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• Jesus’ opinion about prayer

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Jesus’ opinion about prayer

This article will be devoted to the examination of the significance of prayer to


Jesus Christ. How highly the Word of God esteems prayer is signified by the fact that it
calls us to "pray without ceasing" (I Thessalonians 5:17), to "be sober and watchful in
our prayers" (I Peter 4:7), to "[be] continuing steadfastly in prayer" (Romans 12:12),
to be "vigilant in it with thanksgiving" (Colossians 4:2) etc1.
However, despite all these references of the Word of God that point out the
significance of prayer, it is sometimes neglected or it is classified as an activity of lower
priority. This article aims, through the presentation of the example of Jesus Christ, to
make more evident the significance of prayer and at the same time to show that prayer
has to be one of the top priorities of our life.

1. Luke 5:15-16

Starting this survey of some of the records in which we find Jesus Christ praying,
we will go to Luke 5. In this record, as well as in those records that will follow, it is
important to pay special attention to the context, since this will enable us to see the
conditions under which Jesus Christ prayed and to receive valuable instruction. Thus,
starting from verses 12-13, we are told about the healing of a man with leprosy. With this
opportunity, verse 15 speaking generally tells us that though Jesus avoided the
advertisement of his miracles "the report went around concerning him all the more; and
great multitudes came together to hear, and to be healed of their infirmities" (Luke 5:15).
From this passage, we can conclude that Jesus Christ was very busy with all these
multitudes coming to him, and he was certainly much busier that many of us. Really,
under such conditions, how many of us would have taken time to pray? But let's see what
Jesus did:

1See also: I Corinthians 14:14-15, Ephesians 6:18, Philippians 4:6, Colossians 4:12, I Timothy
2:1, James 5:13, 16-18 not to mention the records of the gospels and the Old Testament.
Luke 5:16
"BUT HE WITHDREW HIMSELF into the wilderness and PRAYED"
(NIV-KJV)

When the word "but" occurs, it always contrasts what precedes it with what
follows it. In our case, what precedes is the description of a very busy Jesus Christ. What
follows it, tells us that despite the fact that he was very busy he withdraw himself into the
wilderness and prayed. Though this is a very important statement and shows the
significance that Jesus Christ gave to prayer, it does not carry all the beauty of the
corresponding passage of the Greek text. In the Greek text the tense that is used is the
imperfect that denotes that something was done repeatedly and consistently in the past in
contrast to the simple past tense used by the above translations, which assumes that
something was done in the past once in a specific time. Thus, the accurate translation of
verses 15 and 16 is:

Luke 5:15-16
"However, the report was going around concerning him all the more; and great multitudes
were coming together to hear and to be healed by him of their infirmities. But he
continued withdrawn himself and prayed."

Therefore, what verses 15 and 16 describe is not something that happened only
once in the life of Jesus Christ. Instead, what they tell us is that he ALWAYS was very
busy, with multitudes that were coming to him, BUT he also ALWAYS used to take time
to pray. In other words, prayer was a HABIT of Jesus Christ, something to which he gave
top priority even when he was very busy. In turn, this shows the importance of prayer.
This importance is so great that Jesus Christ, the Son of God, used to allocate special
parts of his time to it and this happened even when he was busy in other godly activities.
Moreover, it indicates that whether we will pray or not is not a matter of time but a
matter of priorities. Jesus Christ had time to pray because HE DECIDED to make time
to it. All of us in one way or another allocate our time to various activities. The question
therefore is not whether we have time or not, for the day has the same time for all of us,
as it also had for Jesus i.e. 24 hours. What has to be asked is what priority does prayer
have in our daily time schedule? Is prayer one of our top priorities as it was for Jesus or is
it something that we decide to do after we are done with other activities such as work,
school, gardening, TV viewing, sleep etc.? Jesus' example as well as all the records of the
Word of God that refer to prayer beseech us to make prayer A TOP PRIORITY OF OUR
LIVES.
Thus, instead of first allocating the time for all other activities and then, if some
time remains, to devote it to prayer, it is better to FIRST set a time to pray and then
organise your time for other activities.

