I.
"OUR FATHER!"
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Jesus "was praying at a certain place, and when he ceased, one of his
disciples said to him, 'Lord, teach us to pray, as John taught his
disciples.'"1 In response to this request the Lord entrusts to his
disciples and to his Church the fundamental Christian prayer. St. Luke presents
a brief text of five petitions,2 while St. Matthew gives a more developed
version of seven petitions.3 ( ) The liturgical tradition of the Church has
retained St. Matthew's text:
Our
Father who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name. Thy kingdom come. Thy will be
done on earth, as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread, and
forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive those who trespass against us, and
lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil.
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Very early on, liturgical usage concluded the Lord's Prayer with a doxology. In
the Didache, we find, "For yours are the power and the glory for
ever."4 The Apostolic Constitutions add to the beginning: "the
kingdom," and this is the formula retained to our day in ecumenical
prayer.5
The
Byzantine tradition adds after "the glory" the words "Father,
Son, and Holy Spirit." the Roman Missal develops the last petition in the
explicit perspective of "awaiting our blessed hope" and of the Second
Coming of our Lord Jesus Christ.6 Then comes the assembly's acclamation or the
repetition of the doxology from the Apostolic Constitutions.
ARTICLE 1 "THE
SUMMARY OF THE WHOLE GOSPEL"
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The Lord's Prayer "is truly the summary of the whole gospel."7
"Since the Lord . . . after handing over the practice of prayer, said
elsewhere, 'Ask and you will receive,' and since everyone has petitions which
are peculiar to his circumstances, the regular and appropriate prayer [the
Lord's Prayer] is said first, as the foundation of further desires."8
I.
At the Center of the Scriptures
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After showing how the psalms are the principal food of Christian prayer and
flow together in the petitions of the Our Father, St. Augustine concludes:
Run
through all the words of the holy prayers [in Scripture], and I do not think
that you will find anything in them that is not contained and included in the
Lord's Prayer.9
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All the Scriptures - the Law, the Prophets, and the Psalms - are fulfilled in
Christ.10 The Gospel is this "Good News." Its first proclamation is
summarized by St. Matthew in the Sermon on the Mount;11 The prayer to our
Father is at the center of this proclamation. It is in this context that each
petition bequeathed to us by the Lord is illuminated:
The
Lord's Prayer is the most perfect of prayers.... In it we ask, not only for all
the things we can rightly desire but also in the sequence that they should be
desired. This prayer not only teaches us to ask for things but also in what
order we should desire them.12
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The Sermon on the Mount is teaching for life, the Our Father is a prayer; but
in both the one and the other the Spirit of the Lord gives new form to our
desires, those inner movements that animate our lives. Jesus teaches us this
new life by his words; he teaches us to ask for it by our prayer. the rightness
of our life in him will depend on the rightness of our prayer.
II.
The Lord's Prayer
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The traditional expression "the Lord's Prayer" - oratio Dominica -
means that the prayer to our Father is taught and given to us by the Lord
Jesus. the prayer that comes to us from Jesus is truly unique: it is "of
the Lord." On the one hand, in the words of this prayer, the only Son gives
us the words the Father gave him:13 he is the master of our prayer. On the
other, as Word incarnate, he knows in his human heart the needs of his human
brothers and sisters and reveals them to us: he is the model of our prayer.
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But Jesus does not give us the formula to repeat mechanically.14 As in every
vocal prayer, it is through the Word of God that the Holy Spirit teaches the
children of God to pray to their Father. Jesus not only gives us the words of
our filial prayer; at the same time he gives us the Spirit by whom these words
become in us "spirit and life."15 Even more, the proof and
possibility of our filial prayer is that the Father "sent the Spirit of
his Son into our hearts, crying, 'Abba! Father!'"16 Since our prayer sets
forth our desires before God, it is again the Father, "he who searches the
hearts of men," who "knows what is the mind of the Spirit, because
the Spirit intercedes for the saints according to the will of God."17 The
prayer to Our Father is inserted into the mysterious mission of the Son and of
the Spirit.
III.
The Prayer of the Church
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This indivisible gift of the Lord's words and of the Holy Spirit who gives life
to them in the hearts of believers has been received and lived by the Church
from the beginning. the first communities prayed the Lord's Prayer three times
a day,18 in place of the "Eighteen Benedictions" customary in Jewish
piety.
