On
the Lord's Prayer II
1. The
order established for your edification requires that you learn first what to
believe, and afterwards what to ask. For so says the Apostle, Whosoever shall
call upon the Name of the Lord, shall be saved. This testimony blessed Paul
cited out of the Prophet; for by the Prophet were those times foretold, when
all men should call upon God; Whosoever shall call upon the Name of the Lord,
shall be saved. And he added, How then shall they call on Him in whom they have
not believed? And how shall they believe in Him of whom they have not heard? Or
how shall they hear without a preacher? Or how shall they preach except they be
sent? Therefore were preachers sent. They preached Christ. As they preached,
the people heard, by hearing they believed, and by believing called upon Him.
Because then it was most rightly and most truly said, How shall they call on
Him in whom they have not believed? therefore have ye first learned what to
believe: and today have learned to call on Him in whom you have believed.
2. The
Son of God, our Lord Jesus Christ, has taught us a Prayer; and though He be the
Lord Himself, as you have heard and repeated in the Creed, the Only Son of God,
yet He would not be alone. He is the Only Son, and yet would not be alone; He
has vouchsafed to have brethren. For to whom does He say, Say, Our Father,
which art in heaven? Whom did He wish us to call our Father, save His own
Father? Did He grudge us this? Parents sometimes when they have gotten one, or
two, or three children, fear to give birth to any more, lest they reduce the
rest to beggary. But because the inheritance which He promises us is such as
many may possess, and no one be straitened; therefore has He called into His
brotherhood the peoples of the nations; and the Only Son has numberless
brethren; who say, Our Father, which art in heaven. So said they who have been
before us; and so shall say those who will come after us. See how many brethren
the Only Son has in His grace, sharing His inheritance with those for whom He
suffered death. We had a father and mother on earth, that we might be born to
labours and to death: but we have found other parents, God our Father, and the
Church our Mother, by whom we are born unto life eternal. Let us then consider,
beloved, whose children we have begun to be; and let us live so as becomes
those who have such a Father. See, how that our Creator has condescended to be
our Father!
3. We
have heard whom we ought to call upon, and with what hope of an eternal
inheritance we have begun to have a Father in heaven; let us now hear what we
must ask of Him. Of such a Father what shall we ask? Do we not ask rain of Him,
today, and yesterday, and the day before? This is no great thing to have asked
of such a Father, and yet ye see with what sighings, and with what great desire
we ask for rain, when death is feared, when that is feared which none can
escape. For sooner or later every man must die, and we groan, and pray, and
travail in pain, and cry to God, that we may die a little later. How much more
ought we to cry to Him, that we may come to that place where we shall never die!
4.
Therefore is it said, Hallowed be Your Name. This we also ask of Him that his
Name may be hallowed in us; for Holy is it always. And how is His Name hallowed
in us, except while it makes us holy. For once we were not holy, and we are
made holy by His Name; but He is always Holy, and His Name always Holy. It is
for ourselves, not for God, that we pray. For we do not wish well to God, to
whom no ill can ever happen. But we wish what is good for ourselves, that His
Holy Name may be hallowed, that that which is always Holy, may be hallowed in
us.
5. Your
kingdom come. Come it surely will, whether we ask or no. Indeed, God has an
eternal kingdom. For when did He not reign? When did He begin to reign? For His
kingdom has no beginning, neither shall it have any end. But that we may know
that in this prayer also we pray for ourselves, and not for God (for we do not
say, Your kingdom come, as though we were asking that God may reign); we shall
be ourselves His kingdom, if believing in Him we make progress in this faith.
All the faithful, redeemed by the Blood of His Only Son, will be His kingdom.
And this His kingdom will come, when the resurrection of the dead shall have
taken place; for then He will come Himself. And when the dead are risen, He
will divide them, as He Himself says, and He shall set some on the right hand,
and some on the left. To those who shall be on the right hand He will say,
Come, you blessed of My Father, receive the kingdom. This is what we wish and
pray for when we say, Your kingdom come; that it may come to us. For if we
shall be reprobates, that kingdom will come to others, but not to us. But if we
shall be of that number, who belong to the members of His Only-begotten Son,
His kingdom will come to us, and will not tarry. For are there as many ages yet
remaining, as have already passed away? The Apostle John has said, My little
children, it is the last hour. But it is a long hour proportioned to this long
day; and see how many years this last hour lasts. But nevertheless, be ye as
those who watch, and so sleep, and rise again, and reign. Let us watch now, let
us sleep in death; at the end we shall rise again, and shall reign without end.