2. Mark 1:35

Another very instructive record where we see Jesus Christ praying is given in
Mark 1:35. Again, it is very important to have a look at the context of the record. Thus,
starting from verse 21, we are told that Jesus taught in the synagogue of Capernaum
where he also cast out a devil spirit (verses 23-27). As a result, "immediately his fame
spread throughout all the region around Galilee" (verse 28). After he came out of the
synagogue, he went to the house of Simon and Andrew where he healed Simon's mother
in law (verses 30-31). Finally:

Mark 1:32-34
"At evening, when the sun had set, they brought to him all who were sick and those who
were demon-possessed, and the whole city was gathered together at the door. And he
healed many who were sick with various diseases, and cast out many demons; and he did
not allow the demons to speak, because they knew him."
(NKJV-KJV)

As in the previous record so here we have the description of another very busy day
of Jesus. Moreover, since he was going to be in Galilee for the next day as well, and
since his fame had spread throughout all this region, one would expect that the next day
was going to be an equally busy day if not busier. This is exactly what happened as verses
36 and 37 referring to the next day tell us:

Mark 1:36-37
"And Simon and those who were with him searched for him. When they found him they
said to him. "EVERYONE IS LOOKING FOR YOU"

Everyone was looking for him. This means that the day that had just started was
going to be very busy. Really, having just finished a very busy day and knowing that the
next day is going to be also very busy, how many of us would have got up earlier to pray?
And if someone did it, wouldn't that mean that he considered prayer to be extremely
important and wouldn't that mean that it was a top priority in his life? Well, let's see
someone who made prayer his top priority. Who is he? Jesus Christ:

Mark 1:35
"Now in the morning, having risen a long while before daylight, he went out and
departed to a solitary place; and there he PRAYED"

Jesus knew that it was going to be a very busy day which probably wouldn't leave
him much time to pray. What did he do? He got up EARLIER to pray. Isn't that a
wonderful beginning of a day? Isn't also a wonderful way to start your day, even a busy
one? Instead of starting your day by thinking about its pressures and demands, you can
start it by discussing these pressures and demands with your Father, and then, during the
day, you will have the joy to see His delivering power answering your prayers and
arranging the issues of the day for you. But in order to do that, you have to believe what
the Word of God says about the importance of prayer and what God can do as a result of
it, to the extent that you determine to get up in the morning to pray. Jesus didn't get up
because it just happened. Instead, HE determined to get up because HE recognised
prayer's priority and importance for his life. Again therefore, it is a matter of priorities
and not a matter of time.
3. Matthew 14:23

Another record in which we see Jesus Christ praying is given in the fourteenth
chapter of Matthew. Again it is very important to have a look at the context. This time the
day was not only busy but it also started very sadly for Jesus, since it was the day that he
heard about the beheading of John the Baptist (see verses 1-11 for the beheading):

Matthew 14:12
"Then his [John's] disciples came and took away the body and buried it, and went and
told Jesus"

Before we go ahead, how would you feel if you heard that your cousin, who also
stood constantly and faithfully with you, was killed in such a horrible manner? I guess
that you would probably feel very sad, and you would like to stay privately for a bit.
That's what Jesus also wanted:

Matthew 14:13
"When Jesus heard what had happened, he withdrew by boat privately to a solitary
place."
(NIV)

His withdrawal to this solitary place privately wasn't something prearranged, for it
happened "WHEN Jesus heard what had happened". Obviously, Jesus wanted to have
some quiet time after the shock of this bad news. However, he didn't stay there forever.
Sometime later, he departed from this solitary place and he saw a great multitude waiting
for him. When he saw this multitude, "he was moved with compassion for them, and
healed their sick" (verse 14). In fact, not only did he heal their sick but he also fed them
miraculously (verses 15-21). Then, verse 22 tells us what happened after this feeding:
Matthew 14:22
"And immediately Jesus CONSTRAINED his disciples to get into the ship, and to go
before him to the other side, while he sent the multitudes away"
(KJV-NKJV)

