Homily for March 3rd, Lord’s Prayer: Matt. 6:7-15.
I’ve told you
last Friday that Lent is a kind of spiritual spring training. It focuses on
three essential practices: prayer, fasting, and almsgiving. Today’s gospel gives
us Jesus’ teaching about prayer. “Do not babble like the pagans,” Jesus says.
The pagan gods of Jesus’ day were manipulative. They were in competition with
one another. To get on their good side, the worshipper had to say the right
words, and repeat them as often as possible. You can forget all that, Jesus
says. The God to whom you pray is your loving heavenly Father. He “knows what
you need before you ask him.”
Jesus then
lays out the pattern for our prayer. We don’t have a private me-and-God
religion. By praying our Father, and
not my Father, we acknowledge that we
approach God as members of his people. Three petitions follow, having to with
God himself. “Hallowed be thy name” is the first. It means “may your name be
kept holy.” God’s name is kept holy when we speak it with faith, not as a
magical word to get his attention, or to con him into giving us what we want.
“Thy kingdom
come” is a petition for the coming of God’s rule over us and the whole world.
We are unhappy, and frustrated, because the world, and too often our own
personal lives as well, do not reflect God’s rule. “Thy will be done, on earth
as it is in heaven,” extends this petition. In heaven God’s will is done
immediately, and gladly.
Four petitions
follow which have to do with our brothers and sisters in the family of God: for
bread, forgiveness, deliverance from temptation, and victory over evil.
Here is a
Lenten suggestion. Take at least five or ten minutes to pray the Our Father
slowly, phrase by phrase, even word by word. Start with the opening word: “Our.”
Reflect on the implications of that word. Pray that you may be mindful not only
of your own needs, but also of the needs of your brothers and sisters. That
could be your whole prayer for five or ten minutes. Move on in your next prayer
time to the word “Father,” and on the day following pray over the words
“Hallowed be thy name.” Practiced faithfully, and with patience, this way of
praying the one prayer Jesus has given us will bring you close to Him who tells
us in John’s gospel: “All this I tell you that my joy may be yours, and your
joy may be complete” (15:11).
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