Most believers have been around prayer their whole lives without ever being taught what it actually is. They’ve heard prayers, said prayers, sat through prayers, maybe even led prayers — but the question of what prayer fundamentally is and why it works the way it does often goes unexamined. Jesus addressed this directly in Matthew 6, and what He said is more clarifying — and more freeing — than most prayer instruction that comes after it.
I spent years treating prayer as a discipline I wasn’t very good at. I knew it mattered. I knew I was supposed to do it consistently. But there was always a low-grade anxiety underneath my prayer life — a sense that I was probably doing it wrong, probably not saying enough of the right things, probably not consistent enough in the right ways.
What shifted for me wasn’t a technique. It was reading Matthew 6 carefully enough to notice what Jesus was actually correcting — not the length of people’s prayers or the frequency, but the fundamental misunderstanding of what prayer is for. Once that shifted, everything else changed.
What Jesus Was Correcting
Matthew 6 opens with Jesus addressing two prayer problems that, between them, cover most of what goes wrong in a prayer life.
The first problem is performance:
“And when you pray, you must not be like the hypocrites. For they love to stand and pray in the synagogues and at the street corners, that they may be seen by others. Truly, I say to you, they have received their reward. But when you pray, go into your room and shut the door and pray to your Father who is in secret. And your Father who sees in secret will reward you.”
(Matthew 6:5–6, ESV)
The hypocrites Jesus describes aren’t praying to God — they’re performing for people. The words are addressed upward but the audience is horizontal. They’ve received their reward, Jesus says, because what they wanted was human recognition and that’s what they got. God wasn’t in it.
The instruction that follows — go into your room, shut the door — isn’t primarily architectural advice. It’s a description of what prayer actually requires: the removal of any audience except God. Not because public prayer is wrong — corporate prayer is a genuine practice throughout Scripture — but because the habit of praying without an audience to perform for forms something in you that performative prayer never can. When there’s no one to impress, you discover whether you actually have anything to say to God.
The second problem is mechanical accumulation:
“And when you pray, do not heap up empty phrases as the Gentiles do, for they think that they will be heard for their many words. Do not be like them, for your Father knows what you need before you ask him.”
(Matthew 6:7–8, ESV)
The assumption underlying this approach — more words, more repetition, more elaborate language equals more likelihood of being heard — reveals a fundamentally transactional view of prayer. As if God needs to be persuaded, worn down, or impressed into action by the volume or quality of what’s said.
Jesus cuts straight through this: your Father knows what you need before you ask. That sentence is not an argument against prayer — it’s a reorientation of what prayer is for. If God already knows your needs, prayer isn’t primarily an information transfer or a negotiation. It’s a relationship. You come to God not to inform Him of things He doesn’t know, but to be in honest communion with the One who already knows everything and loves you anyway.
What the Lord’s Prayer Actually Is
After correcting these two misunderstandings, Jesus gives a model. It’s worth noting precisely what He says — not “pray these words” but “pray like this” (Matthew 6:9). The Lord’s Prayer is a shape, not a script. It shows what genuine prayer looks like in structure and in spirit, not what syllables to repeat.
Each element of the prayer reveals something about the relationship it’s sustaining.
“Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name.” The opening address is the most theologically loaded moment in the whole prayer and the one most easily rushed past. Calling God “Father” — abba, the intimate Aramaic address — was not the obvious choice in first-century Judaism. It signals a specific kind of relationship: not petitioner to sovereign, not creature to Creator in formal distance, but child to father in genuine intimacy. And immediately alongside that intimacy comes “hallowed be your name” — a recognition of God’s holiness and otherness. The prayer begins by holding both together: God is close enough to be called Father and great enough to be regarded as holy. That combination shapes everything that follows.
“Your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.” This is the prayer’s most reorienting petition. It’s easy to approach prayer as the practice of bringing your desires to God and hoping He agrees. Jesus inverts this. The fundamental posture of prayer is alignment — asking for God’s purposes to advance, for His will to be done in the places and situations you’re praying about. That doesn’t mean you don’t bring your own desires and needs. The rest of the prayer makes clear that you do. But they’re held within a larger orientation: not my will accomplished through your power, but your will done in me and through me and around me.
“Give us this day our daily bread.” The simplicity here is important. Not provision for the year, not the stockpiling of blessings — just what’s needed today. This petition forms a posture of daily dependence rather than self-sufficiency. It brings believers back to God not once but continuously, asking for what each day requires. It’s also worth noting the corporate “us” throughout the prayer — not just me and my needs but the community of those who pray together under the same Father.
“Forgive us our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors.” This is the most uncomfortable petition in the prayer, precisely because it links two things that most people would prefer to keep separate. The forgiveness you receive and the forgiveness you extend are held together here not as a transactional calculation — forgive others or God won’t forgive you — but as a statement about what grace actually does in a person. Those who have genuinely received forgiveness they didn’t deserve find that it becomes harder to withhold grace from others. The petition is both a request and an examination.
“Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil.” The prayer closes with honest acknowledgment of human vulnerability. This isn’t a confession of weakness so much as an accurate description of what the life of faith actually requires — ongoing dependence on God’s guidance and protection, not the confidence that you can navigate everything on your own.
What This Means for How You Pray
The Lord’s Prayer as a model suggests something about the shape of all genuine prayer — not as a checklist to work through but as a picture of what honest communion with God looks like.
