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Pray With Purpose, Part 2

January 7, 2001 • Pastor Star R. Scott

Hallelujah. Let's turn to Matthew Chapter 7. One of the great commentators said about this subject that it's the most written about in all Christendom and least practiced, and that's the subject of prayer. Aren't you glad that's not the case in our midst? A lot of books written. You can find just book after book written on the power of prayer and the need of prayer and the privilege of prayer, the purpose of prayer, all of these different books by great men that have been practitioners themselves of this great privilege. Yet, so much of Christendom really don't avail themselves of the privilege of coming boldly into the presence of a living, loving heavenly Father. Bold access having been provided us by the blood of Jesus and, yet, there just seems to always be something else to do in the lives of so many people. When we look at the subject, as we spend these next weeks going over this subject, we need to remind ourselves of the privilege and also the purpose of prayer. Why are we coming before Him? So much of modern day Christianity has made prayer a grab bag and made God the great genie or the Santa Claus, if you please. Some see Him as Santa Claus, that He just comes and delivers what He wills; and others as a genie that see God as someone who has to respond to their wishes. Of course, we know that the Scripture teaches that God isn't either of those, but He is a loving heavenly Father, and He knows the things that we have need of. Amen? That's exciting for us.

The disciples, then, in Chapter 6 of Matthew, when the Lord was with them and they were taken by His prayer life. As He would slip away in the evenings when they were grabbing a few extra hours of sleep and those last few little moments that they would rest, He would slip away and spend time in the presence of His Father. The Scripture says very clearly that He had meat to eat that most men didn't know anything about. It was to do the will of His Father that had sent Him. We don't know that there was any visible change in His outward appearance, as there was on the mount of transfiguration at that time that He was in the presence of God and the inner circle of disciples. Peter, James, and John saw Him transfigured before their very eyes. We don't know that there was any special glow that came from His face like there was from Moses when he was in the presence of God. It's very obvious that when He came back from those sessions, if you read the Scripture closely, that the disciples were taking note. Something was happening in His life...