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Catechism Study: The Lord’s Prayer

by Rev. Mark Bestul

As recorded in Luke 11, the disciples ask Jesus to teach them how to pray, and he does not respond with comments about posture or attitude or sentiment, but with specific words that serve as a foundation on which all Christian prayer is built. When Luther taught Master Peter the Barber to pray, his teaching can be summarized as beginning with the Lord’s Prayer, meditating upon one petition of it, and allowing that petition to serve as the basis for any further exposition of prayer from the heart. As prayer is so central to daily life, this understanding of the Lord’s Prayer as ‘foundational’ for prayer spills over to the Christian’s entire life. Consider the layout of the Catechism: If the Ten Commandments teach the Law and the Creed teaches the Gospel, then the Lord’s Prayer teaches daily Christian life in that Law and Gospel. So, let us follow Luther’s lead and meditate upon the Lord’s Prayer, as it is taught in the Catechism (both Large and Small):

The Introduction: “Our Father who art in heaven”

The First Petition: “Hallowed be Thy name.”

The Second Petition: “Thy kingdom come.”

– Do we tend to think that praying “Thy Kingdom Come” is primarily a “future tense” request for the Second Coming? How does Luther’s explanation teach us to treasure the present-tense work of the Holy Spirit through the Word and Sacraments, so that we cherish His Word in our daily life and the Divine Service as the pinnacle of our week?

The Third Petition: “Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven.”

The Fourth Petition: “Give us this day our daily bread.”

The Fifth Petition: “And forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us.”

The Sixth Petition: “And lead us not into temptation.”

The Seventh Petition: “But deliver us from evil.”

The Conclusion: “[For thine is the kingdom and the power and the glory forever and ever.] Amen.”

God grant you much joy in ever learning how to meditate upon and pray the divine words of the prayer by which our entire Christian life is daily guided!

The Rev. Mark Bestul is pastor of Calvary Lutheran Church in Elgin, IL.

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