Intro
When our fallen flesh thinks of prayer, it merely sees it as a means to an 
end—a way to get what you want!  And such sinful thinking is also rampant in 
the Church.  After all, every member of Christ’s Church in the world is not 
just a saint, but also a full-fledged sinner.  Haven’t you wanted to pray in a 
way that would guarantee that you would get what you’ve asked of God?  I have.  

Main Body
And who here has never tried to make a deal with God?  Haven’t you prayed, “If 
you do this for me, Lord, I promise to do…”  You fill in the blank.  At the 
root of that prayer is the universal human ambition to manipulate God, to get 
Him to do what you want Him to do.  In its crassest form, it’s cutting a deal 
with God, all so He would do whatever He needs to do to fulfill some wish or 
yearning that you have.  

But let’s pause for a moment, and hear the Apostle Paul’s counsel.  He wrote to 
the congregation at Corinth, pointing them back to the people of Israel and how 
they floundered in their faith.  He wrote, “Now their experiences serve as 
examples for us, so we won’t set our hearts on evil as they did” (1 Corinthians 
10:6).  What was at the root of their sin?  It was asking to have what they 
wanted, based on their sinful nature. 

The people of Israel griped and grumbled.  They grew tired of God’s provision 
for them, asking for meat instead of manna.  They wanted the leeks and onions 
of Egypt, instead of what God had for them in the Promised Land.  They wanted 
to worship God in the ways they knew and liked.  They had lived in Egypt for 
400 years, so trying to worship God through a golden calf was nothing weird for 
them.  And yet, Moses’ brother, Aaron, had the boldness to call that sin “a 
feast to the Lord” (Exodus 32:5).

But wanting and asking for what is sinful wasn’t just something the Israelites 
did.  We do that, as well.  And what happens when we do that?  What happens?  
We’re asking God to join with us in our sin!  It goes back to the devil’s 
original temptation in the Garden: “Do this and you will be like God” (Genesis 
3:5).  That’s at the heart of sin—it wants to rule over God, all so you have 
your way and get want you want.  

When that sin infects our prayers, it tries to get God to be our fetch-it boy.  
It’s about getting what you want, instead of what God wants for you.  It’s 
about being in control.

You’re not strong enough to be your own god.  Repent!  Scripture even tells us, 
“We don’t know what to pray for as we should” (Romans 8:26).  So, you shouldn’t 
get whatever you ask from God—that would be a disaster!  God is God.  He is 
your Father.  And even on this Mother’s Day, God the Father still knows what is 
best. 

Now, you might think that your problems are money or illness.  You might think 
it’s your messed-up family or an unfair boss.  You might even think it’s your 
pastor, who preaches and teaches some doctrines in Scripture that you haven’t 
heard before, and yet, you make your experiences the final authority and judge 
in God’s Church.   

But it’s God the Father who knows best.  He knows the real problem that stands 
at the center of it all—sin.  And so what did God do?  For starters, He chose 
not to answer humanity’s prayers—at least, not as we asked them.  Instead, He 
sent His Son into our flesh to bear our sin.  But get this: Jesus didn’t suffer 
and die for theoretical, abstract sins.  He suffered for real sins, including 
your sinful prayers, which you expect God to answer as your sinful flesh would 
like it.  That’s why Jesus was crucified. 

But who would’ve seen that coming?  In all of human history, who would’ve asked 
for that?  From our perspective, that’s just crazy.  How can someone’s 
seemingly useless death benefit another?  That just sounds like some wacky, 
hair-brained scheme.

But that’s what you needed.  That was the way of salvation for you.  God the 
Son had to become a human, so, in His death, He could pour out His lifeblood 
for you.  So, aren’t you glad that God didn’t answer the sin-born prayers of 
His sin-born people—at least not in the way they asked it?  Instead of letting 
us talk Him into giving us what our sinfulness wanted, God gave us what we 
needed!

And so, rejoice when Jesus tells you how prayer really works.  The key to 
prayer—according to Jesus—is not learning how to get what you want, but 
learning how to pray in His name.  But, for us, that’s a sticky wicket.  

How does our fallen nature understand what praying in Jesus’ name means?  It 
hears the truth that Jesus teaches and comes to a depraved conclusion; our 
sinful nature is so good at that (or should I say “bad” at that).  And what 
does it think?  It’s that Jesus’ name becomes a magical phrase or mantra that 
allows us to manipulate God.  

What do you want?  Tack on the phrase, “in Jesus’ name.”  Then, God has to 
answer your prayer in the way that you asked it.  Isn’t that what Jesus says, 
“Whatever you ask the Father in my name, he will give it to you” (John 16:23)?

