Tuesday, September 9, 2025

CrossTalk: Pray without Ceasing


Two men went up into the temple to pray, one a Pharisee and the other a tax collector.” Thus, Jesus begins one of his best-known parables. It is known for his sharp criticism of the self-righteous Pharisee, and his justification of the sinner.

I want to talk about that. But, first, let’s talk about what they went to the temple to do. That’s a vital part of the story. They went to pray!

What does that mean? What is prayer?

The root meaning of prayer is “to make a request.” It is to ask for something. Whatever else we might say to God, we have not yet prayed until we have asked him to give us something,

When the disciples asked Jesus how to pray, He answered by giving them seven things that they should ask for. Collectively, we call these seven petitions the Lord’s Prayer (Matthew 6:9-15).

That’s hugely important. While God wants you to thank him for his gifts and to express your thoughts and concerns, what he wants above all is for you to pray. “Ask, and you will receive, that your joy may be full” (John 16:24).

God wants you to ask for godly things. So, that’s where the devil attacks.

Satan may tell you that God doesn’t exist. This is the lie that keeps most of the world from praying.

The devil may paint God as aloof and uncaring. This is another lie that discourages people from prayer.

But among those who already believe that God is good and gracious, Satan’s favorite deception is that you already have all that you need. He uses this lie to keep you from actually asking for anything.

That is the ruse that kept the Pharisee from praying for anything. “God, I thank you that I am not like other men.” Blah. Blah. Blah. But he never got around to asking for anything. And by that devilish omission, he proved his unbelief.

Suddenly, “thoughts and prayers” has become a hot topic. That’s great! Because like the pharisee and the publican, prayer separates the men from the boys—the sons of God from the sons of disobedience.

Of course you will want to defend the power of prayer. But once you have stood up to be counted with the sons of God, don’t just stand there, pray!

You should start like the publican started: “God, be merciful to me, a sinner.” He will have mercy on you—not because you deserve mercy more than others or because you are any less of a sinner than others.

He will have mercy and forgive your sins because Jesus has earned mercy for you. By His suffering and death, he takes away the sin of the world.

And once God has had mercy on you by taking away your sins, he invites you to pray for many other impossibly difficult things.

- Pray that your friend or neighbor who is captivated by Satan’s lies might be set free and come to believe in the one true God. Pray for the one on the evening news who hates God, who blasphemes—who even kills those who believe in Jesus.

- Pray that people in positions of government power might make decisions that harmonize with God’s will and do not defy the Creator of heaven and earth. Pray that believers might be elected to public offices throughout our land. And pray that the Christians already elected might do their jobs guided by God’s holy Scripture.

- Pray that the unspeakably evil powers of hell might be held at bay. Jesus has always warned us how deep is the corruption and how deadly is the evil that seethes just below the surface. Now that you can see it on the evening news, don’t be surprised.

Rather, now that the serpent has come out of hiding, do what Jesus has always exhorted you to do. Pray without ceasing. God has put you here in the world to make a difference. And your greatest power is not to scream at the television, but to pray to God.

You are the salt that preserves this evil world from the rot that would overtake it. And your saltiness is most effective when you pray for those whom you meet. “The effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man availeth much” (James 5:16).

Pray at church with the body of Christ. Pray at home with your family. Pray in your closet and in your car. “Ask, and you will receive, that your joy may be full” (John 16:24).

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