6. Your
will be done as in heaven, so in earth. The third thing we pray for is, that
His will may be done as in heaven so in earth. And in this too we wish well for
ourselves. For the will of God must necessarily be done. It is the will of God
that the good should reign, and the wicked be damned. Is it possible that this
will should not be done? But what good do we wish for ourselves, when we say,
Your will be done as in heaven, so in earth? Give ear. For this petition may be
understood in many ways, and many things are to be in our thoughts in this
petition, when we pray God, Your will be done as in heaven, so in earth. As
Your Angels offend You not, so may we also not offend You. Again, how is Your
will be done, as in heaven, so in earth, understood? All the holy Patriarchs,
all the Prophets, all the Apostles, all the spiritual are as it were God's
heaven; and we in comparison of them are earth. Your will be done, as in
heaven, so in earth; as in them, so in us also. Again, Your will be done, as in
heaven, so in earth; the Church of God is heaven, His enemies are earth. So we
wish well for our enemies, that they too may believe and become Christians, and
so the will of God be done, as in heaven, so also in earth. Again, Your will be
done, as in heaven, so in earth. Our spirit is heaven, and the flesh earth. As
our spirit is renewed by believing, so may our flesh be renewed by rising
again; and the will of God be done, as in heaven, so in earth. Again, our mind
whereby we see truth, and delight in this truth, is heaven; as, I delight in
the law of God, after the inward man. What is the earth? I see another law in
my members, warring against the law of my mind? When this strife shall have
passed away, and a full concord brought about of the flesh and spirit, the will
of God will be done as in heaven, so also in earth. When we repeat this
petition, let us think of all these things, and ask them all of the Father. Now
all these things which we have mentioned, these three petitions, beloved, have
respect to the life eternal. For if the Name of our God is sanctified in us, it
will be for eternity. If His kingdom come, where we shall live for ever, it
will be for eternity. If His will be done as in heaven, so in earth, in all the
ways which I have explained, it will be for eternity.
7. There
remain now the petitions for this life of our pilgrimage; therefore follows,
Give us this day our daily bread. Give us eternal things, give us things
temporal. You have promised a kingdom, deny us not the means of subsistence.
You will give everlasting glory with Yourself hereafter, give us in this earth
temporal support. Therefore is it day by day, and today, that is, in this
present time. For when this life shall have passed away, shall we ask for daily
bread then? For then it will not be called, day by day, but today. Now it is
called, day by day, when one day passes away, and another day succeeds. Will it
be called day by day, when there will be one eternal day? This petition for
daily bread is doubtless to be understood in two ways, both for the necessary
supply of our bodily food, and for the necessities of our spiritual support.
There is a necessary supply of bodily food, for the preservation of our daily
life, without which we cannot live. This is food and clothing, but the whole is
understood in a part. When we ask for bread, we thereby understand all things.
There is a spiritual food also which the faithful know, which you too will
know, when you shall receive it at the altar of God. This also is daily Bread,
necessary only for this life. For shall we receive the Eucharist when we shall
have come to Christ Himself, and begun to reign with Him for ever? So then the
Eucharist is our daily bread; but let us in such wise receive it, that we be
not refreshed in our bodies only, but in our souls. For the virtue which is
apprehended there, is unity, that gathered together into His body, and made His
members, we may be what we receive. Then will it be indeed our daily bread.
Again, what I am handling before you now is daily bread; and the daily lessons
which you hear in church, are daily bread, and the hymns ye hear and repeat are
daily bread. For all these are necessary in our state of pilgrimage. But when
we shall have got to heaven, shall we hear the word, we who shall see the Word
Himself, and hear the Word Himself, and eat and drink Him as the angels do now?
Do the angels need books, and interpreters, and readers? Surely not. They read
in seeing, for the Truth Itself they see, and are abundantly satisfied from
that fountain, from which we obtain some few drops. Therefore has it been said
touching our daily bread, that this petition is necessary for us in this life.
8. Forgive
us our debts, as we forgive our debtors. Is this necessary except in this life?
