This is Connect with Skip Heitzig. Thanks for joining us today. At Connect with Skip, the heart of what you hear each day is to help you go deeper in your walk with Jesus through clear, practical Bible teaching and real-life encouragement. but you don't have to wait for a broadcast to connect. When you sign up for Pastor Skiff's weekly devotional email, you'll receive inspiring messages and free resources right in your inbox, all to help you weave God's word into daily life.
It only takes a minute to sign up. Go to connectwithskip.com and join the list today. That's connectwithskip.com.
Now let's dive into today's teaching from Pastor Skip Heitzig. You're aware that prayer is a very controversial thing to get involved in. Whether it's prayer in schools or prayer in public assemblies, it has become so controversial. In fact, I would add and say that prayer has been controversial in our country ever since the Revolutionary War. One of the reasons we are a nation is that we rebelled against the tyranny of a government in Great Britain that wanted to curtail our freedom to worship and to pray according to the dictates of our own heart.
And so we left that. We rebelled against that. And we formed one nation under God. But prayer is still very controversial. And the controversy lies specifically in the use of a certain name in prayer.
And that would be the name of Jesus Christ. When our friend Franklin Graham prayed at a presidential inauguration and he closed the prayer predictably, In the strong name of Jesus Christ, people were upset. How dare he pray in the name of Jesus?
Well, if you want the prayer to actually work. That's what you do. But one leader went so far as to say: praying in the name of Jesus is like pouring gasoline on a fire. That's a kind of public furor that it will create.
So it's interesting that according to U.S. News and World Report. Dan Gilgoff wrote an article saying that the White House wants to remedy that. And they are insisting now that Um all public rallies that include prayer That are on a national level must first be approved, commissioned by the White House, and vetted by the White House. That is, all of the prayers have to be seen in advance and edited according to Policy.
So now the government wants to tell us how to pray and how not to pray.
Sounds an awful lot like Great Britain. what we rebelled against to begin with. A few days ago, the Washington Post Carried an article about a high school graduation and one student who offered a public prayer in that place. It was controversial as expected. An atheist student who incidentally did not even attend the prayer.
He walked out for the prayer. Was all upset. The prayer was only a minute and a half. It was not really controversial. It was very benign.
Did not include the name of Jesus. But the student who is an atheist regarded that as religious bullying.
Okay, I understand that not everybody agrees on this topic. But I simply say all that to introduce the topic and the text today because we're dealing with a prophet, Daniel. Who was also facing similar controversial circumstances? In fact, the whole reason he got put in the lion's den was because of his prayer. Hmm.
A law was passed. It was a politically correct environment in Daniel's time where you couldn't pray to any God except the king. He violated that on purpose, opened his windows toward Jerusalem, and he prayed and he got put in jail for it.
Now I have a question for you. Yeah. Why do you think, from a spiritual level, prayer is so controversial? My guess is that the majority of the men is because Satan knows it's so powerful. He knows that prayer, if you are engaged in it regularly, spells his demise, his defeat, his power, his strength in your life.
So he'll do anything he can to keep you from it. Our problem is we typically engage in prayer only when the bombs are falling and the crisis is happening. We're sort of like the Costa Rican tomato frog. There's a frog in the jungles of Costa Rica that is bright red like a tomato, and when it's attacked by a predator, it exudes this milky white poison all over its skin.
So that when the animal that is attacking gets the frog in its mouth and tastes. The poison, he'll spit it out, but the damage has already been done to the frog, and typically that amphibian will just. Die. Too little, too late. We often pray like that.
after Satan has attacked and the damage is done.
So we're going to look at Daniel chapter 9. We're going to begin in verse 3 and take it down to about verse 19, which comprises the prayer of Daniel. And it happens to be, for us, one of the greatest models in the Old Testament. Of what? True.
Effective communication with God is all about.
Now, of course, the greatest model prayer in all of the Bible is what Jesus taught. His disciples to pray, Our Father, which art in heaven, hallowed be thy name, thy kingdom come, thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven. I'm saying it in the old King James because that's how I was taught it. That's a demodel prayer. But what's interesting about the prayer you and I are about to look at a little more carefully this week is that some of those same elements, in fact, most of those elements that Jesus taught us to pray in the Lord's Prayer are present in Daniel's prayer.
You see, this is a prayer with balance. It's not all petition. I need, I want, give me, help me. It's not all praise. It's a balance of several things, and I'm going to give you four things.
