The Kingdom Is … Real

In Lessons 4 and 5 of Teach Us to Pray: Learning to pray from the Lord’s Prayer and teachings of Jesus, we see more Focus points of the Lord’s prayer based on the phrase, “Your Kingdom come. Your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven” (Matthew 6:10). A peek at these lessons reveals the following focus points:

Living the Kingdom

Lesson 4 is titled Focus on God and His Kingdom Priorities in Life, the subtitles of which read (with my bracketed notes):

  • Defining the Kingdom of God [Just what is the Kingdom of God? What is it like?]
  • The King of the Kingdom and His kids [Say who? What does the Kingdom of God have to do with me?]

Praying the Kingdom

Lesson 5, titled Focus on God and His Kingdom Priorities in Prayer, deals with topics like:

  • Praying Your Kingdom come, Your will be done [Just what does that mean?]
  • Seek the will of God in prayer [It really isn’t about us.]
  • Taking the Kingdom, Fighting the good fight [What’s your purpose in life?]

Jesus’ statements about God’s Kingdom and his will begs these questions, and more, dealt with in these two lessons: What is the Kingdom of God? What does it look like? What are the values and characteristics of the Kingdom of God? In what ways does the Kingdom of God affect how we live and how we pray?

Where to find the answers to those questions? As in every lesson, we go to Scripture, of course. And at the end of each lesson, we have an opportunity to pray according to Jesus’ words.

Teach Us to Pray: Learning to pray from the Lord’s prayer and teachings of Jesus, a Bible study, soon to be offered on Zoom. Stay tuned for more information on that. In the meantime, I’ll keep blogging about each lesson.

To read each blog post about Teach Us to Pray, go to  Blog – Jacqueline G Wallace.com and check out the Recent Blog Posts on the right of the page.

First Look Up

In the last blog post we were introduced briefly to the Lord’s Prayer, recognizing it as a model or pattern prayer that Jesus taught his disciples. Lesson 3 begins with “Focus on God,” the first of five Focus points identified in the Prayer.

Our Father

“Our Father who is in heaven, hallowed be Your name.” (Matthew 6:9)

How does the Lord’s prayer open? “Our Father.” Obviously, this assumes a relationship of Father and child. As stated before, this prayer is for Jesus’ disciples, those who follow him in faith and commitment as their Lord and Savior; those who have been born anew into the family of God by faith.

This is not an ordinary Father—child relationship though, for he is “Our Father who is in heaven.” And as such we are to acknowledge his worthiness to be worshiped. “Hallowed be Your name.”


Asking Questions

Since Jesus made such bold statements about exalting God, it is incumbent upon us to ask some pertinent questions:

To whom do we pray?

Who is our focus in Prayer?

Who is this God?

What is he like?

What does he do?

Finding the Answers

We not only ask these questions, but turn right back to Scripture to answer them. This is exactly what Lesson 3 leads us to do. A “Bible Study” should be an exercise in studying the Bible. It is in God’s Word that the answers lie. And our subsequent actions will be based on what we discover in God’s Word.

Interested in finding out what God says about these questions, and more? Contact me at jacqueline@jacquelinegwallace.com for more information about the Bible study Teach Us to Pray.

To read all posts about this Bible study on the Lord’s Prayer, look under “Archives” to the right on the Blog page.

Knocking on Heaven’s Door

An Introduction to the Lord’s Prayer


  The past few weeks I’ve been writing about the new Bible study, Teach Us to Pray: Learning to pray from the Lord’s Prayer and teachings of Jesus. The first two lessons in the Bible study are preparatory to studying the Lord’s Prayer. Lesson 3, however, is where we begin to dig into the Lord’s Prayer itself. But first, we open with a short introduction to the study before getting into the first of five Focus Points identified in the Lord’s Prayer. 

Most recognize Matthew 6:9—13 as a Model or Pattern prayer. In it, Jesus teaches us principles by which to pray. Consistent with teaching principles, the prayer is short and to the point. We are given a framework made of the principles, which correspond to each focus point below; through praise and petition, we fill in the prayer with the personal details of the joys or burdens on our hearts.
 
‘Our Father who is 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 also have forgiven our debtors.
‘And do not lead us into temptation but deliver us from evil.

[For Yours is the kingdom and the power and the glory forever. Amen.’] (Matthew 6:9—13)


Five Focus Points

In this study, Five Focus Points of The Lord’s Pattern Prayer have been identified, corresponding to each phrase of the prayer. The study is built around looking at the Lord’s Prayer through the lenses of those five points of focus.

