Thursday
Evening Bible Study
October
2, 2008
Introduction
In Romans 7, we learned all about Paul’s struggles with the flesh, the
struggles with his own sin nature. We
also noticed that a particular word was the theme throughout the chapter, the
word “I”. When my focus is on “me”, I’m going to have
problems.
In contrast, Romans 8 seems to be the answer to the struggles with the
flesh. Instead of the focus being the
word “I”, the focus is now on the “Spirit”.
Paul wrote to the Galatians:
(Gal
5:16 NKJV) I say then: Walk in the
Spirit, and you shall not fulfill the lust of the flesh.
:26 Likewise the Spirit also helps in our weaknesses. For we do not know
what we should pray for as we ought, but the Spirit Himself makes intercession
for us with groanings which cannot be uttered.
likewise
– hosautos – in like manner, likewise
The word speaks of comparing one thing with another. What is Paul comparing?
Paul has been talking about the frustration that both we as humans as well
as all of creation experience due to the sin that mankind has brought into the
world, and as we are all waiting for the day that God will change things when
Jesus comes back.
(Rom 8:22-23
NKJV) For we know that the whole creation groans
and labors with birth pangs together until now. {23} Not only that, but we also
who have the firstfruits of the Spirit, even we ourselves groan within ourselves, eagerly waiting for the adoption,
the redemption of our body.
Paul is comparing
groans.
Creation groans as it waits for the world to change. We
grown as we wait for Jesus to come back.
Now Paul tells us even the Holy Spirit is “groaning” as He
makes intercession for us.
helps – sunantilambanomai (“with” + “against” +
“to receive”) – to lay hold along with, help in obtaining; to lend a hand
together with, at the same time with one.
Because of the combination of three
words stuck together, there’s a sense of intensity in the word. It’s a “present
tense”, meaning that this is something that
the Spirit is constantly
doing.
This word is only found in one other place in the New Testament:
(Luke
10:40 NKJV) But Martha was distracted with much serving, and she approached Him
and said, "Lord, do You not care that my sister has left me to serve
alone? Therefore tell her to help me."
Martha was bothered because her sister wasn’t helping her.
In contrast, the Holy Spirit does
help us.
Though this is a different word, it reminds me of another similar word used
of the Holy Spirit:
(John
14:16 NKJV) "And I will pray the Father, and He will give you another
Helper, that He may abide with you forever;
Helper – parakletos –
summoned, called to one’s side, esp. called to one’s aid
Lesson
He’s here to help
Some people get some strange ideas about the Holy
Spirit – probably because there are some of us people who get kind of strange
around the Holy Spirit.
The Holy Spirit is not going to make
you weird, unless you’re already weird.
Look at the things that the Holy Spirit produces in
our lives if we learn to yield to Him:
(Gal 5:22-23 NKJV) But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy,
peace, longsuffering, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, {23} gentleness,
self-control.
weaknesses
– astheneia – lack of strength,
weakness, infirmity
What weaknesses is Paul talking about?
The weakness Paul is talking about is our inability
to pray. And the Spirit is constantly
helping us.
:26 For we do not know what we should pray for as we ought,
pray – proseuchomai
– to offer prayers, to pray
as we ought
– dei – it is necessary, there is need
of, is right and proper
Lesson
We don’t know how to pray.
Some of us grew up in churches where
“praying” meant using fancy words that don’t mean anything to anybody. We might
feel like Aunt Bethany in the movie Christmas
Vacation with Chevy
Chase.
Illustration
Chevy Chase plays the part of the goofy dad, Clark
Griswald. Clark and his extended family
are gathered around the table for a holiday feast. Clark stands at one end of
the table smiling and carving a golden brown turkey. Clark looks as if he is
drinking in the joy of family. He raps a knife against a crystal glass to call
the family to attention. Clark announces, “Since this is Aunt Bethany’s 80th
Christmas, I think she should lead us in the saying of grace.” Aunt Bethany is
hard of hearing. She leans next to her elderly husband and yells, “What?” “He
wants you to say grace.” “Grace? Grace has been dead for 30 years,” says Aunt
Bethany. The old man replies, “He wants you to say the blessing!” (play video clip)
(she actually says the “Pledge of Allegiance…”)
“Oh!” says Aunt
Bethany. She bows her head and clasps her hands. One thing is clear. No one at
this table is comfortable or familiar with prayer. Each member of the family
awkwardly prepares for this sacred moment. Some close their eyes. Some put
their hands together. Some look to each other for guidance.