Four things. Yeah. Charles Adden Spurgeon once said that prayer is the rope. that you pull down below so that the great bell rings up above in the ears of God. Keep that in mind.
It's a rope. And I want to give you four strands. That should be a part of the rope that you pull. when you are ringing that bell in the ears of God. But let's read through the text and then we'll go through it.
Daniel chapter 9, verse 3. Then I set my face toward the Lord God to make request. by prayer and supplications, with fasting, sackcloth, and ashes. And I prayed to the Lord my God, and I made confession, and I said, O Lord, great and awesome God, who keeps his covenant and mercy with those who love him and with those who keep his commandments. We have sinned and committed iniquity.
We have done wickedly and rebelled, even by departing from your precepts and your judgments. Neither have we heeded your servants the prophets, who spoke in your name to our kings, and our princes, to our fathers, and all the people of the land. O Lord, righteousness belongs to you, but to us shame a face. as it is this day. To the men of Judah, to the inhabitants of Jerusalem and all Israel.
those near and those far off. In all the countries to which you have driven them because of the unfaithfulness. which they have committed against you. O Lord, to us belongs shame of face, to our kings, princes, fathers, because we have sinned against you. To the Lord our God belongs mercy and forgiveness, though we have rebelled against Him.
We have not obeyed the voice of the Lord our God to walk in his laws, which he set before us. by his servants the prophets. Yes, all Israel has transgressed your law, has departed so as not to obey your voice. Therefore, the curse and the oath written in the law of Moses, the servant of God. have been poured out on us.
Because we've sinned against him. And he has confirmed his words which he spoke against us and against our judges. Who judged us by bringing upon us great disaster, for under the whole heaven such has never been done. as what has been done to Jerusalem. As it is written in the law of Moses, all this disaster has come upon us.
And we have not made our prayer before the Lord our God. that we might turn from our iniquities and understand your truth. Therefore, The Lord has kept the disaster in mind. and brought it upon us. For the Lord our God is righteous in all the works which He does.
though we have not obeyed his voice. And now, O Lord our God, Who brought your people out of the land of Egypt with a mighty hand? And made yourself a name, as it is this day. We have sinned, we have done wickedly. O Lord, according to all your righteousness, I pray, let your anger, your fury, be turned away from your holy city.
Your holy mountain, because for our sins and for the iniquities of our fathers, Jerusalem and your people are a reproach. to all those around us.
Now therefore Our God Hear the prayer of your servant. and his supplications And for the Lord's sake, cause your face to shine on your sanctuary, which is desolate. O my God, incline your ear and hear, open your eyes and see our desolations, and the city which is called by your name. For we do not present our supplications before you because of our righteous deeds. but because of your great mercies.
O Lord, hear. O Lord, forgive. O Lord, listen and act. Do not delay for your own sake, my God. for your city and your people are called by your name.
There's four strands to this rope. that we pull on to ring that bell. And the first strand, it's in your worship folder, is humble. Adoration. Humble adoration.
Notice in verse 4, Daniel says, I pray to the Lord my God. Daniel begins by recognizing to whom he is talking. He's not talking to a friend, he's not talking to King Darius, he's talking to the king of kings. And it's important that when you're praying, you recognize: I'm saying this to God. Because I actually believe it's possible to pray to yourself.
You're not really talking to God. You're praying and you're saying, well, how does that sound? Oh, that sounds pretty good.
Well, I hope they like what I just said and agree with it. You remember in the Gospel of Luke, Jesus gave a parable about prayer, and he said, Two men went up to the temple to pray. One was a Pharisee, and the other was a tax collector. And the Pharisee stood and prayed thus with himself. Lord, I thank you that I'm not like other men, especially like this tax collector.
He prayed that out loud, but he was really praying to himself. You're listening to Connect with Skip Heitzig. Before today's message continues, there's a special offer for your family this Christmas. Hey, this is Nate Heitzig, and if you're like me, one of the best parts of the Christmas season is gathering your kids to share the story of Jesus in a way that makes it come alive. That's why I wrote Christmas Under the Tree.
a beautifully illustrated book and companion audio experience for families of all ages. My hope is that this story helps you and your kids connect the cradle to the cross and treasure the true meaning of Christmas for years to come. Christmas under the tree is yours when you give a gift of $25 or more to help more people discover God's word through Connect with Skiff Heidzig. Request your copy at connectwithskip.com slash offer or call 800-922-1888.
