The following excerpt is from Pour Out Your Heart: Discovering Joy, Strength, and Intimacy with God through Prayer, by Jeremy Linneman (B&H Publishing, 2025).
Jesus must have been delighted when his disciples asked him how to pray. I mean, his disciples ask Jesus a lot of bad questions.
When the Samaritans donât welcome Jesus in their town, James and John ask, âLord, do you want us to call fire down from heaven to destroy them?â (Luke 9:54). Not surprisingly, Jesus rebukes them. At the moment of Jesusâs transfiguration, Peter asks, âShould we put up three tentsâone for you, Moses, and Elijah?â (Matthew 17:4). Mark and Lukeâs gospels makes sure we know, for all time, Peter did not know what he was talking about (Mark 9:6; Luke 9:33).
But occasionally they get it right. âTeach us to pray,â they ask (Luke 11:1). Our Lord must have been beaming with joy at the opportunity to teach his beloved friends how to enjoy fellowship with his Father. For this question, he doesnât rebuke them. He doesnât ignore them. He teaches them.
How Not to Pray: The Phariseeâs Prayer

Interestingly, Jesus doesnât begin his teaching with how to pray but how not to pray. He points them toward the religious leaders of the day. âWhen you pray, do not be like the hypocrites, for they love to pray standing in the synagogues and on the street corners to be seen by othersâ (Matthew 6:5). In other words, as the most important theology book of our generation (Sally Lloyd-Jonesâs Jesus Storybook Bible) puts it, âThey really werenât praying as much as just showing off. They used lots of special words that were so clever, no one understood what they meant.â[1]
Jesus sets before us one way to pray, a posture we might take: Itâs the Phariseeâs prayer. The Pharisee (or hypocrite) prays, in the words of Jesus himself, to be seen by others. In a world obsessed with image, appearance, and perfection, even prayer can become a means of gaining othersâ attention and approval. Itâs important to see the contrast before Jesus invites us into the correct posture.
But When You Pray: The Childâs Prayer
The first approach to prayer that Jesus describes is the hypocriteâs prayerâthe overflow of a performative spirituality, rooted in insecurity. What, then, is the proper approach to prayer? Jesus next describes how to rightly approach God. âBut when you pray, go into your room, close the door and pray to your Father, who is unseen. Then your Father, who sees what is done in secret, will reward youâ (Matthew 6:6).
Where the hypocrite plans his prayers and takes them out to the synagogues and street corners, Jesusâs disciples are to stay at home, go into their rooms (in the Greek, the word typically referred to a pantry or closet) and close the door. The hypocrite prays to be seen by others; the disciple prays to be seen by God.
But this posture is not merely the discipleâs prayer; Jesus goes one step further. Remember, he says, âpray to your Father, who is unseenâ (6:6).
Now, letâs pause and let the full weight of this phrase sink in. The Israelites had thousands of years of history following God. They had the stories of creation and the garden, they knew the lives of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob; they had the wisdom of the Proverbs and had memorized many Psalms. They worshipped in the temple, gave tithes to the poor and needy, observed the Sabbath, and celebrated dozens of holy days. Their lives were appropriately religious and (in varying degrees depending on the person) God-centered.
But this was new. Although the Old Testament occasionally refers to God as Father to his people (Deut. 32:6; Ps. 103:13; Isa. 63:16, 64:8), this was not a regular thought for the people of God. For Israel, God is predominately known as creator, redeemer, shepherd, and almighty God. But father? Letâs not get too carried away.
But suddenly, Jesus is on the scene; heâs the Son of God and the exact imprint of God, he is âone with the Fatherâ (John 10:30). He is, to quote the Jesus Storybook Bible again, âeverything God wanted to say to the world, in a person.â
Sure, God loves to be Jesusâs Father, we might think. After all, Jesus is doing a pretty good job of being a Son. He is eternal and perfect and holy. He doesnât sin. He never disappoints his Father. Why wouldnât God love his Son, Jesus? We believe all this. But God as our father? Here we may stumble. Yet Jesus was abundantly clear.
âClose the door and pray to your Fatherâ (v. 6)
âThen your Father⊠will reward youâ (v. 6)
âDo not be like [the pagans], for your Father knows what you needâ (v. 8)
âThis then is how you should pray: âOur Father in heavenââ (v. 9)
âIf you forgive other people when they sin against you, your heavenly Father will forgive youâ (v. 14)
âBut if you do not forgive others their sins, your Father will not forgive your sinsâ (v. 15)
There we go: Six references to God as Fatherâand not just Father to Jesus, but Father to youâin Jesusâs very brief instructions on how to pray. Do you see the posture Jesus invites us to take? It is simply and boldly the childâs prayer.
Rediscovering God as Father
Whatâs the difference between approaching God as merely a strong and powerful and compassionate God and approaching him first and foremost as our Father? This difference will be felt throughout all of life, but nowhere more deeply than in prayer.
Many people struggle to approach God as Father and understandably so. Many folks that I sit with have only known âfatherâ to be a hurtful person or complicated relationship.
Adoption is one of the most important and beautiful elements of the gospel, some would even say the core message of Christianity. It reveals Godâs heart and unlocks the Scriptures for us in a way nothing else does. Spiritual adoption is simply the truth that God makes us his own sons and daughters when he saves us through the work of his Son Jesus. He didnât have to make us sons and daughters. It would have been enough to make us part of his kingdom, as citizens or servants. But we learn of Godâs heart when we witness something unexpected: he doesnât stop there.
Though itâs a wonder that God would make us citizens of his kingdom, the truth is he doesnât need slaves or servants or citizens. He doesnât need anything. But he wants something. He wants children.
You were an orphan, homeless and hopeless in a dangerous world. But God put in the work, took the steps to do it legally, and then bent down and picked you up into his arms. As the apostle Paul put it, âthose who are led by the Spirit of God are the children of God. The Spirit you received does not make you slaves, so that you live in fear again; rather, the Spirit you received brought about your adoption to sonship. And by him we cry, âAbba, Fatherââ (Romans 8:14-15).
[1] Ray Ortlund on Youâre Not Crazy: Gospel Sanity for Young Pastors podcast, season 1, episode 1.
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