Pastor, teacher, and author Adrian Rogers has introduced people all over the world to the love of Jesus Christ and has impacted untold numbers of lives by presenting profound truth simply stated. Thanks for joining us for this message.
Here's Adrian Rogers. We've been talking about the kind of church that we ought to be, the kind of church that I've tried to teach you to be in these years that God has given me the wonderful privilege of being your pastor. This morning, I want you to open God's Word, if you will, to Matthew chapter 7. And in a moment, we're going to look at verses 7 and 8.
I know they are very familiar to you. But the church that I want to be talking about today, our church, Bellevue Baptist Church, needs to be a praying church. We've talked about a unified church and a steadfast church and other things. But today, a praying church. Bellevue will be no greater, no better, no more useful than her prayer life. And a prayer life is not going to be any better than your life because you are the church. And don't ask yourself, is Bellevue a praying church?
Ask yourself this question. Am I a praying Christian? If you could ask the Lord Jesus Christ for anything you wanted, what would you ask him for? Would you say, Lord, teach me to preach? Or, Lord, teach me to sing?
Or, Lord, teach me to lead? The disciples asked this, Lord, teach us to pray. And the Lord gave them some words here, and I want you to listen to them.
This is Matthew chapter 7, verses 7 and 8. He said, ask, and it shall be given you, seek, and ye shall find, knock, and it shall be opened unto you for every one that asketh receiveth. And he that seeketh findeth, and to him that knocketh, it shall be opened. And when we hear him, these are the words of Jesus, undeniable, impeccable promise. Our Lord says we're to ask, to seek, and to knock. When we ask, that speaks of our desires. When we seek, that speaks of God's direction. And when we knock, that speaks of determination. What we do is to bring desire, direction, and determination together into a burning laser point to get our prayers answered before God.
Now, I want to tell you folks, listen to me. The greatest problem that you have in your life is not unanswered prayer. The greatest problem is unoffered prayer, unasked prayer.
The Bible says in James chapter 4 and verse 2, we have not because we ask not. You see, not to pray is not only to miss a blessing, it is rebellious. Our Lord has commanded us to pray. Quickly jot these scriptures down. Luke 18, verse 1, and he says here that men ought always to pray.
Now, who said that? Jesus said that. Mark chapter 14 and verse 38, Jesus said, watch and pray, watch and pray. And the apostle Paul said in Philippians chapter 4, verse 6, be careful for nothing, but in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving, let your requests be made known under God. There's no substitute for prayer, not enthusiasm, not eloquence, not energy.
There is no substitute for intercession and for prayer. And the reason that many of us fail, the reason that many of us are poverty stricken in our spiritual life is we've never learned to pray. Why does God ask us to pray?
It's a good question. Isn't God good? Doesn't God want to do good things?
And doesn't God know everything? So why should we pray? Put in an ancillary verse over there in Matthew 6, we're in Matthew 7, go back to Matthew 6. And Jesus said here in verses 7 and 8, but when you pray, use not vain repetitions as the heathen do, for they think they should be heard for the much speaking. Be not therefore like unto them. Now watch this, for your father knoweth what things you have need of before you ask him.
That's very interesting. God knows before you ask. Well, that just begs the question then why should we ask? Well, number one, not to impress God. Don't use vain repetition. You don't have to be a junior size Shakespeare in order to pray with your little flowery praises. We don't pray to impress God and we don't pray to inform God. God already knows what things we need.
He knows everything that you need and there's nothing you can tell him that he does not already know. So if you don't pray to impress God and you don't pray to inform God, why do you pray? Do you pray to instruct God?
Absolutely not. Prayer is not some way where you bend God's will to fit your will. You don't instruct God in prayer. Why do we pray? To invite God. To invite God to be a part of our lives so we can delight ourselves in the Lord.
The Bible says there in 2 Corinthians chapter 6 verse 1 that we are workers together with him. God loves us so much that God gives us the privilege of participating in his kingdom work through prayer. Now God can work without our prayers, but we cannot work without God and it is prayer that causes us to depend upon him. God does not want us to live lives independent of him. If God just simply blessed us without our asking, what would that do? That would teach us to live life independently from God. But Jesus said, if you abide in me and my word abides in you, then you'll ask what you will and it should be done unto you. You see, God wants you to abide with him and that's the reason God has taught us to pray, to invite him to take control of our lives.