Lessons 3-8 address each of these five Focus Points. What are these Focus points? Why are they important to studying the Lord’s prayer? How might the application of these Focus Points change our prayers, and our lives? Searching the Scriptures for the answers to these questions is the meat of this Bible study.

Teach Us to Pray

Jesus intended this prayer to teach us, his disciples, to pray, in answer to the disciple’s request. With biblical insights and built-in times for prayer in each lesson, this Bible study teaches us how to view and to use Jesus’ pattern prayer; it teaches us to pray.

In our next post, we dive into the Lord’s Prayer itself and give a taste of what is in store in the Bible study Teach Us to Pray.

To read all the blog posts related to the Bible study, Teach Us to Pray, scroll down “Archives” on the Blog page.

Prayer: Doing What is Right and Doing It Right

The first two lessons of Teach Us to Pray—Learning to pray from the Lord’s Prayer and teachings of Jesus, do not start out teaching about the Lord’s Prayer. In the last two blog posts we revealed that Lesson 1 considered two necessary Prerequisites for Prayer as preparation for a study of the Lord’s Prayer: Relationship and Fellowship.

In this post we back up to what Jesus taught just before he said, “Pray, then, in this way” (Matthew 6:1, 5-8, 9).

Prayer is Doing What is Right

Jesus told his disciples prayer was part of doing righteousness (doing what is right). Based on what he said, we can deduce that a prayerless life is incompatible with a righteous life. Prayer is assumed behavior for the believer in Jesus Christ. It is our mode of communicating with God, it brings us into his very Presence.

Watch Out

But then Jesus gave warnings about how not to pray. We might think prayer is fairly straightforward; how can you go wrong by praying? Jesus thinks otherwise. He gives us a view of prayer from a perspective we don’t have in our own abilities: he instructs us from his perspective. We only see the exterior; God sees our hearts.

What does Jesus warn us against in prayer? What does it mean to pray aright? Lesson 2 of Teach Us to Pray unpacks what Jesus means by doing right (praying) and doing it (prayer) right.

Once we work through Lessons 1 and 2, the stage is set for our study of the Lord’s Prayer proper.

Photo by Claudio Schwarz on Unsplash

A Heart for God

In these blog posts I have been revealing bits of my most recent Bible study Teach Us to Pray—The Practice of Prayer: Learning to pray from the Lord’s Prayer and teachings of Jesus. From the last post, in Lesson 1 we learn there are two main Prerequisites for a life of prayer: Relationship with God through faith in Jesus Christ and Fellowship with God and growing in our faith walk.

Pursuing the second Prerequisite for prayer, we discover that a vital aspect of Fellowship with God is having a heart of love and longing for God. But how do we get that? Are there ways to deepen our love for God? Are there things we can do to nurture a heart of love and longing for God?


Doing Our Part

Yes, there are things we can do to draw closer to God, not just wait for him to zap us to love him more. He is already doing his part drawing us to himself.

One thing we can do is pray the Psalms; they are a wonderful place to nurture such a heart of love and longing for God. This idea is developed in the lesson and an opportunity is given to actually put it into action.

Photo by gleangenie natash44sepia adj.

Another thing we can do is form new habits to deepen our fellowship with God. Along with your other daily Bible reading, try starting your time with God each day by reading a psalm. Focusing on God in praise as we approach him in prayer helps us develop love and longing for God. This is vital for a rich prayer life. This and other factors are considered in Lesson 1.


At the end of Lesson 1, there is the first built-in prayer time, as there is at the end of each lesson. This allows you to put into practice things discussed. Learn then do.

Do you need to nurture a heart of love and longing for God? What are you willing to do to accomplish it?

These are a small taste of what is in store in Lesson 1 of Teach Us to Pray. More in the next post.

The Two Prerequisites for Prayer

Prerequisite – something that is necessary to an end or to the carrying out of a function.[1]


Did you know there are prerequisites for prayer, or specifically, for what we term a “prayer life”?

Anyone can call on the name of the Lord at any time to seek salvation through Jesus Christ. The only prerequisites for that are humility, repentance of sin, and faith in Jesus Christ as one’s Lord and Savior, as the gospel of God teaches us. And this is the starting point.

But from that point on, to develop a lifestyle of prayer as a disciple of Jesus, one must meet the prerequisites for it. Without these two prereqs, there won’t be such a thing as a “prayer life” in one’s life.