For in the other we shall have no debts. For what are debts, but sins? See, you
are on the point of being baptized, then all your sins will be blotted out,
none whatever will remain. Whatever evil you have ever done, in deed, or word,
or desire, or thought, all will be blotted out. And yet if in the life which is
after Baptism there were security from sin, we should not learn such a prayer
as this, Forgive us our debts. Only let us by all means do what comes next, As
we forgive our debtors. Do ye then who are about to enter in to receive a
plenary and entire remission of your debts, do ye above all things see that you
have nothing in your hearts against any other, so as to come forth from Baptism
secure, as it were free and discharged of all debts, and then begin to purpose
to avenge yourselves on your enemies, who in time past have done you wrong.
Forgive, as you are forgiven. God can do no one wrong, and yet He forgives who
owes nothing. How then ought he to forgive, who is himself forgiven, when He
forgives all, who owes nothing that can be forgiven Him?
9. Lead
us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. Will this again be necessary
in the life to come? Lead us not into temptation, will not be said, except
where there can be temptation. We read in the book of holy Job, Is not the life
of man upon earth a temptation? What then do we pray for? Hear what. The
Apostle James says, Let no man say when he is tempted, I am tempted of God. He
spoke of those evil temptations, whereby men are deceived, and brought under
the yoke of the devil. This is the kind of temptation he spoke of. For there is
another sort of temptation which is called a proving; of this kind of temptation
it is written, The Lord your God tempts (proves) you to know whether ye love
Him. What means to know? To make you know, for He knows already. With that kind
of temptation, whereby we are deceived and seduced, God tempts no man. But
undoubtedly in His deep and hidden judgment He abandons some. And when He has
abandoned them, the tempter finds his opportunity. For he finds in him no
resistance against his power, but immediately presents himself to him as his
possessor, if God abandon him. Therefore that He may not abandon us, do we say,
Lead us not into temptation. For every one is tempted, says the same Apostle
James, when he is drawn away of his own lust and enticed. Then lust, when it
has conceived, brings forth sin; and sin, when it is finished, brings forth
death. What then has he hereby taught us? To fight against our lusts. For you
are about to put away your sins in Holy Baptism; but lusts will still remain,
wherewith ye must fight after that you are regenerate. For a conflict with your
own selves still remains. Let no enemy from without be feared: conquer your own
self, and the whole world is conquered. What can any tempter from without,
whether the devil or the devil's minister, do against you? Whosoever sets the
hope of gain before you to seduce you, let him only find no covetousness in
you; and what can he who would tempt you by gain effect? Whereas if
covetousness be found in you, you take fire at the sight of gain, and art taken
by the bait of this corrupt food. But if he find no covetousness in you, the
trap remains spread in vain. Or should the tempter set before you some woman of
surpassing beauty; if chastity be within, iniquity from without is overcome.
Therefore that he may not take you with the bait of a strange woman's beauty,
fight with your own lust within; you have no sensible perception of your enemy,
but of your own concupiscence you have. Thou dost not see the devil, but the
object that engages you you see. Get the mastery then over that of which you
are sensible within. Fight valiantly, for He who has regenerated you is your
Judge; He has arranged the lists, He is making ready the crown. But because you
will without doubt be conquered, if you have not Him to aid you, if He abandon
you: therefore do you say in the prayer, Lead us not into temptation. The
Judge's wrath has given over some to their own lusts; and the Apostle says, God
gave them over to the lusts of their hearts. How did He give them up? Not by
forcing, but by forsaking them.
10.
Deliver us from evil, may belong to the same sentence. Therefore, that you may
understand it to be all one sentence, it runs thus, Lead us not into
temptation, but deliver us from evil. Therefore he added but, to show that all
this belongs to one sentence, Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from
evil. How is this? I will propose them singly. Lead us not into temptation, but
deliver us from evil. By delivering us from evil, He leads us not into
temptation; by not leading us into temptation, He delivers us from evil.
