You Will Find No
Prayer That is Not Already Contained
in the Lord's Prayer
Here are some
examples.
When one
prays: Be glorified among all nations as thou art glorified among us, and Let your prophets be proved true, what else is one asking than Hallowed
be thy name?
When the
psalmist says: Bring us back, O God of hosts, let your face
shine on us and we shall be saved what
else is he saying than Thy kingdom come?
When he says: Direct
my steps according to your word, so that iniquity has no dominion over me what else is he saying than Thy
will be done on earth as it is in heaven?
When in the
book of Proverbs it is said: give me neither poverty nor riches, grant me
only my share of food what
else is this than Give us this day our daily bread?
When he says: Deliver
me from my enemies, O my God, and defend me from those that rise up against me what else is this than Deliver
us from evil?
And if you go
over all the words of holy prayers, I think you will find nothing which cannot
be comprised and summed up in the petitions of the Lord’s Prayer. So when we
pray we are free to use different words to any extent, but we must ask the same
things: in this we have no choice.
It is our duty
to ask these things without hesitation for ourselves and for our friends, for
strangers and even for our enemies; although of course our emotions may differ
according to the persons being prayed for and their closeness or their distance
from us.
Now you have
the answers to two questions: what sort of person you should be when you pray,
and what sort of things you should pray for. These answers have not come from
my teaching but from the teaching of him who has condescended to teach us all.
We must seek a
blessed life and we must ask God to grant it to us. What a blessed life might
mean is something that many people have had many arguments about; but why
should we go to many people or listen to many arguments? God’s own Scriptures
have summed it up exactly: Blessed is the people whose God is the Lord. How are we to be part of that people,
to look on God and live with him for ever? As St Paul says, The
only purpose of this instruction is that there should be love coming out of a
pure heart, a clear conscience, and a sincere faith.
For “a clear
conscience” we may read “hope.” Faith, hope, and charity, therefore, lead to
God the man who prays, the man, that is, who believes, hopes, and desires, and
is guided as to what he should ask from the Lord by studying the Lord’s Prayer.
Source: The Liturgy of the Hours – Office of
Readings
From a Letter to Proba by Saint Augustine of Hippo
Photo
taken from Wikimedia
Commons
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thank you for your interest in our blog! Your comment will be viewed shortly to be added to our blog. :)