New Testament Prayers: Week 4
Use this guide to help your group discussion as you meet this week.
Transcript
Hey everybody. Unfortunately, due to the weather, we have been unable to meet, and we are going to be starting Second Samuel this coming Sunday when we are hopefully, Lord willing, able to get back together.
So what we wanted to do was I’m just going to take a moment to kind of walk you through some of the content that we had prepared and was intending to walk through as we finished up our prayer series this Sunday. And so just wanted to walk you through some of that.
If you will just grab a Bible, go to Matthew chapter 6. We’re going to look at what is known as the Lord’s Prayer. So Jesus, this is how he teaches his disciples to pray. And this is actually in the middle of what we’re looking at is in the middle of the sermon on the mount, although it shows up in other times as well.
So what we’ve done in our prayer series is we’ve taken the time to look at New Testament prayers and consider the things that Paul prays for. Some of the things that Paul prays for and we’ve seen these expansive prayers. The requests that he’s making are huge. He wants us to see the glory of God and to know eternally what’s coming for us. He wants us to be sanctified completely. That’s the will of God, that we would be sanctified, that we would completely be made holy. He wants us to know the love of God, the unknowable love of God, so that we might be filled with all the fullness of God, which is unfathomable. And then to be able to then see that he’s able to do more than we can ask or imagine. He’s beyond our mental capabilities. Like these are massive prayers.
And what we’re going to see here is something very, very simple, straightforward.
And so some of what I think is helpful for us to understand is that there is no ceiling to prayer when it comes to the things we can talk to God about and we can pray for, that we’ve entered into it goes as high as heaven, like it is beyond thought, it is beyond reason. We get to go and talk to him about everything and request anything and talk - like the expanse of prayer is wide open.
But the floor to prayer is very low. It’s not complicated. And that’s what we’re going to see as we talk through and see what Jesus teaches his disciples here, is that it’s not like, hey, in order to pray this is going to be real hard. Anybody can enter in.
So for the person who goes, man, I just don’t even know how to pray and I feel like when I pray it’s only like 30 seconds long and then I’m distracted, it’s like, yeah, you can do it. A prayer can be 10 seconds long. The prayer that when he says pray like this, he prays for about 20 seconds. The thing that he shows him how to pray.
But then we see that Jesus also prays all night long. And so there’s just, the ceiling is non-existent. You can go as high as possible. So for the person who’s like, oh cool, I prayed for 15 seconds, I did it - it’s like, no, you get to keep growing in this.
But for the person who’s like, I think this is really difficult and I don’t even know if I’m praying right - it’s like, hey, the entry level is real simple. And so that’s where we’re going to start with Jesus teaching a basic daily prayer that’s pretty straightforward.
And so I want to read the whole section we’re going to look at. It’s in Matthew 6. And then we’re just going to go through it piece by piece. And I’m going to try to go through it fairly quickly. This is the content that I would have been preaching, but I’m not really preaching to y’all. I’m just kind of walking you through some of this. So we’ll move fairly fast.
Matthew 6:5–8
“And when you pray, you must not be like the hypocrites. For they love to stand and pray in the synagogues and at the street corners, that they may be seen by others. Truly, I say to you, they have received their reward. But when you pray, go into your room and shut the door and pray to your Father who is in secret. And your Father who sees in secret will reward you.
And when you pray, do not heap up empty phrases as the Gentiles do, for they think that they will be heard for their many words. Do not be like them, for your Father knows what you need before you ask him.”
Now, I said I was going to read through the whole thing, but I want to stop there for a second.
He’s going to start off by basically saying, “Hey, I’m going to teach you about praying, but when you pray, there’s some ditches. There’s some things you just need to avoid.”
One of the dangers of praying is that you would pray to be seen by others. That’s the way he words it. He says, “Don’t pray like the hypocrites,” meaning that they look like something on the outside, but there’s something else going on. It’s a trick.
And so he says they pray in the synagogues, they pray at the street corners, and their goal is for you to see them. And he says they have their reward. They’ve done it. So if your praying is a performance, it works. It works as a performance, but it doesn’t work as a prayer. They get what they wanted because their prayer wasn’t to God. It wasn’t between them. It was for you to watch them.
And so he says, “Don’t do that. Don’t make praying a performance. Rather, go into your room and shut the door and pray to your Father who sees in secret.”
