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GraciousCall.org - Handbook on Faith, Hope, and Love
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Handbook on Faith, Hope, and Love by Saint Augustine
CHAPTER
XXX. The Principles of Christian Living: Faith and Hope
114. Thus, from our confession of
faith
, briefly summarized in the Creed
(which is milk for babes when pondered at the carnal level but food for strong
men when it is considered and studied spiritually), there is born the good
hope
of the faithful, accompanied by a holy
love
.
241
But of these affirmations, all of which ought
faithfully
to be believed,
only those which have to do with
hope
are contained in the Lord's
Prayer. For "cursed is everyone," as the divine eloquence testified, "who rests
his hope in man."[242]
Thus, he who
rests his hope in himself is bound by the bond of this curse. Therefore, we
should seek from none other than the Lord God whatever it is that we hope to do
well, or hope to obtain as reward for our good works.
115. Accordingly, in the Evangelist Matthew, the Lord's Prayer may be seen to
contain seven petitions: three of them ask for eternal goods, the other four
for temporal goods, which are, however, necessary for obtaining the eternal
goods.
For when we say: "Hallowed be thy name. Thy Kingdom come. Thy will be done on
earth, as it is in heaven"[243]
--this
last being wrongly interpreted by some as meaning "in body and spirit"--these
blessings will be retained forever. They begin in this life, of course; they
are increased in us as we make progress, but in their perfection--which is to
be hoped for in the other life--they will be possessed forever! But when we
say: "Give us this day our daily bread. And forgive us our debts, as we forgive
our debtors. And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil,"[244]
who does not see that all these
pertain to our needs in the present life? In that life eternal--where we all
hope to be--the hallowing of God's name, his Kingdom, and his will, in our
spirit and body will abide perfectly and immortally. But in this life we ask
for "daily bread" because it is necessary, in the measure required by soul and
body, whether we take the term in a spiritual or bodily sense, or both. And
here too it is that we petition for forgiveness, where the sins are committed;
here too are the temptations that allure and drive us to sinning; here,
finally, the evil from which we wish to be freed. But in that other world none
of these things will be found.
116. However, the Evangelist Luke, in his version of the Lord's Prayer, has
brought together, not seven, but five petitions. Yet, obviously, there is no
discrepancy here, but rather, in his brief way, the Evangelist has shown us how
the seven petitions should be understood. Actually, God's name is even now
hallowed in the spirit, but the Kingdom of God is yet to come in the
resurrection of the body. Therefore, Luke was seeking to show that the third
petition ["Thy will be done"] is a repetition of the first two, and makes this
better understood by omitting it. He then adds three other petitions,
concerning daily bread, forgiveness of sins, and avoidance of temptation.[245]
However, what Matthew puts in the
last place, "But deliver us from evil," Luke leaves out, in order that we might
understand that it was included in what was previously said about temptation.
This is, indeed, why Matthew said, "
But
deliver us," instead of,
"
And
deliver us," as if to indicate that there is only one
petition--"Will not this, but that"--so that anyone would realize that he is
being delivered from evil in that he is not being led into temptation.
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