The word "immediately" is connected with the feeding of the multitudes and it
means that as soon as the multitudes were fed Jesus constrained his disciples to get into
the ship. See this word "constrained". The corresponding Greek word is the past tense of
the verb "αναγκαζω" (anagkaz o ) that is used 9 times in the New Testament2 and means
"to compel someone to do something though he may not want to". So, according to the
above passage Jesus compelled his disciples to get into the ship. Probably they didn't
want to. But he didn't discuss it. He constrained them to do it. Then, he sent the
multitudes away. The question that we may ask now is why he compelled the disciples to
leave? What did he plan to do after sending the multitudes away? The answer is in verse
23:

Matthew 14:23
"And when he had sent the multitudes away, he went up on the mountain by himself TO
PRAY. Now when evening came, he was there alone"
The reason that he didn't allow the disciples to stay but constrained them to get
into the ship and go was that he wanted to stay alone and PRAY. See how significant
prayer was to Jesus Christ. He was willing to get up very early in the morning, to
withdrew himself from the multitudes, to compel the disciples to go, in order to pray.
Doesn't that indicate that prayer was a TOP priority in his life? It certainly does. May we
appreciate these records and believe what the Word says about the importance of prayer
so as to make it a top priority in our lives as well.

2Four times it is translated "to constrain" and five "to compel".


4. Luke 6:12-13

Another record in which we find Jesus Christ praying is in Luke 6. This time the
focus is not on the fact that he made time to pray but on the subject of his prayer. Though
the record does not specifically state this subject, it can be easily seen from the context:

Luke 6:12-13
"Now it came to pass in those days that he went out to the mountain to pray, AND
CONTINUED ALL NIGHT IN PRAYER TO GOD. And when it was day he called his
disciples to himself; and from them he chose twelve whom he also named apostles"

He prayed ALL NIGHT. Though the Bible does not specifically say what he
prayed for, it does say that in the morning he made one of the most crucial decisions of
his ministry: the choice of the twelve. Most probably therefore, one of the central subjects
of his prayer that night was this choice. The question now is: if Jesus needed to pray
before he made decisions and choices, do you think that we don't need to pray before we
make them? Really, why should WE make decisions using our little minds and five
senses information and not go to GOD and ask Him to instruct us and show us what the
best choice is? He knows the best choice, He is willing to show us this choice, and He has
the means, His spirit in us, to announce it. The question therefore is not whether God is
willing and able to help us, for He is. The real question is: do WE choose Him as our
advisor and go to Him to ask Him through prayer?
The same is also true for things pertaining to our service to God. We don't need to
be confused about how to serve God and what to do for Him. We don't need to torture our
little minds to make decisions about things that belong to HIM. He is the one that is
responsible to tell us what to do and how to do it. Some of the these things are mentioned
in the Bible. So the Bible tells you to love, to pray, to study to show yourself approved
unto God etc. Thus, you do not need God to personally tell you to pray: He has already
told you that in His Word. Similarly you do not need God to personally tell you to love:
He has already told you that in His Word. However, you do need His personal instruction
if for example you are thinking of going to such and such place to do some work for Him.
In such a case, before you make up your mind, pray about it and see what God wants. He
may wants you to go to somewhere else. He may want you to do something else. It is HIS
business. Isn't it?