Disciples Only Need Apply

The Lord’s Prayer—the prayer Jesus taught his disciples in response to the request, “Teach us to pray”—was not meant for those who do not yet know Christ as their Savior and Lord. It was and is meant for disciples, learners, followers of Jesus Christ. We’ve already bowed the knee to him in repentance and faith and want to continue on with God.

Relationship: the starting point

The first Prerequisite then, should be obvious from what we’ve just said: it is Relationship. When we come to Christ for salvation, the starting point, we enter a new relationship with God: he becomes our Father in heaven, we become his children. Everything is different. As the Scripture says, “All things become new” (2 Corinthians 5:17). And that newness anticipates further growth and change. We don’t stay the way we were before. This is where the second Prerequisite comes in.

Peter said, “like newborn babies, long for the pure milk of the word [God’s Word], so that you may grow in respect to salvation” and “grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ” (1 Peter 2:2; 2 Peter 3:18, bracket added).

These are not simply nice sounding options; these are commands to obey.

Fellowship: a new lifestyle

Growing and changing, just like babies do, involves a more intimate level of communication with God. We call this Fellowship, the second Prerequisite. And it has nothing whatever to do with coffee and donuts after the church service.

Fellowship with God has to do with what Peter said about growing in the grace and knowledge of Jesus Christ. Learning and obeying his word, doing his will, daily seeking him, and depending on him. It is submitting to the Holy Spirit’s teaching and guidance, developing a heart for God. And so much more.


This is just a taste of what we are calling Prerequisites for Prayer (Lesson 1). These characteristics must be present and growing in your life. We show you how to start and maintain that process as we unpack these prerequisites more completely in Lesson 1 of Teach Us to Pray, a study of the Lord’s Prayer. 


Where are you on the continuum of faith? Do you have a Relationship with God through faith in Jesus Christ? As a child of God, are you growing in your Fellowship with him?

If you want to pray as Jesus taught us, these are the starting points.


[1] https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/prerequisite

Photo by cbcs BibleRead-2 via Morguefile

Going Beyond the Surface of the Lord’s Prayer

Have you ever recited the Lord’s Prayer in a church service? Some churches recite it frequently; others, such as the churches I grew up in, not so much. As a consequence, when I was in a church service where the congregation did recite the prayer, I stumbled along, trying to remember the words I was vaguely familiar with but hadn’t committed to memory. (I have memorized it since then and I encourage memorizing it for everyone.)

The Lord’s Prayer wasn’t a big focus for me growing up. I didn’t understand it. Well, on a surface level, yes, I did, but not in a deep way. It was somewhat of a mystery to me. I didn’t quite know what to think of it or what to do with it, even though it did have some lovely turns of phrase.

More Than Meets the Eye


In recent times, however, after a more thorough study of it, I have come to highly value the Lord’s Prayer. It’s like Jesus gave us, in the Lord’s Prayer, a key to unlock a great treasure, one we didn’t even know was there. Or that we needed.

The Lord’s Prayer came about when one of Jesus’ disciples asked him to teach them to pray.  He knew that John the Baptizer taught his disciples to pray, and this unnamed disciple of Jesus’ was apparently hungry enough to go deeper with God, to ask Jesus to do the same for them.

Unlocking the Treasure of Prayer


So, Jesus gave his disciples a model prayer, a pattern for crafting our own personal prayers to God. It is a teaching tool with which to build our prayers, guiding us to go deeper with God, teaching us how to pray.

Teach Us to Pray—The Practice of Prayer—Learning to Pray from the teachings of Jesus, with practical application is a Bible study that takes us deeper into understanding the Lord’s Prayer, unlocking that treasure trove God has for us, and drawing us closer to God our Father.

Come along with me as I blog about the lessons in this Bible study of the Lord’s Prayer, and get a taste of what I mean.

A New Bible Study

Where have I been all this time? I’ve been busy but I’ve been a long time away from my blog. I ran out of words, or so it seemed. After launching the Brokenness to Beauty Bible Study, my writing muse skipped town on me; it needed a rest, I think. I needed a kick start (also called inspiration). Then, surprise surprise, a puff of wind …

A New Challenge

It all started when Debbie, the Women’s Ministry Director at church, asked me and my friend, Naomi, to present a workshop on prayer for the upcoming women’s retreat. I had written several other short Bible studies and the two of us had co-presented them for past retreats, so we had some experience under our belts. Usually, it took a few days to nail down the specifics of the topic given us so I could start writing the material.

