The Introduction
The Jesus Prayer has its origin in this parable. The text of the prayer is simple: “Lord Jesus Christ, have mercy on me a sinner”. Although prayed since the sixth century, the modern technique associated with this prayer – controlled breathing and mantra-like repetitions – probably didn’t come into use until the fourteenth century. Like any prayer, the point isn’t to perfect the technique but to find the right spirit.
The tax collector in the parable had the right spirit, even if he couldn’t imagine the technique that history would form around his prayer. He simply bowed his head, acknowledged his sins, and counted on God’s mercy. The Pharisee, who had more style and undoubtedly greater technique, gave himself over to self-celebration, reporting his good deeds in the event God might have missed them. In the process, he missed the heart of prayer, which is humility.
The lesson on prayer is simple. Pray however you want, but be sure of two things: that you DO pray, and that your heart is invested in your prayer.
How do pride and humility figure in your experience of prayer?
The Scripture (Luke 18:14)
Jesus commented, “This tax man, not the other, went home made right with God. If you walk around with your nose in the air, you’re going to end up flat on your face, but if you’re content to be simply yourself, you will become more than yourself”.
The Story – I’ve Been Healed
We all like to be in the in crowd. It’s no fun to get picked last for a team (especially after the kid with the cast) or find yourself the only person without a date for graduation. We find ways to carve out a niche for ourselves, even in the face of rejection. (Case in point: My school lunch table wasn’t filled with outcasts; we were the kids who were too cool to care what other people thought. Yeah, that’s the ticket.)
The parable of the Pharisee and the tax collector reminds us that – no matter what group we’d like to be in – we’re all in one group together: sinners. This should not cause us to focus constantly on our failings, though. It helps to be mindful of where we’ve fallen short and strive always to do better, but the Good News is that God picks all players from our team. The only people who don’t find a place at table are those who think they deserve somewhere better to be or some better group to spend time with. All are invited to God’s banquet.
The Connection
As humans, sometimes we cannot help comparing ourselves to others or calling attention to what we did well so that we that can receive praise. We cultivate a spirit of humility by living a life full of gratitude for God’s blessings and by a sincere awareness of our dependence upon God. Help your students to understand the difference between how the Pharisee and the tax collector behaved. Help those you teach to choose the path of humility and to recognise their need of God in all things.
The Commissioning
The listening is over, now is the time for action!
We will have done with self-glorification, we will have done with self-justification,
we will have done with denial, we will have done with apathy,
we will have done with pride.
And you will walk humbly before your God?
We will! Amen.
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