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Summary: Luke’s telling of the “Lord’s Prayer” is shorter than the account found in Matthew. Here, Jesus includes a couple of illustrations that help us to understand. Making sense of prayer is easier some days than others, but it should always be an important part of every believer’s life.
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Summary: The Lord’s Prayer is the perfect model for a renewed prayer life. |
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Summary: Jesus gave his disciples guidance in how to pray, so that they would take God seriously and be part of his movement. But in order to understand Christ’s teaching, we have to untangle it from certain traditions. |
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Summary: The words of the Lord’s Prayer have been written, memorized and even inscribed on a penny. But they deserve to be inscribed on our hearts because it is from there that true prayer arises. |
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Summary: After giving his disciples “the Lord’s Prayer” as a model for praying, Jesus highlighted the petition about forgiving others. That is the key to healing our inner springs of anger, resentment, bitterness and other crippling emotions. |
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Summary: When his disciples requested that Jesus teach them to pray like John the Baptist had taught his disciples, Jesus gave them the prayer we call “The Lord’s Prayer.” He taught this prayer as an example of “how to pray” and within it we find the simple rules to guide us in our daily conversations with God. |
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Summary: When the Lord teaches the disciples to pray, he offers one small prayer with five different petitions. The power is not only in the words the disciples are taught to pray but also from how they pray. Jesus teaches the disciples to pray not once or twice, but to keep on praying. Those who follow Christ should embody the same practice, offering our prayers over and over again. |
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There are 7 sermons in your results. |
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