Now listen very carefully. The devil cannot keep God from answering. So what will he do? He will endeavor to keep you from asking.
Think about it now. The devil can't keep God from answering. So what will he do?
He will try to keep us from asking. Now, our Lord in this scripture says, ask, seek, and knock. Now, three factors I want to give you.
Factor number one, the desire factor. Ask and express your desires to God. So if you have a desire in your heart, what things soever you desire when you pray, believe that you'll receive them and you shall have them. Now, the Bible says, delight yourself in the Lord and he will give you the desire of your heart. Now, don't get the idea that there are spiritual things that you can ask for and secular things that you cannot ask for. The Bible never divides life between the sacred and the secular. With God, every task is a holy task.
Every day is a holy day. Can you imagine Jesus dividing his life into the sacred and the secular? Can you imagine Jesus saying, now, Lord, Father, when I preach, I want anointing, but the rest of the time, I'll do it myself. No, you see, in everything by prayer and supplication with thanksgiving, let your requests be made known unto God.
A good test as to whether you should desire it or whether you should do it is can you ask God to help you or can you ask God to do it through you? Whatever you desire, listen, whatever you desire, tell God. Ask. You say, what if I want the wrong thing? Tell him. Say, Lord, I want the wrong thing. Have mercy upon me, O God. Fix my wanter.
That's right. Listen, you can't hide it from God. If you want it, he already knows it, doesn't he?
So, tell him. Say, O God, this is what I want and I know it's not what you want. Say, have mercy upon me. But, friend, pray about everything. The responsibility for asking is ours. The responsibility for giving is God's.
Now, you just ask. Learn to ask God for whatever you want. You see, sometimes the answer to prayer is direct, and I want you to learn these three words today. Direct, different, and delayed.
All right, sometimes you ask God and the answer is absolutely direct. Last week, I went to the inauguration of our president, had a wonderful time, and God blessed our lives. But I did not have a ticket for the inauguration, so I called our senator's office and Bill Frist and Lamar Alexander and I said, I need a ticket. Well, they sent a ticket, but they said, we need to tell you it is standing and you will be one-third of a mile back. No exaggeration.
A third of a mile. Well, I'll stay home and watch on television. And so I ask another friend for a better ticket. He said, yes, you're supposed to have a better ticket in a ceded area. And he said, I've sent it over to the hotel. I went to the hotel. It wasn't there. I went again. It wasn't there. I went again.
It wasn't there. It was time for the inaugural event. And I'm sitting out there in the lobby and Jim Dobson comes around the corner. We fellowship some. Jim's a good friend.
We fellowship some. He said, what are you doing? I said, a man was supposed to send some tickets over here for me and they haven't come. Well, he said, his friend there said, look, I've got four tickets, one, two, three, four. I had my daughter and son-in-law.
One, two, three, four here. And these were the best seats in the house. I was about as close as those of you on the back row sitting in a nice chair on a cement platform.
Now, let me tell you something. Just before I was given those tickets, I prayed and here's what I prayed. I said, Lord, I don't have to have those tickets and I'm no better than anybody else in this city. There's no reason that I should have the privilege of getting a closer seat or having a chair to sit on, but I want one. And I said, God, I don't know this is your will.
I can't pray in the name of Jesus. It's just what I want. Lord, I'm your child.
That's what I want. I had not prayed that prayer two or three minutes before they came around the corner and I had four of the best seats in the place in my hand. I asked him and the answer was direct. Don't think of some things too big or too small for God to answer. Down in Florida one time I got to go fishing and I love to fish, especially in the salt water, not one of these cow palms around here. I'm sorry. But I was out in the salt water lagoon called the Indian River with some pals and I've been fishing for a long time. We were waiting on the sandbar casting for speckle trout and I'm talking to Lord all by myself away from everybody else, just loving him and praising him and I said, Lord, I am not catching any fish. I said, Lord, I haven't been fishing for a long time and maybe a long time before I go fishing again. Lord, I want to catch a great big trout. I told him this, I want to catch a not a small one, I want to catch a big one. And I said, I can't ask in Jesus' name. I have no right to catch a big fish.
It's not a necessity, but I want one. I had not prayed that prayer in longer than two minutes. I dropped that mirror lure down into a deep hole there off that sandbar and began to bring it up and I saw a big yellow mouth like that coming up out of that water. And that big speckle trout hit that thing and I wrestled him all over the landscape out there on the waterscape, finally got him landed. It was a prize trout. It was one day what they call a button trout. Immediately after I prayed for this fish, there God gave the answer. I said, Lord, that was great. I want another one. And I cast for another one.