Now, let's get back to today's teaching.
So R. A. Torrey writes, we should never utter one syllable in prayer, in public or private, until we are definitely conscious that we are coming into the presence of God and actually praying to Him. And here's why it's important that you recognize to whom you're talking to. It gives you the needed perspective.
See, we come to God so overwhelmed sometimes with our problems and the issues, and it's reflected, Lord, this is really hard. I know this sounds impossible. What? You're talking to somebody who doesn't have the word in his vocabulary. An example that has always been helpful to me is I'm looking at you right now.
I'm looking at a large group of people, a large crowd. And I mean that not individually, but corporately. It's a big mass I'm looking at. But I have a little object in my hand, a Bible. which is capable of By perspective, pushing you away and you're out of my sight.
If I do this, I cannot see you.
Now, if I were to push this Bible back into the crowd. And I would see its size in comparison to you. It wouldn't look that big. But when I push it really close to my eyes, it blocks everything else out. We often come with our problems to God right here.
That's where they are. They're right here. I can't see anything but my issue, my little horizon, my problems. But then, when I say, Oh Lord, you are God, I'm talking to the Lord God, it pushes my problems out into the right perspective. And I see them in the light of who he is.
In Scripture, there's an example of that. Acts chapter 4: a law goes out. The early church cannot speak the name of Jesus publicly. And so The persecution hits. It looks like the program of Jesus is going to shut down.
Until they pray. And this is what they say. Lord You are God. You made the heaven, the earth, the sea and everything that's in it. Why did they bother with all of that in their prayer?
Because they wanted to get this whole thing in the right perspective. We are talking to the Creator, the all-powerful one. Oh, and by the way, we have this little issue we want you to attend to. It's pushing the problem back out into the perspective of the majesty of God. That's why the Jews, when they pray, They begin their prayers typically like this, Blessed are you, Lord God, King of the universe.
That's who we're talking to. The king. of the universe.
So Daniel begins that way. I pray to the Lord my God. Look what he says in verse 4. Look what he calls him. Oh Lord, great and awesome God.
That's humble adoration. It means great in magnitude, great in importance. As he continues in his prayer in verse 7, he says, The Lord is righteous. That is, God always does what is right. Never makes a mistake.
You never have to worry if he's blown it or done something wrong. He's always right. In verse 9, he calls him merciful. and forgiving. In verse 14, he acknowledges his power, his might.
In verse 15, he says, he's made a name for himself.
So when he prays, he uses adoring terms, honoring God's character and praising God's name. That's how Jesus taught us to pray in the Lord's Prayer, right? And when you pray, say, Our Father which art in heaven, hallowed be thy name. And that's how Daniel does it. He prays.
Frankly, I think. Too little time is spent in our prayers with adoration.
So much of our prayer is self-focused. Adoration forces your eyes above the horizon of human difficulties and your own issues and lets you get that right perspective. And see things clearly. For so many people, Prayer is like an aspirin.
Well, take two of these every four hours for three days. Pray twice a day for three days. Or God is something like an emergency room. You know, you know, he's out there, and you know, the prayer is kind of good to do, and it's probably good to talk to him every now and then, but. You don't until a huge issue comes your way, and sort of like you're driven to the emergency room, then suddenly it's like, oh God.
For others, prayer is sort of like a first-class hotel. They believe in a theology that says, I can name it and I can claim it, and I can tell God to do this, and I can command God's power by my words. And so they sort of see God as the bellhop in a nice hotel. They just call room service. Or like Dial toll-free.
Claim it and get your blessing today. But prayer begins with humble adoration. Look at it like this. When we communicate with God, There's a progress that we ought to be making the longer we know him. A mature progress in communication.
When you were a baby, you know what your first word was? I do. What was it? What can it can you say? What?
Wow, somebody just said wow. I think it was more like wow. I don't think he did. Wham. If you did, you were like the coolest baby ever.
But that's how that was your first word. It was a cry. That's all you knew when you wanted your bottle. It was not.
Well, but Wha'cause you're not gonna be able to do it. You got your mom's attention. She fed you. You needed your diaper change. It was.
Wow, okay, not really great communication skills yet. But then your parents said, use your words. Right? And so you use your words, and your words were, I want that. I need that.
A little bit of an improvement from the WAM, but not really much. But as you grew older, you learned to communicate. differently.