5. Matthew 26:36-44

After all the above, we will continue with another example that is given in the well
known passage of Matthew 26:36-44. The things that we are going to see happened
shortly before the arrest of Jesus Christ that finally resulted in his crucifixion. Starting
from verse 36 we read:

Matthew 26:36-38
"Then Jesus came with them [the disciples except Judas] to a place called Gethsemane,
and said to the disciples, "Sit here while I go and PRAY over there" And he took with
him Peter and the two sons of Zebedee, and he began to be sorrowful and deeply
distressed. Then he said to them "my soul is exceeding sorrowful even to death. Stay here
and watch with me"

The reason why Jesus Christ was very sorrowful and distressed was that he knew
what was going to happen. Really, it was a very difficult time for him and at the same
time a very crucial time for all of us since the plan of our salvation was based on his
personal sacrifice and resurrection. But how did he decide to face this crisis? The verses
that follow give us the answer:

Matthew 26:39-44
"He went a little farther and fell on his face, AND PRAYED, saying, "O my Father, if it
is possible, let this cup pass from me; NEVERTHELESS NOT AS I WILL, BUT AS
YOU WILL. Then he came to the disciples and found them sleeping, and said to Peter,
"What? Could you not watch with me one hour? Watch and pray lest you enter into
temptation. The spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak. Again, a second time, He
went away and prayed saying, "O my Father, if this cup cannot pass away from me unless
I drink it, YOUR WILL BE DONE." And he came and found them asleep again, for their
eyes were heavy. So he left them, went away again, and prayed the third time, saying the
same words."

He was asking Father whether there was another way whereby he could
accomplish man's salvation, without having to go through this ordeal situation. He prayed
about it. In fact, he prayed three times. It is very instructive to pay attention to his prayer
attitude. As we can see, he expressed his desire to God ("let this cup pass from me") BUT
at the same time he asked for the will of God to be done ("NEVERTHELESS not as I will
but as YOU will"). This is very important since sometimes we think that because we ask
God for something He is obliged to do it and not only that but that He should do it when
WE want it to be done. God is obliged to do whatever we ask only when we ask in
accordance with His will. Now, for some things there are specific records in the Bible
that show us whether something is His will or not. One such example is healing. The
Word of God contains so many records about it (however even one would be enough to
establish it as God's will) that make it more than clear that healing is the will of God3. We
can therefore claim that healing is already ours. We can pray trusting in this promise of
God. We can be sure 100% that if we get sick and pray to God and trust in His promises,
God will heal us. We know it because the Word guarantees it4.
On the other hand, there are other things that being by nature specific for each
person, are not covered by a respective specific promise in the Bible. For example, let's
suppose that I want to have such and such a car. The Bible does not contain any promise
that tells me whether it is God's will to have that car or not. Is it right therefore to claim
that car as mine? Obviously not, except if God has specifically told me that it is going to
be mine. Is it right to pray to God and tell Him my desire? Yes, yes, yes!!! Is it right to
ask Him to show me whether it is good for me to have that car or not? Yes, yes, yes!!!

3See Exodus 15:26, Psalm 103:3, John 8:29, III John 2 and many many other records that show
the delivering power of God on this field.
4However, the Word does not state how God is going to do it and when He will do it. It is His
job to decide about the when and the how. He may do it even through medicine. We don't know
the when and the how. What we do know is that He will certainly, 100%, do it as we trust in Him
and pray about it.
Should I trust His Word that tells me that HIS WILL is "good, acceptable and perfect"
(Romans 12:2) and that "He cares for us" (II Peter 2:7) and therefore submit my desires to
His will, whatever this will is? Yes, yes, yes!!! This is what Jesus did. What he prayed for
was not God's will and therefore couldn't be done. But see that though there was a desire
"for the cup to pass away", he had AN EVEN BIGGER DESIRE for the will of God to be
done. He said "Nevertheless not as I will but as YOU will". Isn't that again very
instructive? Doesn't that tell us that apart from the various desires that we may have and
bring into prayer, we should also have AN EVEN BIGGER DESIRE for the "good,
acceptable and perfect" will of God to be done? Yes, yes, yes!!
Returning to the example of Jesus Christ, though what he prayed for couldn't be
done, this does not mean that God didn't honour his prayer. The gospel of Luke adds
some more details:

Luke 22:41-43
"And he was withdrawn from them about a stone's throw, and he knelt down and prayed,
saying, "Father, if it is your will, take this cup away from me; nevertheless not my will,
but yours, be done" And an angel appeared to him from heaven, STRENGTHENING
him."