What does Jesus’ name literally mean?  You heard that in last week’s sermon.  
Jesus’ name means, “God saves.”  Jesus is the Lord, who saves His people.  
That’s Jesus’ name—it tells us who He is and what He does: He saves us.  

Think about how Jesus, the God who saves, prayed the night before He went to 
His death.  Jesus asked His Father for another way to save us, a way that would 
allow the cup of suffering to bypass Him.  His prayer was earnest.  He sweated 
drops of blood, and His soul stirred deeply within Him (Matthew 26:39).  

But what did Jesus pray after that?  He said, “Not my will, but yours [O 
Father], be done” (Luke 22:42).  That was a prayer in the name of God the 
Father.  That prayer lined up with who God is and His will for Jesus.  It 
recognized that God’s name and who He is are inseparably joined.

Here’s an example that might help.  If you played cops and robbers as a child, 
invariably, you would say to the thief who was running away, “Stop in the name 
of the law!”  At first, that sounds odd, doesn’t it?  Why should the bad guy 
stop “in the name of the law”?  Does the “name of the law” have any power over 
the robber?

In that childhood game, the bad guy stops “in the name of the law” because with 
the “name of the law” comes the authority and power of the law.  The “name of 
the law” and the law are connected.  So, stopping in the name of the law is 
stopping because of what the law is and what it says.  That’s why the “name of 
the law” has all the authority of the law itself.  Because of that, the bad guy 
stops running away—well, at least as we played cops and robbers in my childhood 
years.

Praying in Jesus’ name connects your prayer to Jesus.  Now, remember, Jesus’ 
name means, “God saves.”  So, it’s recognizing that Jesus is interceding to God 
the Father (Romans 8:34) for you, not as you may want, but in a way that saves. 
 

Imagine praying this prayer: “God, cause my neighbor to have a car wreck.  He’s 
making me angry.  In Jesus’ name, Amen.”  How will God answer that prayer, with 
Jesus interceding for you, as He brings it to God the Father?  Just as Jesus 
removes your sin from you in His death, so also does His intercession for you 
remove your sin from your prayers, making them acceptable to God the Father.  
So, what the Father hears, because of Jesus, is what your prayer would’ve been 
if you had no sinful nature.

So, don’t sink into despair when it seems as if God isn’t answering your 
prayers.  After all, praying in Jesus’ name is praying that His will be done, 
not yours.  And He and the Father are one (John 10:30).  So, God is answering 
all your prayers, cleansed from all their sins by Jesus, in the way that is 
best for your eternal good, your salvation.

Until then, Jesus says, “In this world, you will have trouble” (John 16:33).  
That's because the only real cure for this sin-corrupted world is to destroy it 
and create a new one.  That’s when the trouble in this world will finally be no 
more.  

The Apostle Paul puts it this way: “The whole creation has been groaning as in 
the pains of childbirth… eagerly awaiting… the redemption of our bodies” 
(Romans 8:22-23).  Until Christ returns to raise our bodies from death, the 
world will remain in its fallen state.  Hardship and sorrow will still be part 
of life in this sin-corrupted world.  

But through it all, we have this comfort: God sent His Son to save us in His 
death and resurrection.  God sends us His Spirit, through His Son, to join us 
to Himself through baptism.  That’s where we receive the beginning of our new 
birth, culminating on the Last Day.  “So, take heart, Jesus has overcome the 
world” (John 16:33).

When you are in Christ, one of the birth rights you receive is that God will 
hear and answer your prayers.   Why?  It’s because you are baptized into Jesus. 
 He makes your prayers acceptable to God.  He is interceding for you, even 
changing your sin-filled prayers into the sinless prayers that they should be.  
That’s part of what it means that Jesus makes you holy and righteous to God the 
Father.

Conclusion
So, ask and pray.  God will answer your prayers.  Oh, He won’t answer them 
based on what you may want.  But He will answer them based on what you 
need—your salvation, that which is for your eternal good.  And isn’t that what 
you really want?  Yes!  So, you see, even in your prayers, God is pointing you 
to your final redemption.  

When Jesus returns, that’s when He will make all things new.  Death will have 
died its last death, and a new sinless creation will be born from the ashes of 
the old.  For that’s when every prayer in Jesus’ name will come to its final 
and fulfilling “yes,” when God will complete all that is for your eternal good. 
 It’s as Scripture says: “In [Christ Jesus], all of God’s promises are ‘Yes’” 
(2 Corinthians 1:20).  May it ever be so!  Amen.
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