Scripture: Luke 11:1-13
Journal: What do the words ask, seek and knock do within you? Which one is most present in your life of
prayer? Which one is most absent? Why?
How are the three intended to fit together?
Reflection:
It sounds pretty simple, right? Jesus tells his disciples, “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.”
(Luke 11:9-10) So all we have to do is
knock and knock and knock, until eventually Jesus gets so tired of the knocking
that he opens the door and gives us what we want? I don’t think so. What if we are knocking on a door that was
never supposed to be—or never intended to be—opened? What then?
I think that’s where the ask
and the seek parts come in. There
is a sequence here that we must pay attention to. These verses are not carte blanche to ask for
whatever we want, knowing that if we are persistent enough in our asking, God
will eventually break down and give it to us.
I mean, what if we come to him asking for a snake or a scorpion? What then?
Perhaps ask does not
mean asking for whatever we want, but asking him what he wants. And perhaps seek does not mean seeking
our own will and preference, but seeking God’s will and God’s preference. For after we ask God what he wants and
seek his will and his way in whatever we might be praying about, then we
can knock and knock and knock, and rest assured that when the timing is
right he will open the door.
For at times it is just as
likely that God’s answer to our deepest prayers might come in the form of a
closed door, as it does an opened one.
And far be it from us to keep knocking and knocking on a closed door,
and not receiving the guidance and direction it has to offer. That is why ask and seek must
come first. And that is why Jesus used
all three of these words as he was teaching the disciples how to pray.
Prayer
Closing
Prayer: Lord Jesus, help us to always ask, seek, and
knock, knowing that all three of these acts are essential to the process of
prayer. Amen.
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