Clark is amazed as
Aunt Bethany closes her eyes and begins, “I pledge allegiance to the flag...”
Clark is dumbfounded when everyone else joins in, “of the United States of
America...”
National
Lampoon's Christmas Vacation (Warner Brothers, 1989); directed and produced by
John Hughes; submitted by David Slagle,
When we started the church, I have to admit I didn’t
know much about praying. I mean I knew about prayer, but hadn’t spent a lot of
time consistently praying. Over the years I’ve read a lot of books on prayer. I
have been in a lot of prayer meetings. As a pastor, I have learned to develop a
discipline of regularly praying for the needs of the church. I have learned the
importance of spending time every day in prayer. I have to admit that I think
I’ve grown some in prayer over the years.
Do I think I know how to pray? Not
even.
Illustration
The
Best Position To Pray Is..
Three preachers sat discussing the best
positions for prayer. A telephone repairman who was working nearby happened to
overhear the conversation. “Kneeling
is definitely best,” claimed the first minister. “No,” the second pastor contended. “I get the best
results standing with my hands outstretched toward Heaven.” “You’re both wrong,” the
third preacher insisted. “The most effective prayer position is lying prostate,
face down on the floor.” The repairman could contain himself no longer. “Hey,
fellas,” he interrupted, “the best prayin’ I ever did was hangin’ upside down from a telephone
pole after my safety strap broke.”
I don’t think that
even some of us pastors really know how to pray.
Because of this verse, I’m not sure
we’re ever going to “arrive” when it comes to knowing how to pray.
Why don’t we know how to pray?
1. We ask with the wrong motives.
(James 4:1-3 NKJV) Where do wars and
fights come from among you? Do they not come from your desires for pleasure
that war in your members? {2} You lust and do not have. You murder and covet
and cannot obtain. You fight and war. Yet you do not have because you do not
ask. {3} You ask and do not receive, because you ask amiss, that you may spend
it on your pleasures.
It’s really hard to tell sometimes just
what our motives really are. I think that often our motives are really a
mixture of a lot of things. I doubt we ever have completely pure motives on
anything.
I think there are even times when we
want to ask for something, but we know that we have improper motives, so we
don’t ask. But the thing would have been the right thing.
2. We don’t understand what really needs to be done.
Our passage here indicates that we
don’t know what is “necessary”.
When it really comes down to it, we
don’t really know everything. We don’t really know the things to be asked for.
Things aren’t always what they seem. We
often make our judgments on situations based on what shallow, surface things we
can see. But often the truth about a matter can be far below the surface.
Illustration
A Tale of Faulty Inferences
The train
rushes across the Hungarian countryside. In a compartment sit a mother with her
attractive daughter, a Nazi officer, and a Hungarian official. When the train
passes through a tunnel, the compartment is engulfed in darkness. Suddenly
there is the sound of a loud kiss followed by a shattering slap. When the train
emerges from the tunnel, no one says a word, but the Nazi officer’s face bears
the unmistakable signs of having been slapped.
The mother looks at her daughter and thinks, “What a good daughter I have.
She certainly showed that Nazi he can’t fool with her.”
The daughter looks at her mother and thinks, “Mother sure is brave to take
on a Nazi officer over one stolen kiss.” The Nazi officer stares at the
Hungarian official and thinks, “That Hungarian is clever. He steals a kiss and
gets me slapped, and there’s nothing I can do about it.” The Hungarian official
stares blankly as he thinks, “Not bad. I kiss my hand and get away with
slapping a Nazi.”
Things aren’t always what they seem.
