Trinity 6: The Lord’s Prayer

July 27th, 2025

Colossians 2:6–15, 16–19
Luke 11:1-13

School is finally out for summer! Yeah for the teachers, parents and children! However, the church is in a teaching season as we read and study the (hopefully) familiar gospel stories about Jesus. We are at summer school!

The lectionary spent the last three weeks in Luke 10. It started with Jesus sending out the 70 ahead of him to find labourers for the harvest. Next, Jesus tells the story of the Good Samaritan which challenges us on what it is to give and receive mercy and consider who our neighbour is. Luke 10 ends with Martha and Mary; that great lesson in balancing work and activity with the need to sit and listen at Jesus’ feet. Each of these encounters give us examples of the activity and instructions needed to spread the kingdom and show God’s love.

The start of Luke 11 takes us deeper into spending time with God. It starts with Jesus at prayer. This is the first and best way to get to know God; spending time with Him. There is obviously a quality about Jesus’ prayers and praying that provoked curiosity in the disciples. They would have seen and heard Jesus pray many times before. Finally someone is brave enough to ask Jesus to teach them how to pray.

Jesus’ gracious response is to teach them a prayer which we now recognise as the Lord’s Prayer. Jesus teaches the disciples to talk to God and to bring the whole mess and muddle of our lives, the mundane, the exciting, the big and small, to God.

That is what prayer is; talking to God. Talking. Not begging, pleading, negotiating, bargaining, hiding, pretending all is well when it is not. We have been shown work and activity, sitting and listening, and now we have a guide for talking to God.

Who taught or told you to pray? I remember as little girls, my sister and I being taught to pray by our Nana and our parents. The first prayer that we learned was the classic 18th century children’s prayer – ‘Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep’.

Now I lay me down to sleep
I pray the Lord my soul to keep
If I should die before I wake
I pray the Lord my soul to take
If in the morning light I wake
Lay down my feet
That I may take the path of love
for thy dear sake
God Bless Mommy, Daddy, Susie, Jenny, etc.
And it always ended with ‘God bless all the little children in the world. Amen.’


I realise this is a combination of the many versions (thanks to Google) but this is the one that I know. For many of us, the Lord’s Prayer might be our default prayer. Much like ‘Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep’, the wording can be different and we can use it at different times.

My version of the Lord’s Prayer is said with ‘thy’ and ‘thine’ and ‘trespasses’ not sins. Again, family influence comes into play: my Mom’s upbringing on the old Anglican Book of Common Prayer and my Dad’s love of the King James’ Bible. The language of the Lord’s Prayer is simple and intimate as it affirms the fatherhood of God. We are cared for as his children; we are reminded that God is holy and we must reflect this in our words and worship. It ends with addressing our physical, spiritual and safety needs.

The simplicity of the wording makes it easy to slide in our own needs and requests as there is a space for every plea, cry and desire; without need of particularly eloquent language. It is talking to God and bringing our concerns, which I may remind you, He already fully knows about. You are not fooling Him by withholding! I often think that God uses our prayers to bring needs and issues to our attention.

Luke 11 also reminds us of the need for persistence in prayer. I have always found the ‘Parable of the Friend at Night’ in verses 5-8 rather annoying. Just get up and give him a loaf of bread.

Jesus uses this story of the irritating friend to get the disciples to see prayer as something basic, day-to-day. Prayer does not need to be carefully sanitised or scripted. Nor do we have to worry about bringing to God only what we think he will accept. Back to: God already knows.

Prayer can come with a great sense of frustration. Has this been true in your prayer life and in the situations that have required persistence? There is always ‘work in the wait’ and a sweetness to both the prayers that have been answered through persistence and those that still await an answer. As uncomfortable as it may be we are to persist.

Jesus is encouraging the disciples to bombard God with requests, tell him everything, talk constantly to him, involve him in every part of life. We are not to limit God and prayer to Sunday mornings in a particular pew with particular words. The more we communicate with God, the more we learn about him and the more we learn about ourselves in relation to God.

In verse 9, ‘so I say to you, Ask, and it will be given to you; search, and you will find; knock, and the door will be opened for you. For everyone who asks receives, and everyone who searches finds, and for everyone who knocks, the door will be opened.’
These verses are not about the prayers we pray for the stuff, the answers, the problems that we want God to respond to. Many people feel misled when they read these verses and then ask God to heal their loved one dying of _____ (and nothing short of that), or for a million dollars or a million other things.

When these prayers are not answered in the way that is expected, it is all God’s fault. They then give up on God or turn away from faith as they have created a vision of God as a genie in the sky waiting to grant wishes. Their view of God is fundamentally flawed.

The asking, seeking, knocking that Jesus is talking about is in relation to pursuing God, talking to God, learning more about God and who we are in relation to Him. It is about seeking God’s will and not solely our convenience.
Ask for God to come into your life and He will be given to you.
Search for God and you will find Him.
Knock on the door of heaven and it will be opened for you.

Paul, in Colossians, is imploring that young community to live their lives in Christ. Stay rooted and grounded to be built up and get established. We all have needs, wants, struggles and desires, both secretly and publicly, in all areas of our lives that we (I hope) would want God to be our ever present help in trouble.
Paul goes on to warn them of all the empty deceit happening around them. That hasn’t changed! There is so much deceit and empty philosophy in the world today and it is so attractive. Ultimately it will fail. Jesus is the only one who will ever fill us. We can be alive together with him.