11. And
truly it is a great temptation, dearly beloved, it is a great temptation in
this life, when that in us is the subject of temptation, whereby we attain
pardon, if in any of our temptations we have fallen. It is a frightful
temptation, when that is taken from us, whereby we may be healed from the
wounds of other temptations. I know that you have not yet understood me. Give
me your attention, that you may understand. Suppose avarice tempts a man, and
he is conquered in any single temptation (for sometimes even a good wrestler
and fighter may get roughly handled ): avarice then has got the better of a
man, good wrestler though he be, and he has done some avaricious act. Or there
has been a passing lust; it has not brought the man to fornication, nor reached
unto adultery, for when this does take place, the man must at all events be
kept back from the criminal act. But he has seen a woman to lust after her; he
has let his thoughts dwell on her with more pleasure than was right; he has
admitted the attack; excellent combatant though he be, he has been wounded, but
he has not consented to it; he has beaten back the motion of his lust, has
chastised it with the bitterness of grief, he has beaten it back; and has
prevailed. Still in the very fact that he had slipped, has he ground for
saying, Forgive us our debts. And so of all other temptations, it is a hard
matter that in them all there should not be occasion for saying, Forgive us our
debts. What then is that frightful temptation which I have mentioned, that grievous,
that tremendous temptation, which must be avoided with all our strength, with
all our resolution; what is it? When we go about to avenge ourselves. Anger is
kindled, and the man burns to be avenged. O frightful temptation! You are
losing that, whereby you had to attain pardon for other faults. If you had
committed any sin as to other senses, and other lusts, hence might you have had
your cure, in that you might say, Forgive us our debts, as we also forgive our
debtors. But whoso instigates you to take vengeance, will lose for you the
power you had to say, As we also forgive our debtors. When that power is lost,
all sins will be retained; nothing at all is remitted.
12. Our
Lord and Master, and Saviour, knowing this dangerous temptation in this life,
when He taught us six or seven petitions in this Prayer, took none of them for
Himself to treat of, and to commend to us with greater earnestness, than this
one. Have we not said, Our Father, which art in heaven; and the rest which
follows? Why after the conclusion of the Prayer, did He not enlarge upon it to
us, either as to what He had laid down in the beginning, or concluded with at
the end, or placed in the middle? For why said He not, if the Name of God be
not hallowed in you, or if you have no part in the kingdom of God, or if the
will of God be not done in you, as in heaven, or if God guard you not, that you
enter not into temptation; why none of all these? But what says He? Verily I
say unto you, that if you forgive men their trespasses; in reference to that
petition, Forgive us our debts, as we also forgive our debtors. Having passed
over all the other petitions which He taught us, this He taught us with a
special force. There was no need of insisting so much upon those sins in which
if a man offend, he may know the means whereby he may be cured: need of it
there was, with regard to that sin in which if you sin, there is no means
whereby the rest can be cured. For this you ought to be ever saying, Forgive us
our debts. What debts? There is no lack of them; for we are but men; I have
talked somewhat more than I ought, have said something I ought not, have
laughed more than I ought, have eaten more than I ought, have listened with
pleasure to what I ought not, have drunk more than I ought, have seen with
pleasure what I ought not, have thought with pleasure on what I ought not;
Forgive us our debts, as we also forgive our debtors. This if you have lost,
you are lost yourself.
13. Take
heed, my brethren, my sons, sons of God, take heed, I beseech you, in that I am
saying to you. Fight to the uttermost of your powers with your own hearts. And
if you shall see your anger making a stand against you, pray to God against it,
that God may make you conqueror of yourself, that God may make you conqueror, I
say, not of your enemy without, but of your own soul within. For He will give
you His present help, and will do it. He would rather that we ask this of Him,
than rain. For you see, beloved, how many petitions the Lord Christ has taught
us; and there is scarce found among them one which speaks of daily bread, that
all our thoughts may be moulded after the life to come? For what can we fear
that He will not give us, who has promised and said, Seek ye first the kingdom
of God and His righteousness, and all these things shall be added unto you; for
your Father knows that you have need of these things before ye ask Him. Seek ye
first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things shall be
added unto you. For many have been tried even with hunger, and have been found
gold, and have not been forsaken by God. They would have perished with hunger,
if the daily inward bread were to leave their heart. After this let us chiefly
hunger. For, Blessed are they who hunger and thirst after righteousness, for they
shall be filled. But He can in mercy look upon our infirmity, and see us, as it
is said, Remember that we are dust. He who from the dust made and quickened
man, for that His work of clay's sake, gave His Only Son to death. Who can
explain, who can worthily so much as conceive, how much He loves us?
by Saint Augustine
Photo taken from Wikimedia Commons
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