And I suppose in two or three more minutes, I'd caught another huge trout. I stopped asking and I stopped catching. Now, what was God doing? God knew the desire of my heart. You see, don't be afraid to ask God.
Sometimes the answers like that are absolutely direct. I was driving to a revival meeting one time and this was in Florida and I had preached Sunday morning, Brother Jim, at Merritt Island and I was going over to Wauchula, Florida, was out there driving my automobile, going along just as happy as I could be, driving about 65 miles an hour when my car stopped running. It didn't sputter. It just stopped running. The engine was not running at all. I put it in neutral, coasted as far as I could. I got by myself on this road and the car won't run.
I did what everybody does. I got out and looked under the hood. I mean, there's the engine. It hadn't fallen out. What's wrong with that car?
I don't know. But I got in and I cranked and I cranked and I cranked and I cranked and I cranked and it would not even sputter to finally my battery was going... And I said, well, worse than a car not running, now I'm going to have a dead battery. Then I thought, Adrian, have you asked God? I got out of that car and I... Now, I know this sounds silly, but I laid my hand on the hood and I said, Lord, if you are the great physician, you're also the great mechanic. And I ask you in the name of Jesus, because I was going to revival meeting, in the name of Jesus, fix my car. I got in, turned the key, vroom.
The engine just roared. You say, well, that was a coincidence. Do you believe what you believe? I believe what I believe. But, friends, sometimes the answer is direct. We ask God and God answers our prayer. Now, remember, Satan cannot keep God from answering, so he'll try to keep you from asking.
Now, he cannot answer unless we ask. Now, that's the first factor, the desire factor. What things have you desire? The desire factor is ask and express your desires to God.
Now, the second factor is the direction factor. Seek and expect direction from God, because there's sometimes there are things that we ask God for and they're not His will. Why did He say seek? Because God sometimes wants to redirect our prayers to His will.
Asking and seeking have to be linked together. Sometimes God's ways are unknown to us. Sometimes we're asking for one thing and we need to be seeking another thing, and so we keep asking and keep seeking until God directs our prayer, if we're not asking for the right thing the first time. Have you ever thanked God for unanswered prayer? It's reported that Mrs. Billy Graham said, I thank God that He does not answer every prayer of mine.
Had He done so, I would have married the wrong man five different times. Sometimes we ask God for things, and it's not what God wants us to have, so we have to keep seeking. This property that we're built on is an answer to prayer, but not because I sought it at first. We were trying to build downtown, and had we built downtown, we would have overbuilt the area and underbuilt our need, but we were trying to buy at least three more acres of property.
Out here, we have 400 acres of property, but we had 24 acres. We had three more acres of property, and we prayed, and I stayed in heaven asking God for the property that we might build a worship center where we could reach people because we were having three services on Sunday morning. I preached three times in a row, then again Sunday night, then after church, they slid me under the door, and so we were praying.
I remember I was with Roland Maddox. We were walking across the parking lot, and Roland said, do you know, pastor, that piece of property we've been trying to buy up there? He said, the man has just raised the price again. Here's what I said.
I can remember the exact words. I said, well, praise God. No two-legged man whose breath is in his nostrils is going to stop what God is doing. Just praise God. I don't understand the way, but praise you, Lord.
Praise you. That man did us the best favor that he had done for us by raising the price on that property. In Orlando, asleep or trying to sleep, God laid on my heart that we need to move this entire facility out here.
It has been an incredible blessing. We asked God for one thing, and we kept seeking God and God showed us what his real plan for us was. I remember I used to pray, oh, God, let Interstate 40 go through Overton Park.
Now, if you're a tree lover, I'm sorry, but that's what I prayed. Let the interstate go through the park so that our people who live where they live can get to the church rather than going around through Robin Hood's barn, wherever that is. When I told the Lord, I explained the whole deal to him. You know, I tried to inform him and then instruct him, but I didn't impress him, but he heard my prayer. When I went and told the mayor of the city what we were about to do, he said, that's wonderful.
He said, you know, the money that was set aside to go through Overton Park can be used to put an interchange right there. You see, isn't God good? Isn't God good? Hasn't God been good to our church? You see, friends, sometimes the answers are direct.
