Jesus said, When you pray, go into your room, close the door and pray to your Father who is unseen… and do not keep on babbling like pagans, for they think they will be heard for their many words… Matthew 6:6-7
The novelist E M
Forster (no friend of the church) wrote of “poor little talkative Christianity”.
No doubt he had a point. We Christians (not least ministers and preachers like
me) can be guilty of “going on a bit”, and in Forster’s time (he lived from 1879
to 1970) that was even
more the case: a sermon lasting merely an hour might well be considered short.
I think Jesus would
have had some sympathy with Forster. Teaching about prayer (Matthew 6) he told
his followers not to copy the “pagans” who (as the NIV puts it), “babble”. N T
Wright translates verse 7: “When you pray, don’t pile up a jumbled heap of
words. That’s what the Gentiles do”.
Perhaps Jesus had in
mind the kind of incident we read about in 1 Kings 18, where the prophet Elijah
and the false prophets of Baal confronted one another on Mount Carmel. Which of
them could succeed in getting their God to ignite a sacrifice on the altar? The
prophets of Baal “called on the name of Baal from morning till noon. ‘Baal,
answer us!’ they shouted”. They “danced around the altar” and went on to “slash
themselves with swords and spears”, and all to no avail. That’s easy for us to
read; but when we stop and think about it, we realise that it was, well, quite
some prayer meeting!
Jesus wants none of
such grandstanding: “When you pray, go into your room, close the door, and pray
to your Father, who is unseen” (Matthew 6:6). Anything that smacks of display
suggests a desire to be noticed and admired by others, and is to be avoided by
Jesus’ followers.
That doesn’t mean, of
course, that all our praying should be done in solitude, that there is no place
at all for public prayer in a service of worship, or of corporate prayer in a
small group – to think that would be to interpret Jesus’ words in an overly
literal way. But it does mean that as Christians we should be concerned to
maintain standards of dignity and respect; perhaps Paul captures it best in
rebuking the unruly Christians of Corinth: “Everything should be done in a
fitting and orderly way” (1 Corinthians 14:40). (And if that sounds a bit
old-fashioned, well, so be it.)
Nor does it mean that
there are never times and places for lengthy prayer. Jesus himself fasted and
prayed for 40 days at the start of his ministry, and on occasion went out to a
lonely place, presumably because he wanted a lengthy, uninterrupted time to himself.
And for us there may be
occasions when we pray (and possibly also fast; why not, if that’s how the Spirit
moves us?) for extended periods. But if - like me as a young Christian many
years ago - you get into the subconscious habit of feeling you must rack up so
many minutes of prayer every day, and, even worse, that God might be cross if
you fail to do so - if you get into that frame of mind, well, it’s a habit that
seriously needs to be broken!
Do we ever pause to
notice how vanishingly small (not to mention how unemotional) the Lord’s
Prayer is? And that is his gift to the church! Let there be long and even
agonized prayers, by all means, as long as they are sincere and from the heart;
but in the routine circumstances of life there is a simple ordinariness
about prayer which we should value and treasure; it can even be refreshing.
I have sometimes
wondered what we would have seen if we had happened upon Jesus one day on one
of his solitary prayer walks. Would he have been on his knees? Hands-together-eyes-closed?
Eyes lifted to heaven? Would his voice be raised? Would he simply be sitting
somewhere, to all appearances just alone with his thoughts? We don’t know, of
course, because we aren’t told – which alone suggests that there are no rules.
But what we can be sure
of is that when a man or woman is alone with their God, that is sacred ground
indeed, and woe betide anyone who sees fit to criticize or find fault with their
manner of praying.
And likewise in public
worship. Should it be “liturgical”, with set prayers read from a book? Why not?
Better that, truly meant, than the long, rambling, shapeless prayers to which
some of us perhaps have become addicted. Should it be more “charismatic”, more “extempore”
or “ad lib”? Again, why not? - as long as it is truly from the heart, and not
just wearisome repetition pretending to be the leading of the Spirit.
The only “rule”, I
would suggest, when it comes to any form of public prayer, is that, however brief,
it should always be an event, a holy moment: a moment when the
congregation is aware of being drawn into the presence of God – none of this “Let’s
just have a quick prayer” stuff, please, as a kind of filler!
There is, of course, so
much more one could say on the basic and mysterious topic of prayer. But, going
back to E M Forster… we live in a world awash with words: books, magazines,
papers, radio, television, online, social media, and so on.
Whatever else you do,
Christian, don’t add unnecessarily to them!
Thank you, Father,
for the brief, simple prayer Jesus gave his disciples, and for the wonderful
variety in the example he set for them. Please help me, by your Holy Spirit,
that my prayer-life may be a refreshment to me and a blessing to others, and
never just a wearisome, dutiful burden. Amen.
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