So the bulk of Christian prayer should be done privately like that. You should have an active private prayer life.
He does not forbid praying in front of people, and we actually see that he prays in front of people. He prays out loud at times. The disciples pray together and pray out loud. There’s actually a lot of good and health that can come from us praying together. But you do have to watch that the point of your praying together is still relating to God, communing to God, speaking to God, and not somehow putting on a show.
So we just have to be careful if somebody asks you to pray at a meal or if you’re praying in your group. Like I know that there are times where we’re praying together and I’m thinking about what I’m going to pray and I’m not praying with them. And so I’m doing what he said here as I’m turning it into some sort of performance.
And he says, “Don’t do that. I don’t think you have to pray out loud in front of people. You do have to pray.” And he says, “Go in your room, close the door, pray by yourself.” So that is commanded of us as Christians.
But he’s not prohibiting praying together. But we do have to be on guard that when we do that, that we don’t miss the point and make prayer somehow a performance.
So he starts off there. Don’t do that. Don’t pray as a performance.
He’s going to give us another ditch. Don’t do this.
So then he says, “And when you pray,” this is verse 7, “do not heap up empty phrases as the Gentiles do, for they think that they will be heard for their many words. Do not be like them, for your Father knows what you need before you ask him.”
Okay? So don’t heap up a bunch of empty phrases. Don’t think that your prayer has to be a certain length or a certain amount of flowery language or you’ve got to use the right words. Don’t do that.
And specifically, one of the things I think you would see here is that his disciples are coming to him and he’s teaching them how to pray. He’s explaining to them how to pray. And this is in the sermon on the mount. There’s another place where they come and say, “Teach us how to pray,” and he does the same thing.
If you went to a priestess of some deity and you were asking, “How do we pray?” what he’s saying is that they would, they have all this junk. You got to chant. You got to wear the right clothes. You got to be in the right place. We’re going to have to have some music. We’re going to need to cut ourselves. They’re going to add all this stuff to it. You got to do it a certain amount of time or it doesn’t count. Or you have to do it at a certain time.
And he just is like, “No, none of that. Don’t heap up a bunch of empty phrases. Don’t think that your many words are going to get it. Don’t think you have to assault God with language to get him to bend to your will. None of that.”
And then what he’s going to say is, “Pray like this.” And what he prays now is simple in its form, simple in his word use, simple in his sentence structure. It’s straightforward and it’s not long. Just pray like this.
So when we’re talking about like this, which is what he says in verse 9, pray like this, it’s simple, but it does open for us, I think, categories that might, when you’re thinking about the prayers that you have, might increase the like, oh actually, I probably should be praying about this and I should be praying about this.
So we’re going to take it through and just kind of go, what are the categories that he prays? You’ll notice the sentence structure is simple and the length is simple. But it maybe will add some complexity to your praying if there’s some areas where you’re just like, I haven’t been praying about that and that.
So I don’t want you to, because we’re going to go through it and look at the different categories, suddenly go, “Oh, wow. This is really complex.” It’s like, “No, he actually is praying pretty straightforward, pretty cleanly, pretty simply,” even if it opens up categories for you, it doesn’t make it more difficult.
Like I said, the floor here is very low. And I think that’s built into what he says when he says, “Don’t be like them.” This is verse eight: “For your Father knows what you need before you ask him.”
And that’s the baseline assumption in praying, is that we’re going to the Father and he cares about us. He knows what you need. And that’s beautiful.
So if you understand, okay, does a three-year-old know how to talk to his father? Does he know how to approach him? Doesn’t know how to be humble and to be in need. Then if that can happen, then you can pray. If you knew how to ask your father for something you needed, then you can pray, because that’s the baseline thing that’s happening here.
So with that in mind, we’re going to look at, he says, “Pray then like this.” I’m going to read the whole thing and then we’re going to go through bit by bit to just see what’s in this prayer. Even though it’s simple and straightforward, it takes 15 seconds.
And like I said, that’s the entry to prayer, is we get to pray very simple, very straightforward. And then we can go from there into not more empty words and phrases, but just greater depth of relationship.
You know, Jesus prays all night long, and it’s not because he had to say the same thing over and over again for it to work. It’s because he relates to the Father. The same way that you would stay up all night and talk to someone, a friend that you cherish or someone that you’re in love with, and you would just, it would just keep going and it’s conversational and there’s so much to talk about and you don’t want to stop.
