This prayer, found but not named as such in Matt. 6:9–13;
Luke 11:2–5 (see also Did. 8.2, which follows the Matthean
version), is a version of the Jewish Qaddish prayer revised around
the theme of the kingdom of God and is a paradigmatic model of prayer
given by Jesus to his followers.
Jesus
and Prayer
Prayer
was a key element of Jewish piety and devotion to God. It was a large
part of meetings in synagogues, annual festivals, worship in the
temple, and daily recitals of the words of the law. Jesus is
remembered as withdrawing into lonely and desolate places for times
of prayer (Mark 1:35; 6:46), most poignantly in the garden of
Geth-semane (Mark 14:32–42 pars.). Jesus’ time in the
wilderness probably was a time of prayer and fasting as well (Mark
1:12–13 pars.). Besides the Lord’s Prayer, another prayer
of Jesus celebrates God’s revelation to the disciples after
their short itinerant mission (Matt. 11:25–26 // Luke
10:21).
The
evangelist Luke emphasizes Jesus at prayer more than any other Gospel
writer. Luke’s Gospel portrays Jesus as praying at his baptism
(3:21), prior to his selection of the Twelve (6:12–13), prior
to Peter’s confession of him as Messiah (9:18), at his
transfiguration (9:28–29), prior to his teaching on the Lord’s
Prayer (11:1), for Peter (22:32), and twice while on the cross
(23:34, 46). Jesus also taught much about prayer, concerning how his
disciples are or are not to pray and how to show genuine devotion in
the kingdom community without hypocrisy (Mark 11:24–25; Matt.
5:44 // Luke 6:28; Matt. 6:5–8; Luke 11:5–13;
18:1–14; 21:36).
In
the Fourth Gospel, Jesus’ prayers underscore the unique nature
of the relationship between the Father and the Son (John 11:41–42;
12:27–28). Jesus’ high priestly prayer for the disciples
concerns their preservation and the role of the Holy Spirit in their
lives (17:1–26). A distinctive characteristic of Jesus’
prayers is that God is addressed by the Aramaic word abba (“father”),
and this became common in early Christian worship (Rom. 8:15; Gal.
4:6).
The
Lord’s Prayer: Matthew and Luke
The
Lord’s Prayer takes distinct forms in Matthew and in Luke (see
table 2). The differences in the two prayers might be attributable to
Jesus teaching two different versions. More likely, Matthew and Luke
both knew the prayer from a common source (written or oral), and
Matthew’s version is a more liturgical elaboration of Luke’s
shorter and more “original” version. Matters are
complicated somewhat by the fact that later Christian scribes had a
propensity for harmonizing the two prayers and sometimes amended them
in their respective manuscripts. Both prayers agree that (1) God
is the Holy Father, (2) the kingdom is yet to come in its
fullness, (3) followers of Jesus depend on God for their daily
provisions, (4) followers of Jesus depend on God for
forgiveness, (5) which is reciprocated in the forgiveness of
others, and include (6) the supplication that God not let them
fall into the final tribulation.
Table
2. The Lord’s Prayer in Matthew and Luke
Matthew
6:9-13….Luke 11:2-4
Our
Father in heaven,….Father,
hallowed
be your name,….hallowed be your name,
your
kingdom come,….your kingdom come.
your
will be done, on earth as it is in heaven….
Give
us today our daily bread….Give us each day our daily bread.
And
forgive us our debts,….Forgive us our sins,
as
we also have forgiven our debtors….for we also forgive
everyone who sins against us.
And
lead us not into temptation,….And lead us not into temptation.
But
deliver us from the evil one….
For
your is the kingdom and the power and the glory forever. Amen. [added
in some later manuscripts; see NIV mg.]….
The
Lord’s Prayer: The Petitions
The
prayer can be broken up into a number of petitions. First is the
petition addressed to God as Father and self-sanctifier. God is
invoked as Father, and his name represents both his character as a
loving father and his authority as the master over all creation. The
prayer is theocentric, and it reads literally “let your name be
sanctified,” which is a plea that God’s holiness will
become more and more evident. The Lord’s Prayer is not some
kind of “I want” list, but rather a burst of praise
expressing the hope that God’s sheer goodness and Godness will
be acknowledged by all.
The
second petition is for God to finally establish his kingdom. The
“kingdom of God” is more akin to God’s reign, rule,
or government. It is referred to rarely in the OT (e.g., Dan. 2:44;
Obad. 21); much more prominent is the theme of God as “king.”
In many of the psalms God already is king of Israel and the nations
(e.g., Pss. 93–99), and yet the prophets could look forward to
the day when Yahweh would again show himself to be king precisely
through his deliverance of Israel, which would be the ultimate
expression of the kingly power (e.g., Isa. 52:7; Zech. 14:9). The
prayer for the coming of the kingdom of God is a prayer for God to
establish his reign or rule in its final and full manifestation on
earth. Although the kingdom was partially present during Jesus’
ministry by virtue of his exorcisms and healings (e.g., Mark 1:15;
Luke 11:20), it still awaits its final consummation. Matthew’s
version has “on earth as it is in heaven” and may
indicate a millennial view of the kingdom as supplanting earthly
kingdoms, resulting in the transformation of the present age. The
petition does not promote escapism from the world but rather points
toward its eventual redemption and transformation by the glorious
power of heaven becoming a reality upon the earth.