You can find a person obnoxious for
some reason and just want them to go away. But God may want you to be a part of
their life to bring healing and help to them. God may want them to be a part of
your life, to teach you how to understand and be patient with others.
What if God’s higher
priority is not your comfort, but their salvation? What if God would rather have you endure them
a little so they might get a taste of grace and mercy.
Here I am praying for
them to go away, and God wants them to stay.
I don’t know what to
pray.
I find that
this is part of the difficulty when it comes to counseling. When you’re
counseling with an individual, it’s not uncommon for them to not quite tell you
the whole story. When the counseling involves a couple, I find that you’re
rarely going to hear the complete story until you’ve talked with both people.
Things aren’t always what they seem.
But God sees and understands
everything.
(Rom 11:33 NLT) Oh, what a
wonderful God we have! How great are his riches and wisdom and knowledge! How
impossible it is for us to understand his decisions and his methods!
He knows just what needs to be done.
Illustration
“There
was a time when I was a red lump of clay. My master took me and he rolled me
and he patted me over and over and over. I yelled out “Let me alone” but he
only smiled and said, “Not yet”. And then I was placed on a spinning wheel,
suddenly I was spun around and around and around. “Stop it I’m getting dizzy,”
I said. The master only nodded and said “Not yet” Then he put me in an oven,
I’d never felt such heat. I wondered why he wanted to burn me and I yelled and
I knocked on the door and I could see him through the opening and I could read
his lips. As he nodded his head he said “not yet.” Finally the door did open
“whew”, and he put me on a shelf and I began to cool. “That’s better” I said.
And then suddenly he grabbed me and he brushed me and he began to paint me all
over. I thought I would suffocate, I thought I would gag, the fumes were
horrible. And he just smiled and said, “Not yet”. And then suddenly he put me
back into an oven, not the first one but one twice as hot, and I knew that I
was going to suffocate. And I begged and I screamed and I yelled , and all the
time I could see him through the opening, smiling and nodding his head, “Not
yet, not yet” . And then I knew that there was no hope, I knew that I wouldn’t
make it . I was just ready to give up when the door opened and he took me out
an he put me on a shelf .Then an hour later he came back and he handed me a mirror and he said “Look
at yourself”. And I did. And I said, “That can’t be me, I’m beautiful!”
We don’t often understand what needs to
be done, we don’t know how to pray.
:26 but the Spirit Himself makes intercession for us with groanings which
cannot be uttered.
makes
intercession – huperentugchano (“over”
+ “in” + “hit the mark”) – to intercede for one; from tugchano – to hit
the mark; to reach, attain, become master of
Present tense – He’s always praying for
us.
We don’t know what to pray for, but the Holy
Spirit’s prayers always “hit the mark”.
groanings
– stenagmos – a groaning, a sigh; This is related to the words in verses 22,23, the
groaning that creation and us humans do.
While our “groanings”
are just noise, the Holy Spirit’s groanings are productive.
which cannot
be uttered – alaletos (“not” +
“spoken”) – not to be uttered, not expressed in words
Lesson
Praying in the Spirit.
Jude tells us that we are to be praying “in the Spirit”.
(Jude
1:20 NKJV) But you, beloved, building yourselves up on your most holy faith,
praying in the Holy Spirit
Paul also mentions prayer in the Spirit.
(Eph
6:18 NKJV) praying always with all prayer and supplication in the Spirit, being
watchful to this end with all perseverance and supplication for all the saints;
1. One aspect
of “praying in the Spirit” involves the gift of tongues.
“Tongues” is praying in a language you didn’t learn by any natural means.
(1 Cor 14:12-17 NKJV) Even
so you, since you are zealous for spiritual gifts, let it be for the
edification of the church that you seek to excel. {13} Therefore let him who
speaks in a tongue pray that he may interpret. {14} For if I pray in a tongue,
my spirit prays, but my understanding is unfruitful. {15} What is the
conclusion then? I will pray with the spirit, and I will also pray with the
understanding. I will sing with the spirit, and I will also sing with the
understanding. {16} Otherwise, if you bless with the spirit, how will he who
occupies the place of the uninformed say "Amen" at your giving of
thanks, since he does not understand what you say? {17} For you indeed give thanks
well, but the other is not edified.
