Sunday Gospel Reflections
        
          July 27, 2025, Cycle C 
          Luke
          11:1-13
                                                           
          
        Recognizing Our Need
          by Fr. Steven G. Oetjen 
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Immediately after Luke’s
        Gospel records
        Jesus’ visit to the home of Martha and Mary (Lk 10:38–42), which
        we heard last
        Sunday, it next relates how Jesus “was praying in a certain
        place.” Jesus
        doesn’t simply tell us that prayer and the contemplative life
        are “the better
        part.” He shows us by his own example. He has much to do —
        preaching, teaching,
        healing, accomplishing our redemption — but he doesn’t do any of
        these things
        without prayer.
In fact, the disciples
        see him at
        prayer, and they naturally want what he has. They see something
        of the
        relationship that he has with the Father, and they want to have
        it too. So, one
        of them speaks up: “Lord, teach us to pray.”
He first gives them the
        words to say.
        They are told to address God as “Father” and given a list of
        five petitions.
        Jesus is showing us what we ought to pray for, and thus what we
        ought to
        desire. We have all sorts of desires, hopes and ambitions, and
        these are not
        necessarily bad. But above all, do you desire that God’s name be
        revered? Do
        you want his kingdom to come? When we pray as the Lord has
        taught us, our
        desires are reshaped around God’s priorities, not our own. All
        throughout the
        Gospels, Jesus teaches us a new life. And in this prayer, he
        teaches us how to
        desire that life and to ask for the grace to live it. Hence,
        Tertullian called
        this prayer “the summary of the whole Gospel.”
Next, Jesus tells a
        parable. Suppose
        you go to your friend at midnight and ask him for three loaves
        of bread. If
        even your tired, annoyed friend will eventually give you what
        you need because
        of your persistence, how much more will God, our loving Father,
        give to his
        beloved children?
One reason we might not
        want to
        approach God in prayer is our fear or our shame. We might
        consider ourselves
        unworthy to bring our needs before God. To put this fear to
        rest, Jesus says,
        “Ask … seek … knock … ” There is no way we can hear these words
        and think that
        God does not want us to approach him. He loves for his children
        to come to him
        and ask for their needs, to ask each day for their daily bread.
Another reason we might
        not want to
        pray is the opposite: our pride. To ask God for our needs means
        first admitting
        that we are in need and that we are not self-sufficient. Prayer
        requires
        humility. It means recognizing that we are lowly and cannot
        provide everything
        for ourselves. It means recognizing that we are children who are
        dependent on
        our loving Father. It means being willing to receive from our
        Father rather
        than trying to grasp at things for ourselves, as Adam and Eve
        tried to grasp at
        their own happiness by taking from the tree.
When we pray as Jesus
        taught us to
        pray, we avoid these two extremes. We have a humble confidence:
        a confidence in
        approaching God because he is our Father, and a humility in
        recognizing our
        need and asking God to provide. The word of Jesus, meanwhile,
        shapes our
        desires to conform to God’s desires so that we know better what
        to ask for.
Ultimately, it is not
        only about “what”
        we ask for, but about “whom.” Today’s Gospel ends, “If you then,
        who are
        wicked, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much
        more will the
        Father in heaven give the Holy Spirit to those who ask him?” The
        Father wants
        to give us the Holy Spirit, who leads us through his seven gifts
        and who
        enriches our lives with his fruits and with the virtues.