It begins with who God is before it moves to what you need. It orients you toward His purposes before it asks Him to meet yours. It keeps you honest about your dependence, your failures, and your vulnerability. And it does all of this within the frame of a relationship — a child speaking to a Father who is both holy and near, both sovereign and intimately present.
The practical implications are simpler than most prayer teaching suggests. You don’t need special language. You don’t need to reach a certain length or emotional intensity before the prayer counts. You need to actually show up — privately, honestly, in the orientation the Lord’s Prayer models — and speak to the God who already knows you and already loves you and is already present before you begin.
Paul adds one of the most encouraging things anyone has ever said about prayer in Romans 8:26: even when you don’t know what to pray, the Spirit intercedes for you with groanings too deep for words. You are never in the position of having to figure out the right prayer formula on your own. The Spirit who dwells within you is already at work in your prayer before the first word forms.
What to Do With Unanswered Prayer
No honest treatment of prayer can avoid this question, and Jesus doesn’t avoid it either. He teaches His disciples to align themselves with God’s will — which means that sometimes what you pray for and what God purposes are different things, and God’s answer is no, or not yet, or something other than what you asked.
This is where prayer as relationship rather than transaction becomes most important. A transaction that doesn’t deliver its promised outcome is a failed transaction. A relationship that includes disappointment, confusion, and unanswered questions is still a relationship — and often a deeper one than before. The disciples who prayed for the cup to pass from Jesus, who watched their prayers go unanswered in Gethsemane, were being formed by exactly that unanswered prayer in ways they couldn’t have anticipated.
Paul’s own testimony about unanswered prayer is instructive. He prayed three times for the thorn in his flesh to be removed and received instead the answer: “My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness” (2 Corinthians 12:9). The prayer wasn’t answered the way he asked. The relationship deepened in ways a “yes” couldn’t have produced.
The practice of prayer in the face of unanswered prayer is not continuing to ask for the same thing more insistently. It’s bringing your honest confusion and disappointment back to the God who is still present, still good, and still working — even when what He’s working isn’t yet visible. That’s what faithful endurance in prayer looks like when the answers are slow.
Key Takeaways
- Jesus corrects two fundamental prayer problems in Matthew 6: performance for a human audience, and the mechanical accumulation of words as if God needs to be persuaded. Both distortions come from misunderstanding what prayer is — not a performance or a transaction but a relationship.
- The instruction to pray in private isn’t primarily about location — it’s about removing any audience except God, which forms something in you that performative prayer never can.
- The Lord’s Prayer is a model for the shape of prayer, not a script to repeat. Each element reveals something about the relationship it’s sustaining — intimacy alongside holiness, alignment before petition, daily dependence rather than stockpiled provision.
- The most reorienting petition in the Lord’s Prayer is “your will be done” — prayer as alignment with God’s purposes rather than bringing God into alignment with ours.
- Romans 8:26 is the most encouraging thing Paul says about prayer: even when you don’t know what to pray, the Spirit intercedes. You are never in the position of having to get the formula right on your own.
Questions Worth Sitting With
Jesus addresses two fundamental prayer problems before giving the Lord’s Prayer. The first is performance — praying to be seen by others rather than to speak to God, which receives human recognition but not genuine connection with God. The second is mechanical accumulation — the assumption that more words, more repetition, or more elaborate language makes prayer more effective. Jesus cuts through both: your Father already knows what you need before you ask. Prayer isn’t primarily an information transfer or a persuasion exercise. It’s a relationship — coming to God not to inform Him of things He doesn’t know, but to be in honest communion with the One who already knows everything and loves you anyway.
Jesus introduces it as a model — “pray like this,” not “say these words.” It’s a shape for prayer, not a script to repeat. Each element reveals something about the relationship it’s sustaining: the opening address holds intimacy and holiness together simultaneously, “your will be done” reorients prayer as alignment rather than negotiation, daily bread forms daily dependence rather than self-sufficiency, and the forgiveness petition links what you receive with what you extend. Taken together, the Lord’s Prayer shows what genuine communion with God looks like — beginning with who God is, aligning with His purposes, and bringing honest need and honest failure within the frame of that relationship.
The instruction to go into your room and shut the door isn’t primarily about location — it’s about removing any audience except God. When there’s no one to impress, you discover whether you actually have anything to say to God. The habit of praying without a human audience forms something that performative prayer never can: genuine honesty with God. Corporate prayer in community has its own proper place — the New Testament assumes it throughout. But the personal prayer life Jesus is describing requires the kind of intimacy that only happens when you stop performing and start speaking.
Because prayer isn’t primarily about informing God of your needs — it’s about the relationship. Jesus’s statement that your Father already knows what you need before you ask is not an argument against prayer. It’s a reorientation of what prayer is for. A relationship that only runs in one direction, where one person knows everything and the other never speaks, isn’t really a relationship. God invites you to pray not because He needs the information but because He wants the communion — the honest, ongoing, daily conversation that keeps you connected to the One who already loves you and already knows you.
Prayer is not a performance you give or a technique you master. It’s the ongoing practice of showing up honestly to a relationship with a God who already knows you, already loves you, and is already present before you begin. The Lord’s Prayer doesn’t give you a script — it gives you a window into what that relationship is and what it looks like to live from it.
Show up. Be honest. Stay.
Christ reigns. Christ restores. Christ will return.
Longing for Christ, learning to wait faithfully.
Your brother in Christ,
Duane