A Breath of Inspiration

This time, however, I knew immediately what we should present: a study of the Lord’s Prayer, with built-in times of prayer. Over the prior year I had facilitated a women’s Bible study and we studied the Sermon on the Mount. I had learned so much from our study, which included studying the Lord’s Prayer, I knew I wanted to share these truths.

Obviously, since the workshop was only one-hour long, I wrote the study of the Lord’s Prayer to fit into that timeframe. Squeeze into it might be more accurate. Talk about “so much to say and so little time”! Both Naomi and I were also committed to integrating a time of praying into a study of prayer. Makes sense to me; you learn about prayer, then you pray. But fitting all that into one hour is an almost impossible feat. I was hoping against hope we could present it in its entirety, prayer time included.

Now, this women’s retreat has been an annual event at the church for years and we were all looking forward to it; women signed up online, ticked the boxes to choose a bunk room or motel type accommodations, ticked more boxes for the activities offered, and paid their fees. Anticipation was in the air!

Setback

Unfortunately, COVID-19 crashed our party-to-be. The pandemic hit the States, like it did the rest of the world, and suddenly there was no women’s retreat.

The manuscript for the workshop on the Lord’s Prayer that I had labored to write was tabled, indefinitely.

A Bigger Challenge and a Better Bible Study

But what’s that saying about change? “…the only thing constant is change” (Unknown author).[1] Change can be a good thing. As the pandemic began to abate and vaccinations abounded, changes for the good blossomed.


About six months after the “women’s retreat-that-wasn’t,” Debbie suggested resurrecting the study on the Lord’s Prayer. She had reread the manuscript and liked it so much she wanted to pursue presenting it in another format, perhaps online. It was then I decided the Bible study needed to be busted out of the constraints of a one-hour timeframe, expanded, and redesigned. I wanted to give the Lord’s Prayer more of what it deserved in the way of time to study it and time to put it into practice, with a prayer time integrated with the teaching. Six months later I had written—from one, one-hour lesson—eight lessons with prayer times incorporated into each lesson. Of course, there’s always so much more that could be said ….

Read It for Yourself

I’m getting my feet wet again blogging after so long a time away. I’ll start by sharing parts of my new Bible study on The Lord’s Prayer so you can read it for yourself. I think you’ll like what you read. Pass along the word to your friends to read it too.

I’m getting good feedback that this Bible study is speaking powerfully to those who read and study it. I pray God use what I’ve written to encourage and challenge people, helping them become stronger in their walk with the Lord. That’s what it’s all about; that’s the only reason I write.

Watch for the first installment of tidbits from Teach Us to Pray—The Practice of Prayer: Learning to Pray from the teachings of Jesus, with practical application; a study of the Lord’s Prayer. These posts will not be “the whole enchilada,” just a taste to whet your appetite for more.

We are working toward an autumn online presentation of Teach Us to Pray. I’ll keep you informed about when we will offer it!

[1]https://www.searchquotes.com/search/Change_Is_Constant/#ixzz6xu5pKdmS

Seasons to Live Life

I sat across the living room from Jean in the women’s Bible study. I knew in that moment I wanted to do what Jean was doing … someday. I also knew there had to be a lot of years’ experience of living and spiritual growing and maturing between that day and the day I’d be ready to be doing what Jean was doing, leading women in Bible study.

I’d read the verses that instructed a pastor to, “teach the older women to be reverent in the way they live, not to be slanderers or addicted to much wine, but to teach what is good. 4 Then they can urge the younger women to love their husbands and children, 5 to be self-controlled and pure, to be busy at home, to be kind, and to be subject to their husbands, so that no one will malign the word of God” (Titus 2:3­—5 NIV).

I knew that someday I wanted to be able to do that, teach younger women to truly live life, becoming what God calls us to be. At the time, I was a young wife and mother myself, not an older woman yet, so I knew I had a lot of living to do before that day came!

Well, I lived every day to the fullest, I believe, for the next few decades. Strange when you can count your life in whole decades, isn’t it? I thanked God for every day, knowing each one was a gift from God, through all the ups and downs, good days and very hard days, sorrows and joys. The joys overshadowing the sorrows, mostly realized at the end of dark valleys. Learning to live this life God calls us to amid the life we find ourselves in.

The decades marched by one day at a time. I blinked, and I was that “older woman.”