He uses the terms “tongues” and “in the Spirit”
synonymously. They mean the same thing.
Notice that praying with “tongues” is something that seems
to bypass the mind – that’s why I’d consider it in the class of groaning “which
cannot be uttered”.
2. Another
aspect of “praying in the Spirit” is what we see here, the Spirit doing the
praying, groanings, no words.
I wonder if this isn’t part of what was going on with Samuel’s mom, Hannah:
(1 Sam
1:12-13 NKJV) And it happened, as she continued praying before the LORD, that
Eli watched her mouth. {13} Now Hannah spoke in her heart; only her lips moved,
but her voice was not heard. Therefore Eli thought she was drunk. …
She had this pain inside her. She prayed words in her heart,
but no words came from her mouth.
Sometimes it’s just hard to speak. God understands.
3. A last
aspect of “praying in the Spirit” is allowing the Holy Spirit to prompt you to
be praying according to the will of God…
I think God wants us to learn how to listen better to the promptings of the
Holy Spirit.
Illustration
A little
girl in England, Josie Caven, was born profoundly deaf. Growing up, she often
felt isolated because of her inability to hear, but that changed after
receiving a cochlear implant during the Christmas season. At the age of 12, she
heard clearly for the first time. The first sound she heard was the song “Jingle
Bells” coming from the radio.
Was Josie’s hearing restored? Yes—completely. Was she
hearing well immediately? Not exactly. Her mother said, “She is having to learn
what each new sound is and what it means. She will ask, ‘Was that a door
closing?’ and has realized for the first time that the light in her room hums
when it is switched on. She even knows what her name sounds like now, because
before she could not hear the soft ‘S’ sound in the middle of the word. Seeing
her face light up as she hears everything around her is all I could have wished
for this Christmas.”
Josie’s hearing was restored, but that restoration
introduced her to the daily adventure of learning to distinguish each new sound
in the hearing world. It’s the already, and the not yet.
"Christmas
Carols Music to the Ears of Deaf Girl," Yorkshireposttoday.com
One of the problems we have in responding to the Spirit’s promptings is
that we don’t always “hear” it. We don’t
recognize it.
Elijah
learned that God didn’t speak to him through earthquakes or fires, but instead
with a “still, small voice”
(1 Ki 19:12 NKJV) and after
the earthquake a fire, but the LORD was not in the fire; and after the fire a
still small voice.
Personally, I think we often have too much noise in our
lives to hear what God is saying.
Sometimes it’s just an impression that you need to be praying for someone.
Sometimes it’s something that reminds you of a person – pray for them.
Learn to listen to the prompting of the Spirit.
Illustration
Hard of Hearing
Three old guys
are out sitting on a bench. First one says, “Windy, isn’t it?” Second one says,
“No, it’s Thursday!” Third one says, “So am I. Let’s go get a soda.”
A man was telling
his neighbor, “I just bought a new hearing aid. It cost me four thousand
dollars, but it’s state of the art. It’s perfect.” “Really,” answered the
neighbor. “What kind is it?” “Twelve thirty.”
Illustration
Dill Rummel, a
woman from a church in Illinois, once told her pastor the story of how a
colleague of hers was hospitalized for ten weeks. Her name was Colleen, and she
had broken her back in two places. Despite the doctors’ efforts, her back wasn’t
healing. Dill was very busy, but she knew God wanted her to visit Colleen. In
fact she felt God wanted her to lay hands on Colleen and pray for
healing—something that was pretty “out there” for Dill at the time.
When Dill finally got around to going to the hospital, she and Colleen
chatted for quite some time about real estate and everyone they knew. Over the
course of her visit, Dill eventually summoned up the courage to say, “Would you
like me to lay hands on you and pray for you?” Colleen readily agreed. Dill
told me, “I did not feel warmth dribbling down through me or anything, but I
did what God wanted me to do.”
