"It’s Okay to Ask Questions"
Ninth Sunday after Pentecost
James the Elder, Apostle
July 25, 2010
Luke 11:1-13

The Ten Commandments teach us to confess our sin. The Creed teaches us
to confess our faith. The Lord’s Prayer teaches us holy living. I have
here a copy of a book that is familiar to us Lutherans: Luther’s Small
Catechism. Our new confirmands may remember what I told them about
this little book—we call it Luther’s Small Catechism simply to
distinguish it from the many catechisms that are in various Christian
Church bodies. The Catechism that we’re familiar with was around long
before Luther came on the scene. It consisted of the Ten Commandments,
the Creed, and the Lord’s Prayer. A Catechism teaches the way of the
Christian life. It does this by asking questions and then giving the
answers. As Lutherans we are familiar with the question asked over and
over again in the Catechism: What does this mean?

The disciples have a question of their own of Jesus. It’s a request:
Lord, teach us to pray. We can think of their request as a question:
Lord, how do we pray? We have confessed our sins. We have confessed
our faith. Now how do we pray? How do we live out the life we have
received in Your forgiveness, the faith into which you have brought
us?

Jesus responds with the words we have come to know as the Lord’s
Prayer. He responds by teaching them and us to pray. He teaches us
holy living. The life of the Christian is a life of prayer. In the
Psalms the psalmist says he meditates on God’s Word day and night. In
1 Thessalonians Paul exhorts us to pray constantly.

Did the psalmist have an exaggerated sense of his holiness? How could
he meditate on the Word of God day and night? Was Paul engaging in
hyperbole when he suggests that we can pray constantly? How can we
pray without ceasing? How are these things possible? God Himself in
His Word teaches us that it is impossible of ourselves. He teaches us
as well that nothing is impossible with Him. We sin even in our
confessing of our sin. We are lacking in faith even as we confess the
faith. That’s why our Lord teaches us with the Ten Commandments and
the Creed. That’s why our Lord teaches us to pray and in holy living
in the Lord’s Prayer. Our Lord teaches us to pray and teaches us holy
living through a lifetime of praying the Lord’s Prayer.

Throughout your lifetime, as you pray, as you learn the holy living
God has called you to I guarantee you you will have questions. That’s
okay. Remember the Catechism? It’s a book made up of questions. It’s
okay to ask questions. God has the answers. Just observe any child for
a relatively short period of time and you will see a person full of
questions. This is good. This is how they learn. We all can probably
remember a time or two when we were growing up and embarrassed
ourselves because we asked a stupid question. Well, for some of us it
happens even when we’re adults.

Just two weeks ago our synod met in Convention, which is a major event
in the life of our church body. It occurs every three years and makes
decisions that affect who we are as a body of Christians and how we’ll
go forward into the future. I was glad to be a part of it and was
excited for the opportunity to possibly go up to one of the
microphones to make comments regarding some of the important matters
we were discussing and deciding. I’m here to tell you that I did make
it up to one of the microphones. And I’m also here to tell you that in
the presence of two thousand people I asked a question that left me
making a fool of myself.

We were being taught how to use the electronic keypads to vote on
elections of people to various positions. On the pretend ballot there
were ten names and we were to vote for multiple names. The person next
to me asked how we were to punch in number ten, if we should press 0
or 1 and 0, and I said I hadn’t heard how to do that so I would go up
to the microphone and ask. I stated that there were some of us who
wanted to know how we should punch in a two digit number. The response
was simple: for ten you press 1 and 0. That brought laughter to the
crowd and I was left walking back to my seat wishing I had never asked
the question.

Even though I was embarrassed I did receive some vindication. The man
sitting right next to the microphone said to me right after I asked
the question, “I was wondering the same thing.” I have to think that
out of 1200 delegates there were at least a few more who wondered the
same thing. So I might have been the fall guy, but I think it was okay
for me to ask the question.

I wonder how the disciple who asked Jesus how to pray felt? Was he
embarrassed? Were the other apostles getting a good laugh at his
expense? But I for one am forever grateful for that disciple who went
up to Jesus and threw caution to the wind and asked the question:
Lord, teach us how to pray. It may have been embarrassing, but his
admittance that we don’t know how to pray brought forth some of the
greatest words ever delivered from the mouth of Jesus. It’s okay to
ask questions.

Imagine Abraham in the Old Testament reading. The holy God has made
His decision. The evil before Him in Sodom had gone on too long, He
would wipe out the city. Abraham in fear and trembling approached God:
Lord, what about those who believe in You? Will You destroy them as
well? Who was Abraham to question the holy and almighty God? He
himself was a sinner. But God welcomed Abraham’s questions. Even
though Abraham was bold to keep bartering God down God responded in
patience and compassion. It was okay that Abraham was asking his
questions.

