"Ask and it will be given to you, seek and you will
find, knock and the door will be opened to you" Matthew 7:7
A wise person once showed me in other areas of scripture how God will often use progression words to make a point. Psalms 1 is a great example. The psalmist talks first of walking, then standing, then sitting with people who have no interest in Godly things. First you are walking, then you get comfortable so you stop and hang around for a while (standing), then you get really comfortable and take a load off (sitting). Now, you are one of them. The point, I believe, the psalmist was trying to make was that turning your back on God doesn't happen all at once. It's a slow and sneaky process which is why we need to be careful!
The most beautiful thing to me is the response of the Son of God to these instructions....
Ask, He said, and it WILL be given you. He's saying, "If you ask Me to come into your heart, I will!" In Revelation He says, "I stand at the door and knock. If anyone lets Me in I will come and make my home in him." And remember, it is impossible for God to lie. So if He says His answer will be yes when you ask Him in, then you can rest assure His answer will be YES!
Don't get me wrong, our earthly prayers are important and even commanded by the Lord. But I believe when Jesus is saying ask, seek, and knock, He is talking about Himself and the kingdom of heaven. It is not that we should not pray for our own lives and the lives of those around us, but I think the important thing is to have eternity in mind when we are praying.
During my quiet time
with God this morning, I got to finish reading the sermon that Jesus gave on
the mount. You know it’s amazing how easy it for us to take a piece of
scripture out of the bible and make it stand on its own. I can't tell you how
many times I've done this. But when we do this, we are not getting the whole
story. We do not have all the facts. It is similar to taking a piece out of the
puzzle and trying to make it become a picture on its own.
I can't tell you
how many times I've heard, read, and even sung the verse above. And the message
I've always gotten from it was that if I am really persistent in my prayers God
will give me whatever I want. This morning I realized the error in my thinking.
I don't believe that's what Jesus was saying at all. I believe what He was
saying was so much deeper and more beautiful than that!A wise person once showed me in other areas of scripture how God will often use progression words to make a point. Psalms 1 is a great example. The psalmist talks first of walking, then standing, then sitting with people who have no interest in Godly things. First you are walking, then you get comfortable so you stop and hang around for a while (standing), then you get really comfortable and take a load off (sitting). Now, you are one of them. The point, I believe, the psalmist was trying to make was that turning your back on God doesn't happen all at once. It's a slow and sneaky process which is why we need to be careful!
When Jesus said
to the people to ask, seek and knock, I believe He was using progression words
to make a point. First, you ask Jesus into your heart. Then, you seek His
kingdom and His righteousness. Last, you go right up to the door of heaven
itself and knock because you know, being an adopted child of God, you belong
there!
The most beautiful thing to me is the response of the Son of God to these instructions....
Ask, He said, and it WILL be given you. He's saying, "If you ask Me to come into your heart, I will!" In Revelation He says, "I stand at the door and knock. If anyone lets Me in I will come and make my home in him." And remember, it is impossible for God to lie. So if He says His answer will be yes when you ask Him in, then you can rest assure His answer will be YES!
Seek, He says,
and you will find. He's saying, "If you seek Me with all your heart, you
will find Me!" Seeking requires movement, action. When you are hunting,
you cannot find game unless you go out and seek it. The deer or rabbit or
whatever it is you are hungry for is not going to come right up to you and say
"Here I am. Go ahead and shoot!" You must go out and seek it. So it
is with the kingdom of heaven. If you stay in the same place spiritually you
will never find it. (I am not saying at all here that you must work to obtain
your salvation. Salvation cannot be possessed by anything we could ever do or
say. That is why, I believe, Jesus says to ask first. You cannot even begin
seeking unless you first have the Spirit of God in you to motivate and empower
you!)
Knock, He says,
and the door will be opened to you. He's saying "I have adopted you into
my family. Come right up to the door and knock because you are welcome
here!" I love this because Jesus said in John 10:7 that He, Himself, is
the door for the sheep. If we ask Jesus into our hearts, we are essentially
inviting the very Doorway to Heaven into our hearts. And He says, "Yes! I
will open the door for you!"
I really wanted
to share this with you this morning because for a long time I thought this
verse (along with others like it) meant whatever whim or desire I had on earth
could be granted if I can just be persistent enough. The problem with this thinking
is that it not only lowers Jesus Christ from the all-powerful, all-knowing,
all-sufficient God that He is down to more of a genie in a bottle, but when the
Lord sees fit to leave your prayers unanswered, what then? There begins to grow
a disconnect in your heart and you begin to doubt His love for you.
No, our God is
much more loving and wise and powerful than to just give us everything we want
whenever we desire. (Parents, do you give your children everything they want? I
certainly hope not!) Jesus is promising something much deeper and more beautiful
and eternal here than answers to earthly prayers. Colossians 3:2 tells us to
set our minds on heavenly things and not on earthly things. 1 Corinthians 2:9
talks about the wonderful things that nobody has seen or heard that God has
prepared for those who love Him. Don't get me wrong, our earthly prayers are important and even commanded by the Lord. But I believe when Jesus is saying ask, seek, and knock, He is talking about Himself and the kingdom of heaven. It is not that we should not pray for our own lives and the lives of those around us, but I think the important thing is to have eternity in mind when we are praying.
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