The final facet of prayer revealed in Matthew 7:7-11 is ‘knocking’. The original language offers no clues to the meaning of ‘knocking’ beyond what we commonly understand it to be. It has a singular purpose that should be easy for us to understand. It isn’t therapeutic nor is it something we do just for the sake of doing it. Knocking communicates a simple message that requires a simple response.
What did Jesus mean by ‘Knock’?
When you knock on a door you are drawing attention to yourself. You don’t just walk up to a door and quietly stand there hoping that someone will notice you. You knock to bring attention to the fact that you are there and that you are expecting someone to open the door. Knocking in prayer involves doing something that draws the Lord’s attention to your request. We ‘knock’ in prayer by DOING SOMETHING to get God’s attention. There are at least four biblical ways we can get God’s attention.
- Fasting – When we are desperate enough to go without food for a period of time it draws God’s attention to our situation. We have to be pretty serious about something in order to do such a thing. Queen Esther called on all the Jews to neither eat nor drink anything for three days. At the end of their fast she would risk her life to seek the King’s protection. The nation was at stake so they knocked on Heaven’s door by fasting and God delivered them from death!
- Intense Prayer – There’s praying and then there’s ‘intense praying’ the latter being a form of getting God’s attention. Upon leaving the city of Jericho Jesus was stopped by the intense cries of two blind men. These men were desperate for Jesus to heal them and they didn’t care who knew it. They lifted their voices and refused to be silenced though many tried to hush them. They were determined to gain Jesus’ attention and they did. They banged loudly on the door with intense prayer and God opened their eyes!
- Sacrificial Giving – Tithing is our baseline financial commitment to God. Everything above the tithe is an offering and in the area of offerings we can sacrificially give to get God’s attention. Cornelius was a devout Gentile who sought God with prayer, fasting, and ‘many’ alms or charitable gifts given to the people of God. An angel was sent to him with this message, “Your prayers and alms have ascended as a memorial before God.” God noticed Cornelius’ sacrificial giving and arranged for him to make contact with Peter who brought the gospel to his household. He knocked on God’s door and the Kingdom of Heaven was opened to him!
- Radical Faith – Sometimes we need to go out on a limb to get God’s attention. We need to do something radical to show our faith in Him. Jesus ministry offers some examples of radical faith being rewarded. A young paralytic had his friends break through a roof and lower him down just so he could gain Jesus’ attention. His radical faith was rewarded and he walked out of the house a new man! A woman with a twelve-year blood hemorrhage risked being stoned to death by moving through a crowd to touch the hem of His garment. Her radical faith resulted in an instant healing! When people knocked through radical faith Jesus always answered.
All three facets of prayer are in the present active imperative tense in Greek, which means that we are to keep on doing them until God answers. As we keep knocking on God’s door through fasting, intense prayer, sacrificial giving, and radical faith He will open to us. So let’s ask, seek, and knock because as Jesus promised, “everyone who asks receives, and he who seeks finds, and to him who knocks it will be opened.” Matthew 7:8