God sent an angel and strengthened him to do what was his BIGGEST desire: the
will of God. Sometimes, we may discover that our personal desires are not in accordance
with the "good, acceptable and perfect" will of God. If our BIGGEST DESIRE is to do
the will of God, God will strengthen us to do it. In the case of Jesus Christ the
strengthening that he received because he prayed is shown in the record of his arrest:

John 18:3-11
"Then Judas, having received a detachment of men, and officers from the chief priests and
Pharisees, came there with lanterns, torches, and weapons. Jesus therefore, knowing all
things that would come upon him, went forward and said to them "Whom are you
seeking?" They answered him, "Jesus of Nazareth." Jesus said to them, "I am he." And
Judas, who betrayed him, also stood with them. Now when he said to them, "I am he",
they drew back and fell to the ground. Then he asked them again, "Whom are you
seeking?" And they said "Jesus of Nazareth." Jesus answered, "I have told you that I am
he. Therefore, if you seek me, let these [meaning the disciples] go their way", that the
saying might be fulfilled which he spoke, "Of those whom You gave me I have lost
none." Then Simon Peter, having a sword, drew it and struck the high priest's servant, and
cut off his right ear. The servant's name was Malchus. So Jesus said to Peter, "Put your
sword into the sheath. SHALL I NOT DRINK THE CUP WHICH MY FATHER HAS
GIVEN ME?"
(NKJV-KJV)

The last verse shows that the crisis was over. Though his will was different, his
BIGGEST desire was to do the will of God. So he submitted his will to the will of God,
just as me and you should do. But to do that, he prayed and he got strengthened. Apart
from this, the strengthening is shown in his reaction to those that came to arrest him.
Thus, although he went to the garden being exceeding sorrowful and deeply distressed5
his reaction as it is given in the above record is full of boldness. For indeed much
boldness is needed to go and meet those that you know that are going to torture you later.
A fearful person would have tried to escape from the situation. He would have shifted to
others what it was supposed to be his responsibility. But Jesus was not afraid. Instead of
trying to hide himself behind the others, he went forth and asked them whom they were
seeking for. In fact, not only did he do that but he also took care of the security of his
disciples. Moreover, he had the love and peace of mind to heal the servant's ear that Peter
cut off (Luke 22:51). If all these do not show a fully strengthened man what then do they
show? But how did he get strengthened? How did he overcome the crisis? BY PRAYER.

5The Greek word that is used in the corresponding record of the gospel of Mark (Mark 14:33) is
the verb “ekthabeomai” that is used four times from which: once it is translated "be greatly
amazed", once "be sore amazed" and twice "be affrighted".
6. Conclusion

After all the above, and though there are more records that you can study for
yourself, it is clear that prayer was a very important issue in the life of Jesus Christ, a part
that he kept with great care. For prayer's sake, he was ready to get up early in the
morning, to compel his disciples to go, to withdrew himself from the multitudes. By
prayer, he made decisions and he overcame difficult situations. In contrast with the
general idea that says "pray if you have time" HE MADE TIME to pray. Instead of the
world's way of thinking that says: "choose what YOU think is best and do what YOU
will" he prayed to see what GOD thought as best and did what GOD willed. To close,
let's go to Philippians 4:6-7 and let's make it our way of thinking:

Philippians 4:6-7
"Be anxious for nothing, but IN EVERYTHING by prayer and supplication, with
thanksgiving, let your requests be made known to God; and the peace of God, which
surpasses all understanding, will guard your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus"

Tassos Kioulachoglou

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