I am confident that, as an older woman who has been learning as a disciple of Jesus for many decades, I need to be about the work God called me to back when I was a young woman, when I had only two and a half decades under my belt. And so, I am pursuing that work, teaching other women.

There was a surprise season of writing. First came my book so many people encouraged me to write. Following the publication of Brokenness to Beauty: Transforming Your Brokenness into a Beautiful Life in January 2016, I was again encouraged by several women to write a Bible study to accompany the book. So, I did. Brokenness to Beauty Bible Study: Going Deeper to the Source of Transforming Your Brokenness to Beauty was published late in 2018 and I launched it in January of 2019 (click on the link on each book to learn more about the book).

For several months I have felt “written out.” My season of writing, at least for now, seems to be over. And that’s okay. I want to be doing what God wants me to be doing in this new season. And so, I am.

I’m now facilitating my second class of Brokenness to Beauty Bible Study and I love to open the Word with women. I also started and am facilitating a Women’s Discipleship group.  What could be more exciting than getting into the Word of God with others and learning together from our Teacher, God’s Spirit, and striving to obey him?

What has God called you to in this season? Maybe you’re in the early decades of your life. Be faithful in each day to obediently follow hard after Jesus. Maybe you are in the mid- or later decades of your life. Be faithful to obediently follow hard after Jesus! Following means learning and obeying. Follow his call to the area where he wants to use your skills and knowledge gained in the years you’ve been learning and becoming what he wants us to be.

Want guaranteed success in all you do? There’s only one way I know of to be assured of it:

“Keep this Book of the Law always on your lips; meditate on it day and night, so that you may be careful to do everything written in it. Then you will be prosperous and successful” (Joshua 1:8 NIV).

Live life!

The Power of the Word of God

“One of the things I really like is how you have us dissect the verses to see what the Bible is really saying. I’ve been learning a lot.”

So said Maria as we sat in a booth at a Denny’s restaurant. She is one of the women studying the Bible using the Brokenness to Beauty Bible Study. Published the end of last year, this is my first time facilitating a Bible study using it. My responses to the positive comments, like Maria’s, are always, “Praise God” or “Thank the Lord.”

And I am truly thankful and give any and all praise back to God, where it belongs. God is using his Word as he promised he would, to instruct and enlighten us as we study it together. His Spirit also convicts.

In Lesson 6 is a section titled “What’s In a Name?” that directs the reader to find Scripture verses that describe the Name of God, such as, “Our Father who is in Heaven, Hallowed be Your Name,” and “the Name of the Lord is holy,” and “Your Name, O Lord, endures forever.” And that most scary verse, “You shall not take the name of the Lord your God in vain, for the Lord will not leave him unpunished who takes his name in vain” (Exodus 20:7). Yes, God’s Spirit uses his Word to shine the light of truth on our hearts, and habits.

“I am trying very hard to change the way I talk. God really convicted me even though I never thought about it until it was pointed out in the study, that saying ‘Oh my God,’ unless I’m praying of course, is wrong!”

I know Patsy will change her habit of using God’s name as an exclamation, because she deeply loves and is committed to Jesus. Thank the Lord! He is using this Bible study in all the women’s lives, mine included, because this Bible study steeps us in God’s Word and challenges us to act on it! The Word of God is living, powerful, and eternal. God’s Spirit is our Teacher; I just have to facilitate!

I’ve taken each woman out individually for coffee or lunch to create an opportunity to get to know them better. It has been so much fun! Each woman is unique and her story is unique. And as I listen, I can detect the hand of God in each of their lives.

These women bless me by their love for the same Lord I love. They bless me for their hard work to study the Bible each week and come prepared to share what God is teaching them. They bless me for their desire to live worthy of him who died to purchase their salvation.

In a few weeks, we will conclude our 10 lesson Brokenness to Beauty Bible Study. That will not be the end though. I’ve had confirmation from God to establish a women’s discipleship group and with the interest expressed by several of the women in the Bible study to be in it, we will flow seamlessly into the
“Growing in Grace Women’s Discipleship Group” in the following weeks.

By God’s grace, we will continue together to “grow in grace and the knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ” 2 Peter 3:18.

Please pray with us. Our desire is to be disciples of Jesus who live worthy of him!

For more information about my book Brokenness to Beauty and its companion study, Brokenness to Beauty Bible Study, please contact me at Jacqueline@jacquelinegwallace.com Or visit my website at http://JacquelineGWallace.com/books.