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Friday, November 24, 2017

Our Father 1: How and how not to pray

As we approach a study on prayer, we should consider Matthew's approach to the Our Father (or the Lord's Prayer): he first recorded some of Yeshua's instructions on prayer, including both negative mitzvot and positive mitzvot. We read them in Matthew 6:5-8:
And whenever you pray, do not be like the hypocrites, because they love to stand and pray in the synagogues and on the corners of the streets, in order that they may be seen by people. Truly I say to you, they have received their reward in full! But whenever you pray, enter into your inner room and shut your door and pray to your Father who is in secret, and your Father who sees in secret will reward you. But when you pray, do not babble repetitiously like the pagans, for they think that because of their many words they will be heard. Therefore do not be like them, for your Father knows what you need before you ask him.

Who are the hypocrites?

The Greek word used in Matthew 6 is hypokrites. To some extent it is what linguists call a “false friend;” we should not presume to know what it means because of the similar word, hypocrite, in English—even though it derives from the Greek hypokrites! In modern English, “hypocrite” indicates a person who tells others how to behave and live rightly, but does not do so himself. In the first century, the word primarily denoted a pretender, an actor or stageplayer: someone who puts on a performance by faking particular behaviour.

We see this in Matthew 6:2, where the hypocrites make a public fanfare of their giving; in Matthew 6:5, where they stand in prominent places (both in houses of worship and on street corners) to pray where they can be noticed; and in Matthew 6:16, where they deliberately look somber and  unkept to show they are fasting. It’s all an act! Even if they are giving, praying and fasting, they are doing it for human recognition, not to magnify the Father in heaven.

How should we pray?

We should pray:
  1. Not like hypocrites—like actors, “in order that they may be seen by people.”
  2. In private—in secret! (This does not prohibit public, communal prayer, as the Bible clearly demonstrates. However, private prayer is commanded.)
  3. Without repetitious babbling (like the pagans)—“because your Father knows your needs before you ask.”

Tuesday, November 21, 2017

Book review: Converging Destinies

Earlier this year, Stuart Dauermann published Converging Destinies: Jews, Christians, and the Mission of God. I reviewed it in Conspectus 24 and came to this conclusion:
Converging Destinies is a stimulating read and a valuable addition to several fields, including missiology, Jewish-Christian relations, postsupersessionism and Messianic Judaism. Dauermann prompts theological thought and praxis in his own idiosyncratic way, and he deserves to be read by the Evangelical audience targeted by this journal. Though the book has its flaws, they do not detract from the validity of the message itself—the convergence of Jews and Christians in the mission of God. May it come speedily and soon, and in our day!
Click this link to download the full review from SATS.