That’s what I mean by the ceiling to prayer. The requests that you can make, the things that you can talk about is unending because of the depth of relationship that we get to have with the Father.
But the entry level to just like what counts as a prayer is any of it. If you’re aiming it at him and if the point is to relate to him and to talk to him and to bring your needs to him, then it all counts.
So I’m going to, this is what he says. Pray then like this.
Matthew 6:9–13
“Pray then like this:
‘Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name.
Your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.
Give us this day our daily bread,
and forgive us our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors.
And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil.’”
That’s it. That’s the whole prayer.
So we’re going to walk through. I’m going to tell you what these different things mean, what he’s saying, and then I want you to consider them as like, okay, do I have category for that? Do I pray that sort of thing?
Again, not complicated in language, not long, not repetitious, but also for us to go, hey, there’s things I should be praying for.
It’s like, what? Well, let’s look and see what sort of things he says to pray for.
So he starts off with “our Father in heaven.” And that’s just framing up who are we talking to. Prayer is not to the universe. It’s not just floating out there. And Christian prayer is to the Father. We can pray to Jesus. We can talk to the Spirit. But in general, normative Christian prayers, we’re praying to the Father. That’s who Jesus bought our relationship with. He brought us back to the Father. Our arrangement was with the Father and that Christ comes to rescue us and to bring us in to be adopted as sons and daughters of God.
So we’re praying to the Father, and it’s beautiful this pairing. He’s our Father in heaven.
So he is our Father. That’s the - he loves us. He knows us. There’s this relationship built in. But he’s also in heaven. He’s big, competent, capable, ruling, reigning, glorious.
And so know who you’re praying to and begin with the relational depth there, but also the weighty glory of him reigning from heaven.
So that’s “our Father in heaven” is where he starts.
And then “hallowed be your name.” Now we don’t consider, we don’t talk about hallowing things very often, but it’s may your name be honored as holy. May it be set apart.
And I think that there’s two things happening here. This is just praising God. So it’s beginning with, I’m hallowing, like I’m surrendering to you your honor. It’s, you know, when the angels say glory to God in the highest, it’s I’m glorifying you now. I’m hallowing you now. I’m honoring your name now in this very moment.
And so it’s, you can praise God, glorify him, honor him. And it’s a way for you to remember you are my Father in heaven. You do love me but you are holy and completely other and different and above me. So it’s a humility in approach.
It also, if it’s a prayer that moves forward, is to be praying that, Lord, I would honor you, that I would show you respect, that I would bring glory to your name, that in my heart and my words and my actions I would live in a way that brings you honor.
So that’s start off knowing who you’re praying to, and then in submission and respect and humility, we praise him. But also do you pray that you would honor him as you go forward and as you live your life.
So that’s some of what’s happening there.
Okay. “Hallowed be thy name.” “Your kingdom come.”
Now again, I think all of these is such a simple phrase. All of these we could spend a whole sermon on just explaining some of what’s going on here. But the category that I want to open up for you is that we should be praying for the advancement of his kingdom on earth.
We want more people to submit to the King. Which means that we want more people to place faith in Jesus. We want the advancement and the good news of the kingdom to be proclaimed. We want the good effects of the kingdom to be extended.
So you should pray for missions and missionaries and for your school and for your co-workers. You should be praying that people would meet Jesus.
This is, you know, we have this section in when our groups meet. We want to discuss and review kind of how are we being missionaries together and who are we building with? We want to pray for those sort of things.
And this is built into what you’re going to see later. It’s a daily prayer. So it’s just the normal daily way to pray. You should be praying for missions. You should be praying for the kingdom to advance and for more people to surrender to Jesus.
And then this fits into that, but he says, “Your will be done on earth as it is in heaven.”
So this kingdom advancing is faith and it is new believers, but it also is submission to his will. It’s that the world would look more like it belongs to him.
So “your kingdom come, your will be done on earth as it is in heaven.” So we should be praying that his will would be accomplished in our lives, in the lives of others, in our schools and our neighborhoods, that it would look like we belong to him, that we would surrender to him, that good things would happen, that people would turn from sin, that we would do what is right.