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According to the apostolic tradition, the Lord's Prayer is essentially rooted
in liturgical prayer:
[The
Lord] teaches us to make prayer in common for all our brethren. For he did not
say "my Father" who art in heaven, but "our" Father,
offering petitions for the common body.19
In
all the liturgical traditions, the Lord's Prayer is an integral part of the
major hours of the Divine Office. In the three sacraments of Christian
initiation its ecclesial character is especially in evidence:
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In Baptism and Confirmation, the handing on (traditio) of the Lord's Prayer
signifies new birth into the divine life. Since Christian prayer is our
speaking to God with the very word of God, those who are "born anew".
. . through the living and abiding word of God"20 learn to invoke their
Father by the one Word he always hears. They can henceforth do so, for the seal
of the Holy Spirit's anointing is indelibly placed on their hearts, ears, lips,
indeed their whole filial being. This is why most of the patristic commentaries
on the Our Father are addressed to catechumens and neophytes. When the Church
prays the Lord's Prayer, it is always the people made up of the
"new-born" who pray and obtain mercy.21
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In the Eucharistic liturgy, the Lord's Prayer appears as the prayer of the whole
Church and there reveals its full meaning and efficacy. Placed between the
anaphora (the Eucharistic prayer) and the communion, the Lord's Prayer sums up
on the one hand, all the petitions and intercessions expressed in the movement
of the epiclesis and, on the other, knocks at the door of the Banquet of the
kingdom which sacramental communion anticipates.
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In the Eucharist, the Lord's Prayer also reveals the eschatological character
of its petitions. It is the proper prayer of "the end-time," the time
of salvation that began with the outpouring of the Holy Spirit and will be
fulfilled with the Lord's return. the petitions addressed to our Father, as
distinct from the prayers of the old covenant, rely on the mystery of salvation
already accomplished, once for all, in Christ crucified and risen.
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From this unshakeable faith springs forth the hope that sustains each of the
seven petitions, which express the groanings of the present age, this time of
patience and expectation during which "it does not yet appear what we
shall be."22 The Eucharist and the Lord's Prayer look eagerly for the Lord's
return, "until he comes."23
IN
BRIEF
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In response to his disciples' request "Lord, teach us to pray" (⇒ Lk 11:1), Jesus
entrusts them with the fundamental Christian prayer, the Our Father.
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"The Lord's Prayer is truly the summary of the whole gospel,"24 The
"most perfect of prayers."25 It is at the center of the Scriptures.
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It is called "the Lord's Prayer" because it comes to us from the Lord
Jesus, the master and model of our prayer.
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The Lord's Prayer is the quintessential prayer of the Church. It is an integral
part of the major hours of the Divine Office and of the sacraments of Christian
initiation: Baptism, Confirmation, and Eucharist. Integrated into the Eucharist
it reveals the eschatological character of its petitions, hoping for the Lord,
"until he comes" (⇒
1 Cor 11:26).
GO TO:
PART ONE: THE PROFESSION OF FAITH
PART TWO: THE CELEBRATION OF THE CHRISTIAN MYSTERY
PART THREE: LIFE IN CHRIST
PART FOUR: CHRISTIAN PRAYER
GO TO:
SECTION TWO THE LORD'S PRAYER
PART FOUR: CHRISTIAN PRAYER
SECTION ONE: PRAYER IN THE CHRISTIAN LIFE
CHAPTER ONE THE REVELATION OF PRAYER
CHAPTER TWO THE TRADITION OF PRAYER
CHAPTER THREE THE LIFE OF PRAYER
SECTION TWO THE LORD'S PRAYER
CATECHISM OF THE CATHOLIC CHURCHCHAPTER ONE THE REVELATION OF PRAYER
CHAPTER TWO THE TRADITION OF PRAYER
CHAPTER THREE THE LIFE OF PRAYER
SECTION TWO THE LORD'S PRAYER
PART ONE: THE PROFESSION OF FAITH
PART TWO: THE CELEBRATION OF THE CHRISTIAN MYSTERY
PART THREE: LIFE IN CHRIST
PART FOUR: CHRISTIAN PRAYER
Copyright © 2020 by Ekklesia Katholos (Acts 9:31)
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