Fr.
Gerhard Lohfink reminds us that God acts through people, and that the Our
Father has an Odd construction of the first three petitions. “…
the Our Father expresses a fundamental theological insight: God takes the
initiative. God acts. Everything comes from God.” “In the Our
Father, Jesus summarized all that he wanted and hoped for.”
“The
Our Father is a plea for daily bread [the 4th petition] the
disciples “… need to find people who will receive them into their
houses in the evening, give them bread to eat and provide something
for them the following day.”
Abba
[Father] expresses a new family in which the disciples now
live, they are to trust God unconditionally; they live in a new
family. Most likely Daily Bread probably refers to
the bread for the day to come [at that time meant Israel], no planning for the
future only for the day to come.
God
nourished the people with manna, but the Israelites could not
store it up, except on the Sabbath Jesus does not worry about tomorrow. “The bread petition in the Our Father shows us that something new was happening in Israel…. It is not benign and nonthreating.”
The Surprising
Address “Father”, in Luke’s version, and in Matthew’s version “Our Father in heaven”,
originally from intimate family life, but not Papa or Daddy. It contains
tenderness and confidence within its meaning.
Jesus
promised His disciples “… a hundred of brothers & sisters,
not a hundred fathers.” In the Old
Testament the relationship between God and God’s people is seen as the beloved
and the beloved. “Whoever has seen me has seen the
Father.”
Jesus
is the icon of God through Jesus we learn what it means to say God is our
father.
May God Be
Praised!
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