And so as you’re going through and thinking through what are the things I’m praying for and how do I pray normally, we pray for missionaries, we pray for the work of the advancement of the kingdom, and we pray for the advancement of his will.
And then also when there’s situations in your life, you can pray it like this: I pray that your will would be done. I don’t know what should happen at work. I don’t know how this conversation should go. I don’t know how I should handle this, Lord. I pray that your will would be done. I pray that I would be sanctified and repent of sin and handle this well and honor you well. And so I just pray that your will would be done in this situation.
And so that’s the - he prays that.
Then he says this: “Give us this day our daily bread.”
This is humility in the fact that we are dependent on him every day of our life.
I think that for a lot of us, this is kind of where most of our prayers center around, just what’s going on today. What do I need? And that’s fine and beautiful that that shows up in our prayers. He expects it to.
This was a practical reality for them that often they needed their food today. Like they didn’t know if they were going to have it. Whereas we, you know, we have grocery stores and refrigerators and freezers. And so a lot of times we just kind of aren’t thinking about how dependent on him we are for the general just function of life, but you are.
And so we should normally be asking, Lord, hey, provide for me what I need. And one of the ways I word it, and I pray this through this with my boys a good bit, was, Lord, give us everything we need and help us to be truly thankful. Help us to enjoy it, but help us to be truly thankful.
But I think for a lot of us, this is the stuff. This is, you know, praying over this meeting I have at work and this test that I’m going to take and all these just different things that are coming up that are on our plate that day. This conversation I’m going to have with this person. Just, Lord, provide the things that I need to live, to exist, to function, for this day to go well.
And so we ask for that, and we humbly are dependent on him for those things.
I think for some of us the bulk of our prayer may be in this zone, this practical need zone. And I would just say, yeah, but you need to open up and understand we should be praying for missionaries. We should be honoring the Lord in our prayers and we should be considering his will at work and things. So, you know, spread it out.
And then I think that every once in a while I’ll meet someone and it’s almost like talking to God about simple things like bread is beneath God, so we shouldn’t talk about stuff like that. I shouldn’t pray to him about, you know, this test I have because I don’t want to waste his time.
And that also, I think, belittles him as if he’s big but not so big that we are able to waste his time. We’re not able to waste his time. He’s not exhausted by us. He’s not limited by us. We are to bring things to him, and he delights to talk to us.
If there’s something that’s burdening you or bothering you or in your way or in your need, you talk to him about it. He’s not too big for that. He’s not too busy for that.
And so I would say for the person who’s like, I only pray big prayers - it’s like, yeah, we should pray big prayers. But we also should know that he loves us, that he cares for us, and that he is dear and near, and not too big that these are beneath him, but so big that he can handle everything. And so I just think that don’t limit him in that way either.
So we should have the humility to realize situations and we should talk to him about practical things.
All right. So then as he finishes, he’s going to say, “Forgive us our debts as we also have forgiven our debtors. Lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evil.” Those three together.
I find it very interesting and very helpful, and I point this out a lot when I’m talking to people about prayer. The Bible tells us we have three enemies: the flesh, the world, and the devil. And it doesn’t always frame them up like that in that order, but we do. It’s going to talk about those three things as that stand in the way of us following God.
So we’re told that we have to put to death the deeds of the body, that we’re fighting the passions of our flesh, that the flesh is opposed to the Spirit, and that we’re only going to walk in one. We’re either going to walk in the Spirit or walk in the flesh.
And so that’s the idea that you want to sin, you desire sin. That there’s a part of you, there’s a part of me that genuinely wants to sin, and I have to put that to death. I have to fight against that. You have to fight against that.
It tells us that one of our enemies is the world. This is not like “God so loved the world that he gave his only Son” as in the people, but the world systems, world ideas that stand opposed to God. It is people that tempt us to sin or that tell us sin is okay or that normalize it, or the systems that are in place that help us rebel against God.
So that friendship with the world is enmity with God. That is the way the Bible’s going to talk about it. So that we shouldn’t be friends of the world but we should come out of the world. We should love Jesus. We should follow him. We shouldn’t look like we belong here. We should look like we belong to him.
So that’s a second enemy, is the world.
And then the third one is the devil, that we actually have a real spiritual enemy that wants destruction for us, that wants us to follow him into rebellion, that doesn’t want joy or peace. You know, he roams around like a roaring lion seeking someone to devour is the way Peter puts it. So we have that enemy.
