• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Lutheran Church of Australia

where love comes to life

Menu
  • ABOUT US
  • THE LATEST
    • News
    • Flashback Friday
    • Calls – Employment – Volunteering
    • Daily Devotions
    • Worship Planning Page
    • The Lutheran
    • Bulletins and Announcements
  • CONGREGATIONAL LIFE HUB
  • FIND A …
    • Church
    • School
    • District
    • Resource
    • Project or Event
    • Ministry or Service
    • Agency or Ministry Partner
    • Aged or Community Care Service
  • CONTACT US
LCA Portal LAMP2 LCANZ Service Centre Donate

Persistent prayer

13 May 2024


Print Friendly, PDF & Email

by Neil Bergmann

Click here to download your printable verse to carry with you today.

 

And will not God bring about justice for his chosen ones, who cry out to him day and night? Will he keep putting them off? (Luke 18:7)

Read Luke 18:1–14

Today’s reading looks at two parables about prayer – one about a persistent widow and one that compares prayers from a Pharisee and a tax collector. Together, they tell us our prayers should be persistent and humble.

Prayer, I think, is more about changing us than it is about trying to convince God to do what we ask. God already knows what we want and need, even before we put them into words. Is telling God the same thing over and over going to change God’s mind? Maybe if we get lots of people to pray the same thing, God will be more convinced. I doubt it.

Instead, prayer focuses our minds on what is important in our walk as disciples. We need all the help we can get if we are to live our lives as God intends and, even then, we will fail a lot. Discipleship is not a one-way street of improvement, always moving closer and closer to perfection. Instead, it is a cycle of being refreshed and strengthened by spending time in prayer and worship, sent out into a hostile world to follow God’s will, and then returning to spend time alone with God again.

We cannot live as disciples by our own strength and wisdom. Instead, we need to humbly approach God, over and over again, admitting our weaknesses and being filled by God’s strength and God’s wisdom.

God, have mercy on me, a sinner. I am weak; fill me with your strength. I am foolish; fill me with your wisdom. I am frightened; fill me with your courage. Amen.


Neil Bergmann worships at Our Saviour Lutheran Church, Rochedale, Queensland. He represents the Lutheran Church on the Queensland Churches Environmental Network (QCEN), a commission of Queensland Churches Together.


  • Click here to read previous devotions.
  • We are also posting them on LCA Facebook, making it easy for you to share them with family and friends.
  • Sign up to receive Daily Devotion in your inbox every morning. If you’re already doing that, please encourage others to sign up. Click here for the link.

« Jesus prays for his disciples
Whose kingdom? »

Primary Sidebar

Join more than 5,000 people receiving LCA eNews in their inbox every fortnight. It brings you the latest of everything, including updates from this page. It's free, and you can unsubscribe at any time. Click on the picture to sign up.

Archives

  • July 2026
  • June 2026
  • May 2026
  • April 2026
  • March 2026
  • February 2026
  • January 2026
  • December 2025
  • November 2025
  • October 2025
  • September 2025
  • August 2025
  • Footer

    Quicklinks

    • HOME
    • NEWS & FEATURES
    • CALLS & EMPLOYMENT

     

    • FIND A CHURCH
    • WORSHIP PLANNING PAGE

    Contact us

    139 Frome Street
    Adelaide SA 5000

    08 8267 7300

    © 2026 Lutheran Church of Australia

    Privacy Policy • Disclaimer

    Designed by LCA Communications