Did Jesus teach that we should recite
only short prayers (Matthew 6:7)?
In Jesus' instructions about prayer, He
taught His followers: "And when you pray, do not keep on babbling
like pagans, for they think they will be heard because of their many
words" (Matthew 6:7). These words of Jesus were aimed straight at the
Pharisees. These individuals always made a public show of their
prayers. They would typically pray in a public place--perhaps on a
street corner--to impress people with their piety. They would pray
conspicuously. They very much enjoyed being seen as they
prayed.
The Pharisees also made their prayers
excessively long, a practice picked up from the pagans, who engaged
in endless repetition and incantation. An example of such endless
babbling is found in 1 Kings 18:26: "They called on the name of Baal
from morning till noon. 'O Baal, answer us!' they shouted." The
belief was that endless repetition of specific requests endeared the
petitioner to God, and hence God would be obligated to answer. Prayer
was used by the Pharisees as a lengthy formula or technique to
manipulate God into action.
So--the point of Jesus' instruction is not
that we should necessarily utter short prayers to God (although short
prayers are just fine if that is all you have time for or if that
meets your particular need at the moment). The point of Jesus'
instruction is that we should not engage in endless babbling,
repeating the same request over and over again within the confines of
a single prayer, as if that would force God's hand to answer. God
answers prayer not because He can be moved to do so by endless
babbling but rather because He desires to do so as your heavenly
Father.
In support of the fact that Jesus is not
forbidding long prayers is that Jesus Himself is portrayed as praying
at length (Luke 6:12). He also repeated Himself in prayer on occasion
(Matthew 26:44). He further instructed His disciples that "they
should always pray and not give up" (Luke 18:1). Jesus' point was not
that one should avoid long prayers, but one should avoid the
Pharisaic misconception that prayers are effective precisely because
they are long.