The Commands of Christ
Sermon #14
Ask,
Seek
And
Knock
Matt 7:7-11
There is nothing that reveals more about a believer than his or her prayer life.
How that individual approaches God and what that individual is willing to ask for reveals
how he or she views God. We frame our requests in accordance with what we know of the
character of the one we are addressing. It is very similar to how an child will make a
request from their father. The child with a kind, gentle and firm father, does not fear to
ask anything, for deep down they have the assurance that the father has greater wisdom and
experience, and therefore would not give them anything that would be harmful to them. The
child with extravagant but uncaring father will with
arrogance lay down his demand knowing his every desire will be met. The child with
the stingy, ill-tempered, abusive father will seldom dare to ask for anything, fearing yet
another emotional explosion.
This is also true spiritually. When we pray we pray in harmony with the view of God
we have. I thinks sometimes or view of God can be influenced by the kind of earthly father
we have had. An individual that believes God is arbitrary, will be fearful and on guard.
The individual who believes that God is vengeful will be fearful. But the individual who
believes that God is gracious will come boldly.
"Ask, and it will be given to you; seek, and you
will find; knock, and it will be opened to you. (8) For everyone who asks receives,
and he who seeks finds, and to him who knocks it will be opened. (9) Or what man is there
among you who, if his son asks for bread, will give him a stone? (10) Or if he asks for a
fish, will he give him a serpent? (11) If you then, being evil, know how to give good
gifts to your children, how much more will your Father who is in heaven give good things
to those who ask Him!
All three verbs in verse seven, Ask, Seek, Knock are imperatives (commands).There are two
basic kinds of imperatives in the New Testament. There is the aorist imperative which is a
command to do a particular thing at one specific time, and there is the present imperative
which is a command not only to do something but to keep on doing it indefinitely. All
three verbs in verse seven, Ask, Seek, Knock are not only imperatives (commands) but they
are present tense
There is also within this verse a suggested progression in prayer. The very words;
ask, seek and knock seem to suggest an ever increasing intensity in prayer.
1.
Asking. There are some things that are
2.
Seeking. Seeking
is a deeper level of
3. Knocking. The knocking here denotes seeking entrance, or desiring
fellowship.
Within this command to pray I think
we can see five general principles about prayer.
1. God Does Not
Promise to Answer Everyones Prayers.
The there is a restriction to the promises given in these verses. The promises
apply only to those who are really Gods children.
Some would say, But isnt God the Father of all
humans? And the answer is, No he is not! And he is not
obligated to answer the prayers of those who are not his children. I realize of course
that is pretty narrow statement, in fact a former head of the Southern Baptist Convention
once stirred up a big conflict over his statement that God is not obligated to answer the
prayers of unbelievers. But he was right! God is not the Father of all men, God is the
Creator of all men, but that is not the same. God is Father only to those who are born
again into the family of God.
God Does Not Promise
to Answer Everyones Prayers
.
2. We Are Expected To Ask for the Things God Has
Promised. ask and it shall be
given.
This same principle is stated in the negative in James 4:2
you do not have because you do not ask.
Dont those words describe the church as you know it today? The venerable evangelist
preacher of the early nineteen hundreds Dr. R.A. Torrey said, We do not live in a
praying age. We live in an age of hustle and bustle, of mans efforts and mans
determination, of mans confidence in himself and his own power to achieve things, an
age of human organization, and human machinery, and human push, and human scheming, and
human achievement; which in the things of God means no real achievement at all.
[Reuben A. Torrey. The Power of
Prayer (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1955) p. 16 as quoted by James Montgomery Boice. The
Sermon on the Mount: An Exposition. (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1972) p. 274]
We Are Expected To Ask for the Things God Has Promised
.
3. God hears and answers every prayer. (v.
8)
For everyone who asks receives, and he who
seeks finds, and to him who knocks it will be opened.
There are two certainties when we
pray. One is that God hears every prayer.
The other certainty is that God always answers. This verse says for everyone who asks
receives, did I read that right? Yes, it says everyone receives! But we
have the misconception that the only possible answer to prayer is yes. There are two other
possibilities. God can say, No or he can say, Not Yet.
God hears and answers every prayer
4. Sometimes God Gives Us What We Need and Not What
We Ask for. (vv. 9-11)
Or what man is there among you who, if his son
asks for bread, will give him a stone? (10) Or if he asks for a fish, will he give him a
serpent? (11) If you then, being evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how
much more will your Father who is in heaven give good things to those who ask Him!
