Intro
Jesus says, “Whatever you ask.”  So what have you asked of God?  Jesus says, 
“Whatever you ask the Father … He will give you.”  So what have you asked the 
Father?  Was it a want or a need?  And did you get it?

But have your prayers become sparse and spindly, because you haven’t received 
what you have asked?  Have you prayed believing, yet still disbelieving because 
of your experiences?  Have you wanted God to hear and answer your prayers, but 
doubted that He even bothers to listen?

You are not alone.  Job, in the Old Testament, said, “[O God,] I cry out to you 
for help, but you won’t answer me.  When I stand up, you merely look at me.  
You have become cruel, and with your mighty hand, you persecute me” (Job 
30:20-21).

Main Body
When we hear Jesus tell us, “Whatever you ask the Father in my name he will 
give you,” we often only hear, “Whatever you ask the Father …he will give you.” 
 Did you catch what was missing?  It’s the phrase, “In my name.”  Or sometimes 
we think that by simply ending a prayer, by saying, “In Jesus’ name,” God the 
Father cannot deny whatever we ask of Him.

With a deformed theology like that, prayer has mutated into selfish words we 
say to get what we want from God.  In some churches, the use of “prayer 
warriors” and prayer chains have only fostered this false teaching, all so we 
can get God to do what we want Him to do.

Trust me, I’m not against praying.  And I’m not against prayer chains.  Prayer 
chains are a way we can help bear one another’s burdens (Galatians 6:2).  
Prayer chains are a way we can live out our faith.  But if a prayer chain 
exists to barrage God with enough requests to wear Him down, to convince Him to 
do whatever you ask, then I am against such prayer chains.

For such a way of praying is not based on faith, but on works.  Our requests 
don’t wear God down.  God is not that weak.  And God won’t hear a prayer just 
because more people are praying to Him.  God is not that deaf.

Don’t live in the shallows of such a prayer life.  For that’s not praying in 
Jesus’ name.  And--based on what Jesus said--true prayers the Father answers 
must be in His name.  Do you not yet realize that God’s disposition toward you 
is based on His Son, Jesus?  It’s not based on anything you do.  So why should 
this reality change between you and God when it comes to prayer?

You see, no matter how many prayers warriors storm the throne of God, it won’t 
change the Father’s disposition toward you.  For how the Father sees you and 
responds to you is based on Christ, not you.  This is what Jesus promised His 
disciples--and through them--all Christians: “Whatever you ask the Father IN MY 
NAME, he will give you.”

So, if your prayer life has one disappointment after another, it’s not because 
you have prayed.  It’s not because you may have prayed improperly.  And it’s 
not because you may have only prayed with just a smidgen of faith.  It’s that 
you don’t know what praying in Jesus’ name means.

When Jesus invites you to pray to the Father “in His name,” He is inviting you 
to pray based on who He is and what He does.  It’s praying based on His cross, 
atonement, and redeeming work.  The words “in the name of Jesus” aren’t magic.  
Those words mean that we have access to God the Father through His Son.  Those 
words mean that God hears your prayers because of what His Son, Jesus, has 
done--and continues to do--for you.  Praying in Jesus’ name means that when you 
are praying, it’s as if Jesus Himself is doing the praying.

That’s what praying “in Jesus’ name” means.  The sounds, letters, and syllables 
of Jesus’ name mean nothing in themselves.  What carries their true meaning is 
what they represent--Jesus’ life-giving work.  That means everything.  If 
simply saying the proper sounds meant everything, then all would already be 
lost.  For in the language of the original, New Testament Greek, “Jesus” is 
[Greek pronunciation].  And I have no idea what the original Aramaic sounded 
like.

Still, Jesus does tell us, “Whatever you ask the Father in my name He will give 
you.”  So we can ask for anything and get it, right?  Not if it’s praying based 
on something or someone other than who Jesus is and what He does.  That’s the 
linchpin.  If you are praying for what you want, but not what Jesus wants for 
you, then you are praying in your name, not in His name.

