Have you ever stopped to wonder why we always end our
prayers with “In Jesus’ name, amen?” The phrase has become this trite little farewell to God
after prayer that I doubt many of us have given much thought. It’s like saying goodbye after we get
off the phone.
“Uh God, I gotta go. Dinner is getting cold. In Jesus’ name, amen.” Click. |
Jesus said, “if you ask anything in my name, I will do it” (John 14:14), so we ask everything in His name. “Bless our food”, “Bless my dog”, “Bless grandma”, “Bless the president”, etcetera, all in Jesus’ name.
Yet do we ever stop to think about the name we’re whipping
out like a no-limit credit card on Heavenstore.com?
Are we so quick to forget that at the name of Jesus EVERY
KNEE WILL BOW, of those who are in heaven and on earth and under the earth, and
that every tongue will confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God
the Father? (Philippians
2:10-11)
Where is the respect due our Lord in using His name so
arbitrarily? I’m not saying not to
ask in the name of Jesus, just don’t throw it out in vain without a second
thought about who’s name you're using.
And as far as the “Amen” goes, if you’ve done a word-study
on “amen” or have ever heard a sermon on it before, you probably already know
it means “truly, surely, or it is so.”
But have you ever looked at the word in context? It never comes after “In the name of
Jesus” at the end of a prayer. The
word is sometimes used as an agreement, but it is almost exclusively found
after blessing or praising God, like in the Lord’s Prayer: “For Yours is the
kingdom and the power and the glory forever. Amen.” (Matthew
6:13)
This use of the word is something I just discovered while
writing this post, which is very different then what I intended to write, and in discovering
this use of the word, it seems very nearly blasphemous to say it after blessing
our food, our dog, our grandmas, even our president. In fact in Revelation, Jesus says, “To the angel of the
church in Laodicea write: The Amen,
the faithful and true Witness, the Beginning of the creation of God, says this
. . .” (Revelation
3:14).
He calls Himself “the Amen”, which shouldn’t be that
shocking since He calls Himself “the Truth” in John
14:6, but it’s like the double whammy of using the Lord’s name in vain at
the end of our trite little prayers.
Amen isn’t the end of a prayer; the “Amen” is the End, as in the “Beginning
and the End.”
Here’s what I propose.
Let’s stop praying like the God we speak to isn’t real and doesn’t care
how we talk to Him, and let’s start praying with fear and trembling, awe and
respect, and most of all love for Jesus Christ and the Father who loved us
enough to send His Son.
To God Almighty be all glory and honor forever and ever,
Amen.
1 comment:
and may I add my own AMEN!!
Prayer is not merely words spoken -- it's conversation with the Lord Almighty -- that involves alot of listening too!
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