Finally, Luke reminds us that our Father in heaven will give us good gifts, more than we can ask or imagine. It is all for the asking.

How is your prayer life at the moment? Do you?
How is it going? Need a change or boost?
If not – why not?

Do you want to do anything about it?
Maybe you need to want to want to do something about it!

Talk to God. It is not eloquent or fancy, not just an activity for Sunday.

I am going to leave some space for a few minutes to do just that. You are not bound to your seats – get up. For some people sitting in a pew is not conducive to prayers. Kneel if you’ve got the knees for it.

Trinity 4: Neighbourhood Mercy

Vincent Van Gogh


13/7/25
Trinity 4

Colossians 1:1-14
Luke 10:25-37 – Good Samaritan


The Gospel reading this morning should be rather well known to you! When the familiar is clung on to, the significance can get lost. Many of us might hold a simplistic view of this story. There is more to the Good Samaritan than simply being a good person who helps people.

The idea for the next few minutes is to look at points in the story that often go unnoticed.

Over three weeks we have Luke 10 as the set Gospel. Last week Jesus sent out the 70 to find more labourers for the harvest. They were to cure the sick and proclaim the coming of the kingdom. The disciples returned to Jesus with joy as they told him about all the amazing things they had seen and done. Jesus is overjoyed by their news and rejoiced in the Holy Spirit and prays to God the Father. Jesus blesses them for what they saw and did.

What are the disciples seeing and hearing? The answer is Jesus; they are seeing His works and hearing His words. The disciples had amazing experiences and saw the amazing power they were sent out with at work.

How is our seeing and hearing this morning? Are we missing out because we are blind and deaf to the works and words of Jesus? It happens sometimes; even to the best, most holy of us!

Many of the problems in our world and in our own lives (to some extent) stem from blindness and deafness to those around us. How can we love our neighbours as ourselves if we are blind and deaf? Many people are lonely, have no one to visit them. Some people can go for days or weeks without seeing or speaking to another person. Are we watching and listening out for those people? Are we one of those people? The priest and Levite demonstrated this kind of blindness as they passed by the beaten man. They saw but did not act; moved to the other side of the road.

I say this as much to myself as I say to you: how is our seeing and hearing? Do we need a check-up? Is there someone who this week we could practice on?

What is the Question?!

Immediately following Jesus’ comments the young lawyer stood up to test Him. What is the young lawyer really asking? His question is genuine, “What must I do to inherit eternal life?”

Jesus answers the question with a question, “what is written in the law?” The lawyer (no fool himself) gives Jesus a concise, A+ answer: “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, with all your strength, and with all your mind; and you shall love your neighbour as yourself.”

Jesus provides an A++ answer: “You have given the right answer; do this, and you will live.” The young lawyer wants more. Maybe the lawyer really means, “Who is not my neighbour?” As in: how much love are we talking here, Jesus? Can you be specific? Where should I draw the line? Outside my front door? At the edges of my neighbourhood? Along the religious and cultural boundaries I was raised with to keep me pure and holy? I mean, there are lines, aren’t there? There must be lines. We can’t be neighbours with everyone!”

We all have lines but are they in the right place?

The Good Samaritan was not blind or deaf that day on the road from Jerusalem to Jericho. He was likely inconvenienced and out-of-pocket by helping the beaten man. He did it anyway.

The Good Samaritan would have not have been the good guy in the original telling of this story. If we put it in a modern context: An Israeli or Russian soldier is robbed, and a Ukrainian or Palestinian villager saves their life. A racist white cop is robbed, and an African-American teenager saves his life. A transgender woman is robbed, and an anti-LGBTQ activist saves her life. An outspoken atheist is robbed, and a Bible-thumping fundamentalist saves his life.

I am not for a moment trivialising the real and consequential differences that divide us politically, religiously, racially, or ideologically. I dare not do that — not when those differences are costing people their lives this very day.

The enmity between the Jews and the Samaritans in Jesus’s day was not theoretical; it was embodied and real. The differences between them were not easily negotiated; each was fully convinced that the other was wrong. Jesus deeming the Samaritan ‘good’ was radical and risky; it would have stunned his Jewish listeners.

The Beaten Man

The man at the centre of the story does not have a voice. Everything is done to him. His name and what his business was on that particular day is unknown. If he was unconscious he couldn’t have spoken. What might he have thought or felt about his situation?

We can assume that he was Jewish. That is how the people listening to Jesus tell this story. Yes, it is a story – Jesus made it up!

Given the great hatred between Samaritans and Jews, the beaten man may not have wanted to be ‘touched’ by an enemy. Not that he was not in any state to accept or decline help.

The Samaritan man would have had to change all his plans for that day and night as we are told that he spent the night with him. The Samaritan then ensured continued care and left him safely at the inn. His help cost him both time and money; two important resources. The man could not have done anything for himself; he was completely dependent on the Samaritan at that moment.

The final question

Which of these three, do you think, was a neighbour to the man who fell into the hands of the robbers?
The young lawyer answers, ‘The one who showed him mercy.’

Mercy. Helping a neighbour, regardless of who they are or where they are from, shows mercy. God desires mercy and not sacrifice. How is our vision and hearing today? Are we looking for opportunities to show mercy? The obvious and the obscure.

Often those with no voice, like the beaten man, remind us of our own frailty and our burdensomeness. Remind us of our own need for mercy.

The story of the Good Samaritan is ultimately about mercy. Anyone who needs help, needs mercy is our neighbour. Let us not forget the times when we need mercy shown to us.