And what’s interesting and I find very helpful in this normal daily way to pray, Jesus has in mind all three. He has in mind that we are in a war against sin, that sin is destructive. We are in a war that the world tries to pull us and lure us and take us captive. And that we’re in a war against a real enemy that wants us to not surrender to the Lord and not follow him.
And so I think it’s very helpful that in his normal daily way to pray, he considers all three: the flesh, the world, and the devil.
And so when he considers the flesh, what he says is, “Forgive us our debts,” or forgive us our sins, “as we have also forgiven our debtors,” or as we have also forgiven those who have sinned against us. And so trespasses is another way that that’ll be translated at times.
That a normal daily way for you to pray is to ask for forgiveness, to walk in repentance. That repentance is part of the Christian life. And it’s not us walking with our head down in shame. It is delighting in the freedom that has been purchased for us by Christ, that we get to be forgiven.
And so you should, in your normal praying, be considering: forgive me for how I spoke yesterday. Forgive me for the language I use. Forgive me for the attitude that I have. Forgive me for when I had that opportunity to serve somebody, I just did it begrudgingly. I was annoyed the whole time that there was a person around me in need rather than loving them. So forgive me. Help me.
And this is why one of the normal things Christians should do with each other is repent to each other, because it’s been - it’s part of our normal praying. It’s part of our normal walking with the Lord, is that we’re asking for forgiveness.
The flip side of this, and I would encourage you to read what he says after this in 14 and 15, but he connects this idea of us being forgiven with us forgiving others. And Matthew 18 is also helpful here. Yeah, all of Matthew 18. I was wanting to see if it went into Matthew 19, but in Matthew 19 he starts talking about other things. So just all of 18.
But it’s helpful here in this idea of how forgiveness works.
But we’re to be people who receive grace and live in the grace and the mercy of God, and that we’re to be people who give grace and mercy to all those around us. And so that’s where he puts those together. That he says forgive us as we forgive those who sin against us.
And so that a normal part of our daily praying is to consider our sin, but also to walk in repentance and ask for forgiveness and to move forward in being forgiven and receiving mercy. That his mercy is over all that he’s made, and so that daily we receive mercy and it’s wonderful. And so that we would normal daily pray, repent of sin.
The next thing he says is, “Lead us not into temptation,” so that we would be aware that one of our enemies is the world. That the world is going to try to normalize sin. It’s going to be out there taunting us and calling to us.
And you’re saying, “Lord, don’t let me look at the bait on the hook and not see the hook.” You know, that’ll keep me away from temptation. He doesn’t just say, “Help me withstand temptation.” He says, “Pray that you won’t even enter into it. That you won’t go near it. That I won’t even be tempted today.”
And I was, Chet said one of the ways that he prays this and considers this in his prayer life is, Lord, help me to see the things that tempt me. You know, he gave the example of like if there’s a certain app on my phone that’s going to keep tempting me, help me to see that, recognize that, and just get rid of the app. Help me to see the areas and the avenues and the people and the places that lead me into temptation so I can get rid of them.
You know, I heard a pastor say this one time and I found it very helpful. But the sooner you show self-control, the less self-control you need.
So that saying, “I’m going to go to the party, but I’m not going to drink,” is harder than just saying, “I’m not going to go to the party.” Saying, “We’re going to go up into the dorm, but we’re not going to commit sexual sin,” is harder. It’s more difficult than just being like, “Hey, let’s just not go in the dorm. Let’s just not be alone together.” That temptation level is higher. So let’s avoid temptation.
And so rather than saying, “I want to avoid sin,” Jesus is saying, “Yeah, okay.” But also you want to be forgiven for sin and you want to avoid temptation. You want to go further back and say, “What are the things that tempt me? How do I not even get to where I’m close to the line? How do I stay away from temptation?”
And so that’d be a thing that you’d be praying, and that you would be aware of the world’s influence to draw and entice you away from the Lord and into sin.
Third enemy, and the way that he finishes prayers: “But deliver us from evil.” Now the word evil there, evil is a fine translation. Wickedness is a translation that it’ll be translated wickedness sometime, or wicked as in like wicked people, or the evil one as in Satan himself.
