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Summary: Oswald Chambers makes a revolutionary observation about prayer. This is a detailed look of different aspects of prayers, and word studies about prayer. Lastly we consider Oswald Chamber’s comment, looking at the Scriptural connections to it.

PRAYER NOURISHES THE NEW LIFE

Dan. 1:15

INTRODUCTION

A. HUMOR

1. THE MECHANIC

a. Linda meets up with her friend Jill as she is picking her car up from the mechanic. "Everything ok with your car now?" Linda asked.

b. "Yes, thank goodness," Jill replied. "I was worried that my mechanic might try to rip me off, so I was relieved when he told me all I needed was blinker fluid."

2. THE DOCTOR

a. Doctor: "You'll live to be 60." Patient: "But I am 60." Doctor: "See! What did I tell you?"

b. The doctor gave me six months to live. I couldn't pay his bill, so the doctor gave me another six months.

c. The Doctor called Mrs. Cohen, "Mrs. Cohen, your check came back." Mrs. Cohen answered, "So did my arthritis!"

B. A THOUGHT ABOUT PRAYER

Oswald Chambers, My Utmost for His Highest, Aug. 28 entry:

“Prayer is not a normal part of the life of the natural man. We hear it said that a person’s life will suffer if he doesn’t pray, but I question that. What will suffer is the life of the Son of God in him, which is nourished not by food, but by prayer. When a person is born again from above, the life of the Son of God is born in him, and he can either starve or nourish that life. Prayer is the way that the life of God in us is nourished….We look upon prayer simply as a means of getting things for ourselves, but the biblical purpose of prayer is that we may get to know God Himself.”

C. THESIS

1. Tonight we’re going to take a detailed look of different aspects of prayers, and word studies about prayer. Lastly we’ll range around Oswald Chamber’s comment, looking at the Scriptural connections to it.

2. The title of this message is “Prayer Nourishes the New Life.”

I. WHAT IS PRAYER?

A. DIFFERENT FORMS OF PRAYER

1. Bowing Ps. 95:6

2. Kneeling Ps. 95:6; Dan. 6:10.

3. Standing Ps. 135:1-3

4. Laying prostrate, Lk. 17:16

5. Laying down in bed, Ps. 63:6

6. Silently, Ps. 46:10; Hab. 2:20;

7. Speaking Ps. 71:8; 98:1;

8. Shouting Ps. 89:15; 98:6; Ezra 3:11;

9. Lifting up Hands Ps. 63:3-5; 141:2; 1 Tim. 2:8;

10. Walking & Leaping 2 Sam. 6:16; Acts 3:7-8.

B. HUMOR: FOUR TYPES OF PRAYER

1. Mark Gellman, a rabbi who often appears on the Today Show and writes periodically for Newsweek says there are four kinds of prayer: Gimme, Thanks, Oops, and Wow! Thanks is obvious. Oops means confessing our sins. Wow is when we overflow in praise for who God is, not just for what he’s done for us lately.

2. We do have a human tendency to distort that first element of prayer. We can turn asking into “Gimmie.” James says, “You do not have, because you do not ask God. When you ask, you do not receive, because you ask with wrong motives, that you may spend what you get on your pleasures” (James 4:2-3).

C. DEFINITION

1. Prayer is defined as “the act or practice of praying to God; a supplication, expression, earnest request or wish addressed to God.”

2. But I want to add that prayer (should) form a connection between us and God, through which flows the life of God into our spiritual beings.

3. Jesus talked about this in the analogy of the Vine & Branches, John 15:4-6. The sap of life must flow from the trunk of a tree into its branches, or they’ll die. So with us.

4. “And we all, with unveiled face, continually seeing as in a mirror the glory of the Lord, are progressively being transformed into His image from glory to glory…” 2 Cor. 3:18, AMP.

5. This is a description of the overall effect of daily prayer, behold God and letting God’s Word change us into the same image through the Spirit.

II. ROOT MEANINGS OF O.T. WORDS FOR PRAYER

I found 14 different O.T. words that were translated “pray, prayer” in the KJV. Some of these words had very interesting root meanings, that reflect back on prayer.

1. Ge. 20:7 “palal,” Abram was told to pray for Abimelech. This word involved the sense of “judging” as part of the prayer.

2. 2 Chron. 6:32 “chanah.” Solomon’s prayer that God would hear the prayer of the scattered Israelites if they turned back to Him. It means “to bend or to stoop.”

3. Ezra 6:10 “tsela,” Chaldean, from “tsame”--“to thirst.”

4. Job 21:15 “paga” means to “impinge” or to ‘drive something in,’ like a wedge. Thus to Intercede is to drive in the wedge of the supernatural.

5. Job 33:26 “athar.” Elihu tells of the restoration of a righteous man. His prayer is to God like one who “burns incense.”

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