Even earthly fathers give good things
to their children. We do not give a child a red-hot chili pepper just because they ask for
it. Well, my father might have but he an unusual sense of humor. May you can now
understand what is wrong with me. He once had me hold on to the spark plug of the lawn
mower so I could see if it was firing. It was firing alright, it knocked the
fire right out of me. But general speaking we do not give things to our children that we
know will really harm them. And if this true of our earthly fathers how much more true it
must be of our heavenly father.
John Stott
puts it this way, So
then if we ask for good things, he grants them; if we ask for thins which are not good
(either not good in themselves, or not good for us or for others, directly or indirectly,
immediately or ultimately) he denies them; and only he knows the difference. [John
Stott. Essential Living: The Sermon on the Mount. (Leichester, England:
Inter-Varsity Press, 1988) p. 189]
Someone
has written I asked
for strength that I might achieve; he made me weak that I might obey. I asked for health
that I might do great things: he gave grace that I might do better things. I asked for
riches that I might be happy; he did not give them so that I might be wise. I asked for
power that I might have the praise of men; I was given weakness that I might feel a need
of God. I asked for all things that I might enjoy life; I was given life, that I might
enjoy all things. I received very few of the things I asked for; but I received the things
I had hoped for. [Haddon w. Robinson. The Solid Rock
Construction Company. (Grand Rapids: Discovery House, 1989) pp. 106-107]
Sometimes God Gives Us What We Need and Not What We
Ask for
5. No Prayer Is Ever Wasted.
The underlying principle behind the significance of persistent prayer has to be the
truth that no prayer is ever wasted effort.
I want to close with an illustration from the life of Howard Hendricks, beloved
professor at Dallas Theological Seminary. Dr Hendricks writes,
My father
has always been a very important person to me. Not that I approved of everything he said
or did or that I imitated him consciously in any way. We werent really close
friends, either. But he was important in my life because of the indirect impact he made
upon me.
Dad was a
military man. He had seen action around the world. During the periods when he was
embroiled in battle, I would become very sensitive to his spiritual need. I and my family
prayed for him, but at times Im afraid my faith sputtered. His response was always
the same: Son, dont worry about me. Ill work it out with God (as if God could
be manipulated like a Pentagon official).
God brought a man into my life, a
man with a passion for men. His name was Butch Hardman. One day before we knew each other
Butch was boarding a plane in Detroit when a friend handed him a cassette tape. Ever
hear Hendricks? Heres a tape you should listen to. On that tape I related my
fathers spiritual need. Butch listened and something about the anecdote reminded him
of his own father with whom he had shared Christ shortly before he died. He began to pray
for this unknown man, George Hendricks.
Some
months later Butch attended a pastors conference in Philadelphia where I was the
speaker. He shook my hand afterward. That was the only time our paths crossed before a
remarkable incident in Arlington.
Butch was
driving the church bus down the street, having discharged all his passengers. He saw a man
standing on the corner who reminded him uncannily of Howard Hendricks. Could it possibly
be
? He backed up the bus, stopped, got off, and went over to the man. Are you
by any chance Howard Hendricks father? It is easy to imagine the startled
response. Er-ah (I can envision my fathers critical once-over with his steely
blue eyes) yeahyou a student of my son?
No, Im not, but he sure
has helped me. Got time for a cup of coffee?
That
encounter began a friendship, skillfully engineered by the Spirit of God. Butch
undoubtedly sensed dads hesitancy when he discovered he had met a preacher. For a
long time Butch did not invite him to attend his church. He simply suggested that dad drop
by the office for coffee. Patiently he endured dads cigars and his endless
repertoire of war stories. Before long he also learned that dad had been diagnosed as
having a terminal throat cancer.
Months later Butch was at his
bedside. Mr. Hendricks, Ill be leaving shortly for a Holy Land trip. Instead
of my listening to you tonight, would you let me tell you a story?
Butch had
earned his hearing and he began simply to relate the interview of Jesus Christ with
Nicodemus as recorded by the Apostle John. At the conclusion dad accepted Butchs
invitation to receive Jesus Christ as his own personal Savior. Then dad got up out of bed,
stood, and saluted with a smile. Now Im under a new Commander-in-Chief!
That night Butch called Dallas.
The last time I saw dad alive I
could not believe he was the same man I had known. His frame was wasted, but his spirit
was more virile than I had ever known.
In
accordance with dads specific provision in his will, Butch Hardman conducted the
crisp military funeral in Arlington cemetery where the gospel of Jesus Christ was
presented to the small
[Howard & Jeanne Hendricks. FootPrints.
(Multnomah Press, 1981) pp. 16-19 - www.bible.org/illus/p-q/p-q-83.htm
No Prayer Is Ever Wasted
What are the principles of Prayer revealed in this
command?
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