The Lord’s Prayer: The Third Petition
July 21, 2024
Grace to you and peace in Jesus’ name. Amen.
The Third Petition is:
Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven.
What does this mean?
The good and gracious will of God is done even without our prayer, but we pray in this petition that it may be done among us also.
How is God’s will done?
God’s will is done when He breaks and hinders every evil plan and purpose of the devil, the world, and our sinful nature, which do not want us to hallow God’s name or let His kingdom come; and when He strengthens and keeps us firm in His Word and faith until we die. This is His good and gracious will.
This sermon was an intimidating one to write. The topic is: The will of God. That’s a topic that should make you pause. The will of God might conjures up images of great power like: waves crushing the sea shore, tornadoes obliterating a small town, or earthquakes shaking mountains. The will of God is strong and mighty, and we are puny and weak in comparison. You are subject to His whims, whatever they might be.
There is an easy way to talk about the will of God. I could, as the pastor of this congregation, stand here with all my authority, and declare to you what the will of God is. The problem with that is the genuine risk of turning God into some distant thing, scribed in an ancient book, which you must accept because of who I am, and who you are. Many pastors think that way. All of them are wrong.
It would also be easy to take on this topic by giving the stereotypical clichés. We can quote Romans 8 out of context and state with bold confidence, “All things work together for good.1” We could quote Jeremiah 29, out of context, and state, “I know the plans that I have for you, declares the Lord.2” We can state, out of context, “what God ordains is always good.” The problem with these “easy outs” is they don’t really deal with the will of God. They simply tell us: Just live with it.
Living like that could make your life horrible because this distant, unreachable, untouchable deity, who is oblivious to your pain and struggles, just wanted it t hat way. Then faith is reduced to accepting it and living with it. That nonsense is more in line with the ‘three fates’ of Shakespeare,3 or the ‘force’ in Star Wars.
Since all of that is wrong, what’s right? Let’s start by changing our view of the world because we’ve got it all wrong. First we should not live in fear of what will happen tomorrow. We should not fear what tomorrow will bring. We can be confident tomorrow will be worse than today. What we should fear is that today is the best it is ever going to get. Everything is all downhill from here.
As believers in the one true Christian Faith we always have good science on our side. It is an established law of physics that entropy is inevitable. Meaning we can refer to the Second Law of Thermodynamics, which states: A closed system will eventually rundown, decay and die. It is just a way of stating the obvious: Things don’t stay the same, things don’t get better, things always get worse.
Think about pouring a bowl of your favorite cereal. When you first pour the milk the cereal is crunchy and scrumptious. Let it sit for an hour and it turns into a warm grain slushy you can drink through a straw. This truth is not limited to only things in our lives, it is true of all of God’s creation.
The Bible says:
Creation was subjected to frustration
but not by its own choice,
it is a slavery to decay.4
Did you hear that, “a slavery to decay;” not to stay the same, not to get better, but a slavery to decay. So your house, your car, is not going to get better on its own, so is it the will of God that it will eventually fall apart. We had a car a while back that had one failure after another. Each one cost more than the next to fix. Was it the will of God that we deal with that. Look at our great nation and all the turmoil and tension it suffers. The news will tell you things don’t look like they’re getting better. The world our children will live in may not be as affluent, safe or secure as yours was. Is God’s answer to that: Just get used to it.
The Christian Church seems to be past the point where we will ever come together again, where we will ever be as the Bible says:
…like minded, having the same love, being one in spirit and in purpose…5”
In fact there may not even be a reason for any synod in a few years according to some studies. Do we just get used to it, it’s God’s will.
For many pastor’s it can be a challenge to deal with congregations that are ever and continually less knowledgeable in the Words of Scripture, and Scripture’s promises. Is that just the will of God? There’s nothing we can do about it. In fact even when it comes to sin, we all sin, we can’t stop. God won’t make it stop, so it must be the will of God. I really hope you think I’ve just gone a bit too far. I have, but Christians have often thought and taught these very things.6
Even more insidious is those who think this way, suggesting accepting these things represents strong faith in God. To understand He is supreme, come what may ‘His will be done,’ and real faith is getting to the place where you just have to accept it.
Simply accepting such things is not praying, “Thy7 will be done.” God’s will being done is not giving up on any hope for the future in this life. Praying “Thy will be done” is not mustering our courage to face the oncoming onslaught of attacks, destruction, and decay. Praying, “Thy will be done” is not giving up and allowing evil to persist in our lives. That is not praying, “Thy will be done.”
So what is, “Thy will be done” praying? Look at Romans 12:
Don’t become like the people of this world. Instead change the way you think. Then you will always be able to determine what the will of God really is, what is good, pleasing, and perfect.8
You see all of that inevitable decay is true, but only in a “closed system.” Only in a place where nothing from the outside comes in, but we do not live in a closed system. The “system” has been broken into. T he “system” has been invaded by the very Son of God Himself.
Jesus took on our nature. He walked among the decaying “system.” A “system” decaying because of what we had done to it. Remember He had made it all perfect in the beginning.9 He walked here, He endured the effect of sin on this world. He even endured the ultimate affect of sin: death, but like I said: This is not a closed system. The Son of God, Jesus Christ, shattered the system of decay and death when He rose from the dead defeating Death forever.10
We now can taunt and tease death with the words of St. Paul:
Death, where is your victory?
Death, where is your sting?11
So now decay and death are no longer inevitable. We don’t have to just accept it. We don’t have to accept it because One has come.12 One promised from long ago.13 One who left this place better than the way He found it when He arrived. When Jesus Christ physically rose He gave new life. He is life. He is the way the truth and the life.14
How do we access this life giving change? How do we get some of this energizing elixir of eternity? In the simplest way. In the most profound a miraculous way. Through the exorcism of your evil spirit, and through the possession by the Holy Spirit who takes up residence, not just with you but within you. The very event that took place at your Baptism.
You now walk in newness of life.15 It continues to happen when you read God’s Holy Word. Which is why we want you to read and study God’s Word always. Because God works through His Word.16 Through these things God touches you and He personally changes you from the decaying rotting filth you would otherwise be. In Holy Baptism He called you His own.17
Lastly in the Sacred Supper of Jesus precious Body and Blood. Here what passes your lips is not a snack. It is the very presence of Jesus your Savior. Jesus said:
Whoever feeds on My flesh and drinks My blood has eternal life, and I will raise him up on the last day. For My flesh is true food, and My blood is true drink. Whoever feeds on My flesh and drinks My blood abides in Me, and I in him.18
It is in these things we find that elixir of eternity. It is in these things we find the perfection we lost. That perfecting work of God w ill be completed on that day we call the Last Day. That day when every knee will bow and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord.19 The unbelievers will bow in humility and sorrow eternal. The faithful will bow in praise and glory unending. All this because God answers our prayer, “Thy will be done.” God’s will is to save us and He has.
In Jesus’ name.
Amen.
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NOTES
1Romans 8:28
2Jeremiah 29:11
3The “Three Fates” or Three Witches” are characters in a play by William Shakespeare called Macbeth.
4Romans 8:20
5Philippians 2:2
6Romans 6:15-16
7’Thy’ is an old English word that means: ’Your.’
8Romans 12:2 (Paraphrased)
9Genesis 1:31
102 Timothy 1:10; 1 Corinthians 15:24-26; Hebrews 2:14; Revelation 21:4
111 Corinthians 15:55
12John 1:29
13Genesis 3:15
14John 14:6
15Romans 6:4
16Isaiah 55:10-11
171 John 3:1
18John 6:54
19Philippians 2:10-11
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