About three weeks later, the doorbell rang, and there was Colleen standing
on Dill’s front porch. She explained that the day after Dill had visited her,
the doctor sent Colleen to the lab for some X-rays. They showed where the two
breaks had been, but they were completely healed.
Colleen eventually started coming to Dill’s Bible study. One day, when they
were talking about that famous painting of Jesus knocking at the heart’s door,
Dill explained that the artist didn’t put a door handle on the outside of the
door, because we must open our hearts from the inside. Later that day Colleen
prayed these words: “Lord, I guess if you’re out there and I can open the door,
I want you to come in.” That day Colleen was born again.
Submitted by Lee Eclov,
Vernon Hills, Illinois
Pay attention when the Spirit is prompting you.
:27 Now He who searches the hearts knows what the mind of the Spirit is,
because He makes intercession for the saints according to the will of God.
searches
– ereunao – to search, examine into; from
ereo – speak, say – the idea of
searching by asking questions
There’s a lot
of “he” words in this verse. Circle them and identify them to keep it all
straight.
God the Father is
the one who searches hearts.
(Prov
17:3 NKJV) The refining pot is for silver and the furnace for gold, But the
LORD tests the hearts.
Sometimes He searches our hearts by probing us with questions.
:27 knows what
the mind of the Spirit is,
knows – eido
– to see; to know, i.e. get knowledge of, understand, perceive; to see with
the mind’s eye, signifies a clear and purely mental perception
mind – phronema
– what one has in the mind, the thoughts and purposes
The Father understands what’s on the Spirit’s mind.
:27 because He
makes intercession for the saints according to the will of God.
makes intercession – entugchano
– to light upon a person or a thing, fall in with, hit upon, a person or a
thing; to go to or meet a person, esp. for the purpose of conversation,
consultation, or supplication; to pray, entreat; make intercession for any one
Similar to “makes intercession”,
but less intense.
The Spirit is
the one who is praying for us.
according to
the will of God – literally,
“according to God”. The Holy Spirit knows how to pray according to God’s will
because He is God. He knows how to do prayer “according to God”.
saints –
hagios – “holy ones”, that’s you and
I
In other words, the Spirit helps our
weakness of not knowing how to pray. He helps us by actually praying for us,
and even though the Spirit may pray with words that we don’t understand, God
the Father understands perfectly what the Spirit is praying, and the Spirit
ALWAYS prays the right things.
Lesson
The
answer to my groans is the Spirit’s groans
Paul wrote to the Philippians:
(Phil 4:6-7 NKJV) Be anxious for
nothing, but in everything by prayer and supplication, with thanksgiving, let
your requests be made known to God; {7} and the peace of God, which surpasses
all understanding, will guard your hearts and minds through Christ Jesus.
If we will respond to
our anxieties, our “groanings” with prayer, we will find the peace of God in
our hearts.
Illustration
I spent some time looking for the story about John
Paton and came across an amazing short biography of this missionary on the
internet. His father was a man of prayer. He learned to be a man of prayer. He
was a missionary from Scotland, lived 1824-1907, and lived an amazing life of
faith as he reached out to a pagan, wicked, cannibalistic people. Here’s one
story about him:
John Paton was a missionary in the New Hebrides Islands. One night hostile
natives surrounded the mission station, intent on burning out the Patons and
killing them. Paton and his wife prayed during that terror-filled night that
God would deliver them. When daylight came they were amazed to see their
attackers leave. A year later, the chief of the tribe was converted to Christ.
Remembering what had happened, Paton asked the chief what had kept him from
burning down the house and killing them. The chief replied in surprise, “Who
were all those men with you there?” Paton knew no men were present—but the
chief said he was afraid to attack because he had seen hundreds of big men in
shining garments with drawn swords circling the mission station.
Your
situation may not be as intense or dire as John Paton’s was at times, at least
not to other people, but the principle still holds.
We need to develop a new “reflex”.
When we see problems, when we experience “anxiety”, we need to respond
with prayer.
Listen to the Holy Spirit.
Pray as He leads.