Sometimes the answers are different. The apostle Paul had a thorn in the flesh and you read about it over there in 2 Corinthians chapter 12 verses eight and following. And he said, oh, God, take away this thorn. Three seasons of prayer, he prayed. But God said, no, I've got something different for you and I've got something better for you.
My strength will be made perfect in your weakness. I'm going to give you a special anointing, a special power. Now, so what do we do? We ask and express our desires to God. Then we seek and experience direction from God.
And then thirdly, we knock. And when we knock, we exercise determination with God. Sometimes we're asking in the will of God. Sometimes we're asking with specificity what God wants to give us, but we give up too easily. To knock implies determination. In the Greek language, and this was written, as you know in Greek, the word is knock and keep on knocking.
Knock, knock, knock upon heaven's door. Now, I said that sometimes the answers are direct. You ask God for something, there it is.
I love those kind of answers. But sometimes the answers are different. You ask God for one thing and God in love does not give it, but he gives you something better, but different.
But sometimes the answers are not direct and they're not different, they are delayed. There seems to be some impediment, where we've asked God, we sought God, but the door is closed. And so God says, knock, knock, keep on knocking on heaven's door.
That's very interesting. Why would God tell us to do that? Why doesn't God just give us what we ask? Well, this same scripture, ask, seek and knock, is repeated in Luke chapter 11. You might want to turn over to Luke chapter 11. Jesus here, again, is teaching on prayer.
And look, if you will, in Luke chapter 11, verses five through 10. And he said unto them, which of you shall have a friend and shall go to him at midnight? And say to him, friend, lend me three loaves, that is three loaves of bread. For a friend of mine in his journey has come to me and I have nothing to set before him. Now in the Middle East, if a friend comes to you, you must invite him to stay there and you must feed him.
That is the expected thing. And now I said, man, say, look, the cupboard's empty. I've got this friend, I've got to feed him something. And he from within shall answer and say, trouble me not. The door is now shut and my children are with me in bed. I say unto you, though he will not rise and give thee, I say unto you, though he will not rise and give him because he is his friend, yet because of his importunity, just write out in your margin, his persistence, he will rise and give him as many as he needeth. And I say unto you, here it is, ask and it shall be given to you, seek and you shall find, knock and it shall be opened unto you. Now, he's not talking here about a light rattle on the doorknob. He is talking about a man banging on the door. And his friend, his neighbor said, will you go away?
Do you know what time it is? Man, if you wake up those dogs and wake up those babies, we're going to have some serious trouble. You know, the houses were small. They would sometimes keep animals beneath on the first floor and the locks were complicated.
The whole family often in one room. And he said, look, I can't do this. Go away. I said, go away. I said, how many do you need?
Get this bread and get out of here. Now, why would Jesus use an illustration like that about prayer? He's not saying that God is like an unconcerned neighbor.
He's just saying that if a neighbor will do that just because he's being pestered, how much more will God hear us if we continue to seek, if we continue to ask, if we continue to knock. Jesus told a story of an unjust judge. There was a widow.
She had a good case, but this crooked judge would not answer. He didn't have time for her. And she just kept on pastoring him. And notice if you will here in Luke chapter 18 and verse four. And he would not for a while, but afterward he said to himself, though I fear not God, nor regard man. What a hard-hearted guy this was. Didn't fear God, had no respect for man.
Listen to what he says. Yet because this widow troubleth me, I will avenger, lest by her continual coming she weary me. And the Lord said, hear what the unjust judge saith, and shall not God avenge his own elect, which cried day and night unto him, though he bear long with them. I tell you that he will avenge them speedily.
Now what's all of this about? Is he saying that God is like an unconcerned neighbor? No. Is he saying God is like a perverted wicked judge? No.
But what he's saying, if an unconcerned neighbor will hear persistent prayer, if an unconcerned judge will hear persistent prayer, then keep on knocking. That's taught, we see it all in the Bible. Over there in Matthew chapter 15, there's a story of a Canaanite woman. The Bible calls her a Syrophoenician woman. She was from Syria and Phoenicia.
That is, she was a Canaanite. She had a daughter that was demon possessed. She came to Jesus and she said, Jesus, I've got a big need. My daughter has a demon.
Do something for her. Do you know what Jesus said to her? I haven't come to you Canaanites. I've come to the lost sheep of the house of Israel. Do you think I'm going to take the children's bread and give it to dogs? Now suppose Jesus talked to you that way. You'd say, huh, some Messiah he is, some caring person he is, call me a dog.
