I’m just back from one of the richest, most inspiring weeks of my year – the “On Fire” conference, a time when charismatic catholic Anglicans gather for a programme of talks, workshops, and some truly wonderful prayer and worship. Year after year, I’m blown away by belonging to a community whose expectation is that God will turn up, will be tangibly active in their lives and their worship, and will respond readily and unmistakeably when they pray. Believe you me, it’s extremely exciting.
So,
this morning’s gospel feels, right now, very much like lived
experience.
“If
you abide in me, and my words abide in you, ask for whatever you wish
and it will be done for you...”
Whatever
you ask
Of
course, this doesn’t mean that we can expect the slot machine
experience – prayer in equals result out. You don’t need me to
tell you that simply adding “in Jesus’s name, Amen” to a string
of requests does not automatically guarantee success, even when the
things we ask seem to be wholly good…the sort of thing that surely
no loving God could ever deny us.
That’s
always a challenge to faith…for even as I speak I’m sure that
many of you are remembering with sadness the times when you prayed
urgently, with all that was in you, for something that just didn’t
happen…
The
cancer didn’t go into remission…
A
troubled marriage did not suddenly come right after all…
Warring
nations did not experience a sudden unexpected outbreak of peace
“Whatever
you ask in my name…”??
We
do struggle with this, don’t we?
Sometimes
hindsight makes sense of a prayer that’s been left apparently
unanswered…for sometimes the answer is “Wait”. Sometimes, we
have to acknowledge that the “No” that was so unwelcome actually
led to the best outcome in the end.
Sometimes
I think that we’re left in a situation where all we can do is to be
honest with God about our disappointment, our rage…
“You
are supposed to be almighty yet these awful things happen, despite
all our prayers and entreaties. What are you doing? Don’t you know
that this hurts!”
Thankfully
prayer is nothing to do with being polite to God, and everything to
do with coming as we are, with our wounds, our angers, our deepest
most painful needs.
We
set out with our best intentions…we try to believe that God will
answer our prayer…and then it seems as if nothing has changed.
Yet
we have this promise…ask
for whatever you wish…
Does
that mean nothing?
I
think that actually to pray in Jesus’s name is to embark on
something rather different.
Just
think for a minute. Names are powerful things.
We
talk about preserving someone’s good
name when we are intent on ensuring that people realise they are
people of worth and integrity.
When
we march and protest “Not in my name”, what we are doing is
saying that whatever is happening is not an expression of our
world-view, our way of being.
So…when
we are praying “in Jesus name” we are doing more than using it as
a sort of formulaic ending, a quality stamp for our own wishes.
Rather,
we are asking Jesus to validate our prayer – and if we are to do
that with any integrity, that means we must ensure that our prayers
are those we know he can be part of. In other words, when we pray in
Jesus’ name, we must set out to align our own wills with his, so
that the prayers that we
pray have the hallmark of his presence running right through them,
like the lettering on a stick of rock.
He
shows us how it’s done in the Lord’s Prayer, a model that covers
all that we could need for the world’s good:
“Thy
kingdom come…Thy will be done”
Thy
will…In Jesus’ name…
That’s
the secret. It’s not about what we want, about what we think
would be the best way to arrange things. We aren’t setting out to
change God’s mind, but rather, by spending time with him, to change
our own minds, our own outlooks...to abide with and in Jesus, his
words abiding deep within us so that we might discern God’s will,
and place that at the heart of our own prayers.
And
that process of abiding, of soaking up God’s presence, God’s
light, God’s love is, of course, transformational.
When
we pray, we become more Christ-like…we enter into a benevolent
circle so that as we pray in Jesus name we become more able to see
what Jesus would do…and to work with him to achieve this.
We
pray, God works and to him be the glory. In Jesus’ name. Amen.
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