Midweek Lenten Service
Wednesday, March 11, 2009
The Rev. Charles Henrickson

“A Prayer That Sums It All Up” (The Lord’s Prayer)

Suppose you were commanded by God and invited by God to pray for all the needs 
you have and all the gifts he has to give you.  Think of that!  All of your 
needs, all of his gifts.  And you have to put it all into a prayer.  How long 
would it take you to pray for all those things?  How many hours, how many 
thousands of words?

Well, the answer is, about 30 seconds and 70 words.  30 seconds?  70 words?  
How can you possibly cover all of God’s gifts and our needs in that short of a 
time and with those few words?  But our Lord Jesus seems to think it’s 
possible.  In fact, he even gave us a prayer that does all of that.  We call it 
the “Lord’s Prayer” or the “Our Father.”  In this short prayer, which we can 
pray every day, we are invited by God to come to him and call upon him, asking 
for all of his gifts, seeking his help in all of our needs.  The Lord’s Prayer 
is truly “A Prayer That Sums It All Up.”

This is how it is with these texts of the Catechism, isn’t it?  Short summaries 
that cover vast and profound things.  The Ten Commandments, covering all of 
God’s will for our lives and showing us all of our sins where we fail to do 
it--all covered in just Ten Commandments of 83 words.  The Apostles’ Creed, a 
summary of the entire New Testament, telling us who the Triune God is and how 
he creates, redeems, and sanctifies us--all of that in only 111 words.  And now 
this comprehensive, all-purpose prayer, the Lord’s Prayer, 70 words.  What a 
handy compendium of the Christian faith and life we have in these parts of the 
Catechism!  Easily memorized, ready for our recall, right there for our use, 
morning, noon, and night--any time, any where, every day.

Tonight our focus is on this summary prayer, the Lord’s Prayer.  As I say, it 
covers all of our needs and all of God’s gifts in one short prayer.  And we are 
taught and invited by Christ to pray this prayer and come to our dear Father 
who promises to hear us.  This is a prayer we can be sure of, that we can put a 
hearty “Amen” to, for Christ himself is the one who has given it to us.  Think 
of what a treasure we have here in this prayer!  Our only problem is that we do 
not pray it often enough, with thought and with faith.

The Lord’s Prayer is both a prayer that works as a prayer in itself--those 
exact words that Christ gave us--and it also serves as a model and a 
springboard for further praying.  It works as a pattern for prayer.  Look how 
each line can lead to more praying.

“Our Father, who art in heaven”:  Know first who this God is who are you coming 
to in prayer, that he is your dear Father who loves you and cares for you.  
Meditate on God’s character as you have learned to know him, and put that into 
words.

“Hallowed be Thy name, Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done on earth as it is in 
heaven.”  Seek first God’s kingdom and glory and honor, the things that pertain 
to what God is doing in the world--make them your concern, too.  For example, 
“Thy kingdom come” can be a springboard for particular petitions related to the 
spread of the gospel, that God’s kingdom of grace be extended in the world 
through the ministry of the church.  You may name particular missionaries or 
ministers you have on your heart.  That would be using the Lord’s Prayer as a 
pattern for further praying.

Likewise, when we come to the petitions about daily bread and the forgiveness 
of sins.  What are the particular needs of this body and life that you have or 
that your fellow Christians have?  Put them into words, and bring your 
supplications before your Father in heaven.  What are the sins you are aware 
of, that trouble you and for which you need forgiveness?  Confess them before 
your gracious God, pleading the blood of Christ your Savior.  Are there those 
who have sinned against you?  Pray for a heart of forgiveness, and ask God for 
help to restore your relationship.

Then we come to the attacks of the devil upon us:  “And lead us not into 
temptation, but deliver us from evil.”  God wants you to call on him in the day 
of trouble.  When temptations fly about your head, call on God for help.  When 
the evil one is throwing evil things your way--attacks of every sort, both 
physical and spiritual--pray in the name of the Mightier One, Jesus Christ, who 
has defeated the devil on the cross.  Name the things for which you need help, 
and call on God for protection and deliverance.  He promises to hear you and to 
help you.

“Call upon me in the day of trouble; I will deliver you, and you shall glorify 
me.”  And so we conclude our praying the way we began, by praising and 
glorifying God.  “For Thine is the kingdom and the power and the glory forever 
and ever.”  Sing a hymn as part of your daily prayers.  I highly recommend 
this.  Praising God in song, rejoicing in the Lord, will not only lift your 
spirits, it will also stimulate and spur on your faith, as you dwell on the 
goodness of God.  “O Lord, open my lips, and my mouth will declare your praise.”

With such a prayer as the Lord’s Prayer, whether we pray it by itself or use it 
as a pattern for praying our own specific petitions--in any case, when we pray 
thus, knowing that we have a gracious and merciful God who hears us and 
promises to answer, then what else can we say but “Amen”?  Yes, yes, it shall 
be so!  For God has commanded us to pray, he has promised to hear us, he 
invites us to come to him as his dear children, and Jesus himself teaches us to 
pray these very words and in this very way!  If that doesn’t merit an “Amen,” I 
don’t know what does!

Yes, if Jesus gives us this prayer and teaches us to pray in this way, we can 
be certain and confident in our praying.  For who is Jesus but the very Son of 
God, who came from heaven from the Father’s side?  Who is Jesus but the one who 
reveals the Father to us, through whom we know the Father’s heart?  We come to 
God and call on him as “our” Father, because we are coming in company with 
Jesus, the one-and-only Son of the Father, in a unique sense.  Through Christ, 
we have gained access to God and this grace in which we now stand.  For Christ 
has opened the way to God through his blood shed for us on the cross.  Our sins 
stood in the way and prevented our access to the Father, but Jesus has opened 
the new and living way through his body.  Having won forgiveness for us by his 
death, Christ has risen and ascended into heaven and presents that shed blood 
as the perfect sacrifice for our sins, that intercedes for us, that gives us 
access to the
 throne of God, where we will find help and grace when we need it.  The Lord’s 
Prayer becomes possible because of the Lord’s Blood shed on our behalf.

And so now through Christ, joined to him in Baptism, we are brothers of Jesus, 
and the Father becomes our Father, too.  And we have been given the Holy 
Spirit, from whom we have received the spirit of sonship, by which we cry out, 
“Abba, Father!”  What a great and glorious privilege we have been gifted with 
to call on our Father in prayer!

And what a great and glorious prayer we have to do it with!  The Lord’s Prayer, 
a prayer given to us by our Lord Jesus Christ himself, in which all of our 
needs and all of God’s gifts are summed up for us in one brief prayer.  You can 
pray it every day, two or three times a day, but this is a prayer that is ever 
new, every time we pray it--because our needs, always changing, will always 
fall under its comprehensive petitions.  And God’s gifts, which are even 
greater than our needs--all of God’s gifts, which he pours out on us day after 
day--all of those countless gifts are packed into this little prayer.

The Lord’s Prayer, “A Prayer That Sums It All Up.”  Only 70 words, but it will 
take us 70 years, 80, 90 years, to pray it--every day of our life, until the 
good Lord gives us a blessed end and graciously takes us to himself in heaven.  
Amen, Amen!  Yes, yes, it shall be so!


Charles Henrickson
4749 Melissa Jo Ln
St. Louis, MO 63128
(314) 845-8811 (home)
(314) 779-8108 (cell)
[email protected]

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