And so I think you just need to be in your praying mindful of the evil of the world. And so this is in some ways praying, Lord protect me from wicked men, from evil situations. Protect me from the evil that I’ve already gone into and that I’m surrounded by. Like deliver me out of it. Rescue me is kind of the word he’s using here.
But also to be mindful of like when Ephesians says:
Ephesians 6:12
“For we do not wrestle against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the cosmic powers over this present darkness, against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly places.”
That I think sometimes in our normal configuration of prayer and the normal way that we think, because we’re western, most of us, and we don’t grow up considering spirits and dark forces and invisible things, we even in our own faith are sometimes like, yeah, well this is my personal faith, but the real things in the world are like on the periodic table. And we even miss that like, no, God is real and the spiritual world is real. It’s as real as oxygen and hydrogen. We’re just not thinking about it right. We don’t have it framed up in our head right.
And so sometimes when we think about the things that we’re worried about or that are assaulting us, that we most often in the western world, when you think about like what are the enemies, you pick people. You pick political ideas or entities. And so the things that you’re worried about is like them trying to do this, this nation, this people, this idea, this group.
And Paul says, yeah, we’re not wrestling with flesh and blood. That’s not who we’re worried about. That we’re at war with a much bigger enemy in a much bigger scheme. And so your normal daily praying should consider, hey Lord, deliver us. Rescue us from the influence of the enemy. Rescue us from the evil one. Rescue us from evil. Rescue us from sin as it goes to work. Protect us.
And so your normal daily praying should include repenting of sin, praying against temptation, and praying about the work of the enemy, that he would not have any effect, that he would not, that the Lord would rescue you from lies that you’re believing and ways that he’s at work and ideologies and temptations and things that he’s doing in the world, and just that evil is at work in the world.
But evil isn’t just a benign force. It has an agent behind it, and being aware of that in our praying.
So Jesus says praying is not a show and it’s not some big long complicated thing. Pray like this. And then he gives a simple straightforward prayer. But I do think it opens up categories for things that we should consider as our normal prayer.
So that you should go in your house and close the door and pray simple straightforward things. And I think it’s helpful if you can print this out or you can open it up to Matthew 6 and you can just kind of go, okay, and help these things guide some of your praying. But don’t complicate it. Don’t think you have to say it well. You’re not filling out forms at the DMV. It’s not like it’s going to get rejected and sent back to you.
You’re talking to your Father who already knows what you need before you say it.
Now, Jesus does tell us to labor in prayer, to continue at it, to pray the same things. And he doesn’t mean say it seven times in a row for it to count. He just means come talk to him again about it tomorrow. Pray when it’s on your mind. Pray again. Pray this morning and pray this afternoon. And then when you think about it again, pray, because he cares about you and he knows you.
And keep at it. Keep talking to him. Keep telling him what’s going on. Keep letting him work on you in prayer so that we would be people who pray.
And the last thing I want to point out as I’m wrapping up just kind of this walkthrough, this assumptive reality of how we get to approach God that Jesus teaches his disciples, is purchased by Jesus. This is a blood-bought gift to you.
You don’t get to pray like this if Jesus doesn’t go to the cross, because he’s not your Father, because you haven’t been adopted. If Jesus hasn’t saved you, you haven’t been brought into the family.
Jesus has to go die for this to be a reality, that he gets to be our Father in heaven. You don’t get forgiven if there is no cross. You don’t get rescued from the enemy if there is no cross. You don’t get taken out of the world if there is no cross. The provision that we need stops at daily, and our eternal provision is not provided if there is no cross. His kingdom doesn’t come if there is no cross. His will isn’t accomplished if there is no cross.
And so one of the things that is to be in mind as we do this is to rejoice in the work of Jesus and to know the privilege and the delight that this type of praying is because it was purchased by the precious blood of Christ and given to those who belong to him as a way that we get to relate to God.
And without him it doesn’t exist, but with him we get to delight in and enjoy it. And it’s not something that we earn or that we achieve or that we do well. It’s something that he’s graciously given us as a gift.
So hopefully as we wrap up our prayer series, this simplified kind of, hey, it’s not a show and it’s not complicated. You get to go talk to your Father and you get to do it because Jesus has earned that for you and given that to you and modeled it for you.
Then go pray. Pray big prayers, but also realize that you get to talk to him normal daily about all the stuff of life. And trust him, because he’s your Father and he loves you and he knows you and he already knows what you need even before you ask.