Praying in Jesus’ name is not praying from your sinful nature, but from the new 
self given you in Christ.  It’s praying for whatever God wants to give you.  
That’s what Jesus wants you to pray for; that’s praying in Jesus’ name.

Praying in Jesus’ name doesn’t mean that you simply utter the noise, that you 
simply make the vocal sounds that say “Jesus.”  If that were true, then why did 
God the Father answer the prayers of His Old Testament saints?  They didn’t 
even know Jesus’ name would be “Jesus.”  By faith, they believed in the Messiah 
to come.  Yet, Jesus didn’t have the name “Jesus” until He had human flesh from 
the Blessed Virgin.

Think about this.  If you ask for something that gets in the way of your 
salvation, even out of ignorance, is that praying in Jesus’ name?  No, it’s 
not.  If you ask for something sinful, even out of ignorance, is that praying 
in Jesus’ name?  No, it’s not.  Praying in Jesus name is not simply making the 
right sounds.  It’s relying on Jesus’ righteousness, which brings you life, 
forgiveness, salvation, and joy.  And it’s the same when you pray.

And so you pray, not only because Jesus tells you to pray.  You pray because 
it’s who you are in Christ Jesus.  You pray because prayer is the Lord’s Word 
actively working in your life and being.  Prayer is faith expressing itself in 
living flesh.  Prayer isn’t just doing what you should do, but it’s being who 
you are in Christ.

For you can only pray because of whom Christ has made you to be: a redeemed, 
forgiven, and holy saint of God.  And because of that, you “ask” as Jesus bids 
you to do.  For you have access to the Father, through the Son, because the 
Holy Spirit has given you the Lord’s Word.  And with that Lord’s Word, you are 
in communion with God: a union and an intimacy that not only enables, but also 
gives you the confidence to speak, say, and ask.

And when you pray like that, don’t stop.  Keep asking and praying until you are 
dead--that is, dead to sin and alive in Christ!  Keep praying like that until 
God calls you home to eternity.  For prayer is faith in action.  Prayer is what 
faith does.

Pray then for what you will, dear Christian, to the Father through His Son in 
the Holy Spirit.  You needn’t worry about what to say or how to say it, or even 
about messing up when you pray (Matthew 10:19).  If you worry about messing up 
when you pray, you will never pray.  Know this: even your messed-up prayers are 
forgiven in Christ.

So pray, because your heavenly Father knows what you need even before you ask 
Him.  But ask anyway, for that is what faith does.  And because your Mediator, 
Jesus Christ, has made the Father merciful toward you, He’s going to give you 
everything according to His will, whether you ask for it properly or not.  In 
truth, God will give you what He wills even when you don’t ask for it.  That’s 
the gracious God you have.

God’s mercy and grace do not depend on your prayers.  And that is good.  For if 
His disposition toward you depended on anything you did, even prayer, you would 
have no hope.  Prayer is a fruit of faith, and our fruits, our works, do not 
save us.  Yet, because prayer is a fruit of faith, faith causes us to pray.

Conclusion
And so with God the Holy Spirit moving you, and Jesus interceding before the 
Father, you pray.  And your prayer will always be the right prayer.  It will be 
the right prayer, even if, for some reason, you have prayed the wrong words or 
have mistakenly prayed for something sinful.  For Jesus will change that prayer 
into what it should be.  That’s what it means when Scripture says that Jesus is 
at “the right hand of God, who is also interceding for” you (Romans 8:34).

And with the Holy Spirit prompting you, and Jesus interceding for you, how can 
the Father not hear your prayers?  He will hear, and He will answer, whether 
you are a prayer warrior or not.  For the only warrior you need, is the One who 
battled for you on the cross--and won!  Amen.


 --
Rich Futrell, Pastor
Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church, Kimberling City, MO
http://sothl.com

Where we receive and confess the faith of the Church (in and with the Augsburg 
Confession): The faith once delivered to the saints, the faith of Christ Jesus, 
His Word of the Gospel, His full forgiveness of sins, His flesh and blood given 
and poured out for us, and His gracious gift of life for body, soul, and spirit.

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