Third
is the petition for daily provision of physical needs. The “daily
bread” petition looks to God as the provider and caregiver of
his people. Elsewhere in the Sermon on the Mount/Plain, Jesus
preaches dependence on God as a means of escaping the worry and lure
of wealth and money (Matt. 6:25–33 // Luke 12:22–34).
Bread was a powerful symbol for sustenance and life (e.g., Prov.
22:9; Lam. 2:12; John 6:35, 48; Sir. 29:21; 34:25). The petition
assumes that God is interested in the most mundane aspects of human
existence, and that he gives what is needed, not always what is
wanted. God sustains his people in their hour of need as proof of his
fatherly care and compassion.
Fourth
is the petition for divine forgiveness in coordination with mutual
forgiveness among the community of Jesus’ followers. The prayer
does not ask God to forgive persons who then in turn forgive others;
rather, in reverse, the prayer implies that God forgives in the same
way that humans forgive each other (Matthew) or on the basis of
humans forgiving each other (Luke). The role of mutual forgiveness
within the new covenant community is spelled out clearly by Paul in
Colossians: “Bear with each other and forgive one another if
any of you has a grievance against someone. Forgive as the Lord
forgave you” (Col. 3:13).
Fifth
is the petition to be spared eschatological tribulation and the
malevolence of Satan. The word peirasmos can mean “testing,”
“trial,” “temptation,” or even “tribulation”
or “ordeal.” The prayer could constitute a plea for help
in the face of personal trials and struggles in the believer’s
life and in the journey of discipleship (e.g., 1 Cor. 10:13;
James 1:2), or it could denote a request to be kept from the
eschatological ordeal that will precede the final and full
establishment of the kingdom of God
(e.g., Mark 14:36, 38; Rev. 3:10). Importantly, what is feared in
this prayer is not experiencing the peirasmos but rather succumbing
to it—the fear of failure. In addition, the prayer asks to be
delivered from ho ponēros, “evil,” or (more likely)
“the evil
one” (cf. Matt. 5:39)—that is, the devil or Satan. God
tests his people to strengthen them and prove their faithfulness,
while Satan tempts people to subdue and destroy them. This prayer
acknowledges the fragility and helplessness of the human state in the
face of human, spiritual, and cosmic evil. The prayer seeks
liberation from evil in the coming reign of God’s
eschatological kingdom.
The
Lord’s Prayer: The Theology
The
theological framework, ethical exhortation, and social dynamics
created or presupposed by the prayer are as follows.
First,
God is the Father of the followers of Jesus. This is axiomatic in the
Gospels and is repeated by the Christian prayer that addresses God
the Father as “Abba” (Rom. 8:15; Gal. 4:6).
Second,
an overarching importance is attached to the kingdom of God as the
context in which all prayer is prayed. The tension of the prayer—the
very fact of needs and the threat of continuing perils—exists
only because God’s plan to restore Israel and renew creation
has not yet been put into full effect. God’s kingdom has broken
into the world through the work of the Son of God and the giving of
the Holy Spirit, and yet it still awaits a final consummation, when
God is “all in all” (1 Cor. 15:28) and finally
repossesses the world for himself. The prayer presupposes the “now”
and the “not yet” of God’s saving action and
balances prayers of triumph and lament in light of current
temptations and the coming victory of God.
Third,
in this prayer salvation not only is spiritual (understood as going
to heaven when one dies) but also involves the physical well-being of
a person and healthy relationships within the believing community.
Just as God is concerned with physical human needs, so should humans
be with their fellow humans. If human beings forgive, then God also
forgives them. Human relations are to mirror the values of heaven and
the vision of the kingdom.
Fourth,
the world order currently exists in partial subjugation to evil
powers opposed to God’s rule, which is simply part of the dire
situation of “this age.” The prayer presupposes an
apocalyptic worldview characterized by dualism (God/Satan, good/evil,
present/future, etc.), the necessity of encountering and persevering
against evil, and divine intervention to put the world order right
and replace it with the kingdom of God.
Fifth,
discipleship involves a variety of traits and characteristics. This
prayer depicts the disciple as trusting and as exhibiting faith in
God’s purpose and plan. The prayer presumes that disciples
cling to God in dependence upon him in their day-to-day need. The
prayer assumes that disciples try to imitate God in reflecting
goodness, love, holiness, and peace in their respective communities.
The prayer also admonishes endurance in the face of trials and
persistence (not repetitiveness) in the discipline of prayer.
Sixth,
although the prayer does not have an explicit Christology, one can be
found implicitly. It seems implied that Jesus is a mediator between
the Father and the disciples, and that he possesses an important role
in the final manifestation of the kingdom. It is, after all, the
disciples of Jesus who are promised a special place in the kingdom
and a special relationship with the God of Israel.
Summary
The
Lord’s Prayer has remained a common thread in the devotional
life of followers of Jesus for two millennia because it is simple,
memorable, poignant, and yet profound. It is not the prayer of an
elite few; it belongs to all who cry out to God as Father and see the
way to God in Jesus Christ, the exalted Lord and Messiah of Israel.
As teachings of Jesus hold immeasurable significance for the life,
faith, praxis, and service of his followers, this prayer
encapsulates a motif of Jesus’ own mission: God as king and the
love of God for his own people.