Rowland Wheatley addresses the doctrine of petitionary prayer in Matthew 6:8, emphasizing that believers should boldly ask their heavenly Father for their genuine spiritual and practical needs. The sermon establishes three primary arguments: first, believers must avoid the false piety of hypocritical prayer exemplified by the Pharisees and the prophets of Baal, recognizing that efficacious prayer requires sincerity rather than verbosity or vain repetition; second, the assurance that God the Father possesses omniscient knowledge of His children's true needs before they petition Him, distinguishing between mere wants and substantive spiritual necessities; and third, the encouragement to practice persistent, bold asking, knowing that the Father's nature ensures He will grant good gifts to His children. Wheatley draws extensively from the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5-7), Romans 8:14-17 (the doctrine of adoption and the Spirit's witness), and Matthew 7:7-11 (the promise that asking yields receiving). The sermon's doctrinal significance lies in its integration of Reformed teaching on God's sovereignty and foreknowledge with the believer's responsibility to pray, resolving the apparent paradox by arguing that God's knowledge of our needs actually incentivizes rather than inhibits prayer, as it provides assurance of a hearing Father. This reflection promotes the spiritual comfort that comes through answered prayer as experiential evidence of adoption into God's family.
“Your Father knoweth what things ye have need of before ye ask him. Not what things we want, but those things that we really have need of.”
“It is not by much speaking... We don't have to think that we must make a long, long prayer. We must have an eloquent prayer. It must be something that the Lord sees good in our prayers, why he will answer.”
“If we are brought to obey the word in asking, in that very thing, the Lord is able to give us a token that He is our Father... Ask and ye shall receive, that your joy may be full.”
“I prayed for this, this is what I needed, I've sought the Lord for it... the Lord then has answered. We give him thanks, but also we have that beautiful token.”
The Bible encourages believers to ask in prayer, as seen in Matthew 6:8, which states that our Father knows our needs before we ask.
We know God is our Father through the Spirit of adoption that confirms our identity as His children, as stated in Romans 8:14-16.
Asking in prayer is important as it demonstrates our dependence on God and allows us to receive the good things He has promised to those who ask.
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