In the Epistle reading Paul responds to those who would make those who
are asking questions to grow in the faith feel small. We’ve all known
those Christians who think they know it all. They will expound on
theological matters as if they’ve memorized every word of the Bible
and as if they themselves are such a theologian that no one should
question them. And that since you are asking questions that seem so
simple you obviously are not a very strong Christian. Paul says that
no one should belittle you in that way. If you’ve got questions about
God and the Bible and living as a Christian, ask away! Don’t be
afraid. It’s okay to ask questions. Yes, you may embarrass yourself,
you may feel funny, people may even laugh at you or look down upon
you, but I guarantee you that there are others who will be grateful
you asked because they will have wanted to know the same thing. Jesus
never laughed at anyone who asked questions. He answered them. He
didn’t look down on them or make them feel small. He responded in
patience and compassion.

That said, the kind of questions we’re talking about are questions of
seeking God in faith. God does not put up with self-seeking questions.
James and his brother John on one occasion asked of Jesus a
preposterous request. We would like to sit at your right and left hand
in Your Kingdom. Jesus rightfully showed them that they were not
seeking the things of God but of themselves.

But Jesus is glad to hear our questions of seeking His will. We’re all
growing in the faith, and how will we grow if we don’t ask what we
don’t know? Jesus even goes farther than that. He wants us to be bold:

And [Jesus] said to them, “Which of you who has a friend will go to
him at midnight and say to him, ‘Friend, lend me three loaves, for a
friend of mine has arrived on a journey, and I have nothing to set
before him’; and he will answer from within, ‘Do not bother me; the
door is now shut, and My children are with me in bed. I cannot get up
and give you anything’? I tell you, though he will not get up and give
him anything because he is his friend, yet because of his impudence he
will rise and give him whatever he needs.”

If you had to do this you’d be embarrassed. You would kick yourself
that you actually rang the doorbell. Your friends would laugh at you
that you had the gall to bug your neighbor for such a reason in the
middle of the night. But when it comes to God, ask. Be as bold as if
you were to wake up your neighbor for something as little as food. God
wants you to ask Him when there is something troubling you. It’s okay.

Sometimes Jesus is accused of being up in the clouds. He certainly
isn’t here: “And I tell you, ask, and it will be given to you; seek,
and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you. For everyone
who asks receives, and the one who seeks finds, and to the one who
knocks it will be opened.” It’s okay to ask questions. When you are
struggling with a passage of Scripture, ask. When you’re facing an
interview for a new job and you’re nervous, feeling not up to the
task, ask. Pray to God for guidance and wisdom. When you’re at odds
with your child, or your parent, or your spouse, ask God to help you
see where you yourself are at fault so that you can talk with your
loved one in humility and to seek reconciliation.

We grow up asking questions. Why should we stop once we become adults?
Jesus says: “What father among you, if his son asks for a fish, will
instead of a fish give him a serpent; or if he asks for an egg, will
give him a scorpion? If you then, who are evil, know how to give good
gifts to your children, how much more will the heavenly Father give
the Holy Spirit to those who ask Him!” It’s a pretty simple thing that
if our child asks for what they need that we’ll give it to them. We
love them and want to take care of them. And this despite our being
sinful people. How much more will God hear our payers, listen to our
questions, give us what we need? How much more will the one who is not
evil, has no sin in Him, who is indeed holy and almighty and merciful
and patient and compassionate give us the Holy Spirit when we ask?

It’s okay to ask questions. It’s okay to admit that you do not live as
God has called you to live. It’s a joy to know that your Lord has
given you what you need. He gives you what to pray for. In His Holy
Prayer He lays out for you the holy life to which He has called you.
When you go home and pray the Lord’s Prayer, don’t just pray it
through. Spend some time meditating on it. Break out your Catechism
and ask the question, What does this mean? after each petition. Take
comfort in your God and Lord who is ready and willing to listen to
your questions and even rejoices when you ask Him. He is your Heavenly
Father who loves you and cares for you. How much more will He love you
when He has given you all things in His Son who gave up His own life
for you?

When He gives you His Son He gives you His Holy Spirit. The Holy
Spirit intercedes for you with groans that words cannot express. The
Holy Spirit loves to take your questions and deliver them up to your
Heavenly Father. Ask and ye shall receive. Amen.

SDG

--
Pastor Paul L. Willweber
Prince of Peace Lutheran Church [LCMS]
San Diego, California
princeofpeacesd.net
three-taverns.net

It is the spirit and genius of Lutheranism to be liberal in everything
except where the marks of the Church are concerned.
[Henry Hamann, On Being a Christian]
___________________________________________________________________
 'CAT 41 Sermons & Devotions' consists of works that are, unless
 otherwise noted, the copyrighted property of the various authors;
 posting of such gives members of this list implied consent for
 redistribution _with_attribution_ unless otherwise specified by
 the author (as long as no charge is made for the work and it is
 not made part of a compilation), as well as for quoting or use
 in a congregational setting _with_or_without_attribution_.

 Note: This list's default reply is to the *poster*, NOT the list.
 Do *not* reply to the list with your comments, but to the poster.

Subscribe?              Send ANY note to: [email protected]
Unsubscribe?            Send ANY note to: [email protected]
Archive?                <http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/>

For more information on this or other lists offered by Confess And Teach
For Unity, you can contact the CAT 41 list administrator at:

    Rev. Fr. Eric J. Stefanski <MoM [at] lists (dot) cat41 <dot> org>

Reply via email to