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The
Gutsy Friend
Scripture
Reading: Luke
11:1-10
Today's
Treasure: "I tell you, though he will not get up and give
him the bread because he is his friend, yet because of the man's
boldness he will get up and give him as much as he needs" (Luke
11:8).
The
parable of the gutsy friend is one of the most unique parallels
Jesus ever drew. Please don't miss the context of Christ's lesson
on boldness. The disciples begged, "Lord, teach us to pray" (Luke
11:1). Believers have great familiarity with the prayer that followed,
but in the very next breath Christ taught the parable of the relentless
friend. In other words: "And when you pray, pray boldly! Pray persistently!"
You
may be as uncomfortable as I once was at this sort of boldness in
prayer. The seeker seemed a nuisance. I thought, I don't want
God to feel He must throw something out the door to me because I
won't stop annoying Him. Don't miss the relationship between
the seeker and the giver in this parable. They were friends—not
just neighbors. The relationship is vital to the story. The parable
never suggests a bold stranger would have received a similar response.
In
Greek, friends "share common interests." So the seeker
was not asking something contrary to the giver's interests. The
giver might have preferred to lend his friend the loaves the next
morning, but he certainly was unopposed to granting his request.
The parable does not teach that God will give us anything we ask
if we are bold enough. "Friends" do not ask of others what they
would be opposed to giving. Friends know one another well enough
to discern whether requests are appropriate. In this wonderful parable
Christ invited us to pray with boldness and persistence as a "friend"
of God—one who shares His common interests.
When
I think of this parable, a friend comes to mind. Joy and her husband
had a son who went through a headstrong season during high school.
One evening they forbade him to go out with his rebellious friends.
He turned on his heels and walked out the door anyway. His parents
were heartbroken. The next day the son angrily demanded of his mother,
"Have you been praying for me again in my room?"
She
finally replied: "Son, I always pray for you. Why do you ask?"
His
answer has stuck with me: "Because there were elbow prints on my
bedspread!"
Elbow
prints conveyed a mother's prayers as she knelt by his bed and begged
for his release. Soon the son could no longer bear the strain. He
returned to his loving parents and grew to be a godly husband and
father. His sons are still young, but if either rebels, their actions
may be no match for a father's prayers at their bedside.
Do
you have a concern that is also God's interest? Are you His "friend"
in this matter, not asking for selfish reasons? Then keep asking.
Go boldly before the throne.
Leave
a few elbow prints on the bed. He hears you.
Thank
You, Lord, for inviting me to pray as a friend. I pray for my interests
to reflect Yours and for my motives to be pure in every request.
Please help my prayer life mature in boldness and persistence. Grant
me the tenacity to pray for the lost as long as I live on this earth.
Let me not tire in prayer or fade in belief. Thank You so much for
the priceless gift of prayer. In the name of the One who always
lives to intercede for us, Amen.
Adapted
from Whispers of Hope, by Beth Moore, page 125. Nashville:
LifeWay Press, 1998. Used by permission.
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