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    « Les Choristes: A Tender French Film | Main | Understanding the Mystery of Christian Marriage, Part One »

    July 12, 2009

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    It's unfathomable to me that evangelicals can be concerned with "vain repetition" when saying the Lord's Prayer. The early Christians (and any who still practice some form of daily office, which is to say most but us evangelicals) say it and others several times in a day, following King David's pattern of prayer mentioned in the Psalms. Repetition in prayer is the school of sanctification, bringing our minds back to alignment with Christ's. It's impossible to vainly repeat his words if that's your intention.

    What makes prayer distinctively Christian? It is the fact that we approach God through Jesus. By him we cry, "Abba, Father." We are not merely trying to pray like Jesus. Through the Holy Spirit, we actually enter into the prayer life of Jesus, so that his prayers become our own. From this perspective, there is no better way to pray than to make the Lord's Prayer our own. We can also make the prayers of other godly people our own. The same Holy Spirit that enables us to pray is at work in them as well. If this were not the case, then why would we even bother to pray with anyone else?

    I amazes me how the same people who condemn repetitious prayer insist on the re-institution of the Lord's Prayer in the public schools. I remember teachers having to force kids to stand, be grudgingly respectful and mouth the words daily. Not sure it all makes sense.

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