Luke 12:13-21; 2 Cor. 6:10. (2008 ST, msg. 9)