Said he doesn't care about me and my daughter. She's demon possessed. You know what that woman did? She said, that's right, Lord.
You described me perfectly. I'm a Gentile dog, but I'm a dog under your table and I'm going to stay there until I get a crumb from you. Jesus' heart broke. He wasn't being cruel to that woman. He was trying to teach her to not to persist. And he said, woman, great is your faith.
Great, you'll have what you ask. You see, she just continued to knock. Elijah was a prophet of God in the Old Testament. God had shut up heaven that it would not rain. For three years, it didn't rain. The leaves were shriveled.
The animals were dying. It was a judgment of God upon the land. But then Elijah and the people prayed for rain for the glory of God. Elijah went up on the top of Mount Carmel.
I've been there many times. And he looked out and he sent his servant. He said, go see if you see any clouds. He went, nothing. He prayed some more. He said, go again. He went, nothing. He prayed some more, go again. He went, nothing. On the seventh time, the servant came back and said, I see a little cloud about the size of a man's hand.
Elijah said, there's going to be an abundance of rain. Friend, we need to keep on praying until God rains down upon us. And here was a man who knocked and kept on knocking. And that's what we need to do. If God doesn't answer your prayer, just keep praying.
Well, that brings up a question. How long should we continue to pray? Let me tell you how long you continue to pray. How long you continue to knock. You continue to knock until you have the answer in your hand or in your heart or until God says no. If you have the answer in your hand, you don't have to keep asking. Now, you may have the answer in your heart. God says, I have heard your prayer.
Wait upon me. I had a deep prayer request in my life one time concerning some of my loved ones. And I tried again to tell God how to do it, but he would not let me instruct him. But one day he said to me, Adrian, you trust me.
I'm going to take care of it. I have heard your prayer. And it took a while for that prayer to come to me, but I had the answer in my heart. And sometimes God would just simply say, no.
Why? Because he doesn't love us? No, because he does love us. Three of God's greatest prophets in the Bible asked God to kill them. God said, no. God said, no, I'm not going to do that.
That's not what you need. You ask, you seek, you knock, you pray until you have the answer in your hand, in your heart, until God says, no. The answer may be direct.
The answer may be different. The answer may be delayed, but God answers prayer. And what is my desire for this dear church? That we will be a praying church. Bow your heads in prayer. Oh, our God, my God, our God. We join the disciples in asking you, Lord, teach us to pray. Amen.
I hope you will develop the habit of asking, seek, knocking. These are not my words. These are the words of Jesus. Ask, it'll be given to you, seek and you shall find, knock and it shall be open unto you.
But let me put this caveat there. He's talking to his children. Now, God may answer the prayer of an unsaved man, but he's never promised to. These promises are to God's children.
Now, friend, I'm telling you something. Listen to me, even if you're not all that excited about going to heaven and missing hell, live long enough and the time will come when for God to answer your prayer will mean more to you than anything in the whole world. And you cannot ask with assurance unless you're a child of God. Now, if you don't know the Lord Jesus Christ as your personal savior, I want to invite you today to give your heart to him, just to trust him, to depend upon him to do with you and for you and through you what he said he would do.
Remember that he loved you so much. He took your sin debt and paid it with his precious blood on the cross and said, it is finished, it is paid in full. And then he offers you salvation if you will trust him and receive what he did for you.
When you trust him, that moment you become a child of God. Now, you'll be a baby Christian. You'll have to grow. You're not going to sprout wings and get a halo. You'll have to grow in the grace and knowledge of Jesus.
I'm still growing. I don't want to stop growing, but you grow and the Lord will be in your heart. You'll have fellowship with him and heaven will be your sure destination.
Bow your heads in prayer. If you already know the Lord, I want you to begin to pray for those round about you who may not yet know the Lord. If you do know him, thank him that he has saved you. And today, if you are not sure that you're saved, be sure that you're not saved.
I've got wonderful, wonderful good news for you. Jesus can and will save you today. You might pray a prayer like this. Oh God, I'm a poor lost sinner. I need to be saved and I want to be saved. Thank you for paying my sin debt with the blood of your dear son, Jesus. Lord Jesus, I open my heart right now like a little child. I receive you into my life. Come into my life. Forgive my sin. Cleanse me. Save me, Jesus. Amen and amen.