So that when you became an adult, your communication with your parents was far different. In the latter years, while my parents were alive, when I called them on the phone, I never once said, I need, I want, give me this, give me that. It was always, how are you doing? How can I help you? How can I be a blessing to you?
That's mature communication.
So it is with prayer. As you become mature, you get more concerned with this. I'm just in God's presence. It's a humble adoration. Dwight L.
Moody, the great evangelist, had a little child. He was busy preparing for a speaking tour, and he was in his study preoccupied with his books and his messages. And his little eight-year-old son came in and sat there, and Moody said, What do you want? He said, I don't want anything, Daddy. I just want to be where you are.
And I think there's something to that in prayer. Lord, I just want to be where you are. You are great. You are awesome. I'm talking to you, I'm hanging with you.
So, humble adoration is the first strand. Here's the second one: honest confession. That needs to be a strand of the rope that you pull when you talk to God. Honest confession. Beginning in verse 5, all the way down to verse 15, it's the longest section of this prayer, which we've already read.
It's a confession. It's Daniel saying, we've blown it. I'm sorry. We've done this. We've acted wickedly.
Over and over again, he goes through the history of the nation of Israel from the times of the kings and the prophets. and shows how they have repeatedly disobeyed God's voice. It's been said that the six most important words in human relations are, I admit that I was wrong. They're the most important words. They're also the hardest to say.
But here is Daniel saying them to God. And when Jesus taught his disciples to pray, did he not tell them that confession was a necessary part of that? Our Father, which art in heaven, hallowed be your name, your kingdom come, your will be done on earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread, and forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors. Incidentally, Have you ever noticed that when Jesus taught his disciples to pray, He taught them to use the plural.
Not the singular. He never said, now, when you pray, say, My Father in heaven. Forgive me. Give me this day my daily bread. It was always us, we, our, the plural.
He wants you to realize that you're a part of something bigger than just. You. You're part of we. And what's fascinating is that's how Daniel prays here. In this prayer, 16 times he uses the word we, 17 times the word our, 9 times the word us, in total 42 personal words.
In other words, Daniel isn't like aloof from his people, like, I am the prophet and they have really sinned, and I'm praying for them because they're bad and they're wicked. He said, I'm a part of the problem. Forgive us. He included himself in it.
Sometimes we like to point our fingers at sinners. Daniel locked arms with them. held hands with them. Said, I'm in this with you guys. I'm a part of this.
Something else, you'll note that Daniel's confession follows his adoration. And I think that one naturally follows the other. I believe the closer you get to God, The greater you sense your own sin and your own selfishness and your own need to clear the slate with God. One always follows the other. Classic example, Isaiah chapter six.
He gets that grand vision of God high and lifted up. You know the story. He sees God, it's wonderful, it's amazing. He's filled with thoughts of adoration, but he says, Woe is me. Woe is me.
I'm seeing this, woe is me. I'm undone. I'm a man of unclean lips. I'm seeing God, and in seeing God, I'm also seeing me. And as I see me in the light of God, I say, woe is me.
Leonard Ravenhill said, The self-sufficient do not pray. The self-satisfied will not pray. and the self-righteous cannot pray. You say, but why does he need to confess? Why does anybody need to admit, God, I'm a sinner?
Doesn't he already know that? Yeah, but I think he likes to hear you say it. The first step in humility is admission. I was wrong. I admit that I was wrong.
And Daniel does that. Notice something further with this in verse seven and in verse eight. He uses the word shame. O Lord, righteousness belongs to you, but to us shame. of faith.
That's a word of conscience. It's humiliation, it's embarrassment, it's guilt. Thanks for listening to Connect with Skiff Heitzig. Before you go, don't miss your chance to request Christmas Under the Tree, the beautifully illustrated book and audio experience by Nate Heitzig that helps your family see the Christmas story with fresh wonder and excitement. It's yours for your gift of $25 or more to help reach more people with biblical teaching through Connect with Skip.
Call 800-922-1888 or go to connectwithskiff.com slash offer. And don't forget to sign up for the free weekly devotional for encouragement from Pastor Skiff right in your inbox. Thanks for spending time with us today, and we'll see you next time on Connect with Skip Heitzig. Make a connection. Shouldn't Ooh.
Of the crossing. A castle burning.
So Connect with Skip Heitzig is a presentation of connection communications, connecting you to God's never-changing truth in ever-changing times.