Luke 11:2
So He said to them, “When you pray, say:
So He said to them, “When you pray, say:
Our Father in heaven,
Hallowed be Your name.
Hallowed be Your name.
When I study passages like this,
I often fall into the habit of looking and the individual phrases and words,
parsing them, and analyzing the elemental truths to be found there, but as
Jesus taught His disciples to pray, the words and phrases are so interdependent
that the individual and specific meaning of each phrase is incomplete without
the others. I’m saying that to the point
that to say “Our Father” is incomplete without also saying “Hallowed by Your
name.” Before we can adequately address
God as Father, we must understand His holiness.
Though this is commonly called “the
Lord’s Prayer,” Jesus meant for this prayer to be the model for my own
prayers. When I pray, this is how I
should pray and basically, what I should pray for.
Prayer is addressed “Father” or “Our
Father” or more specifically, “My Father.”
Though as Paul states, by the Spirit we may cry out “Abba, Father,” this
is not what Christ used as the address in this prayer. Perhaps there is more on that for later….
The important point for me today is the
second phrase which is translated “Hallowed by Your name.” The word “hallowed” is ἁγιάζω
hagiazō – which is the
verb form of ἅγιος hagios – “holy.” As a verb, the word
means “to sanctify or to make holy.” The
verb is an aorist imperative with the subject, “you,” understood. The prayer is addressed to God the Father
with the first request for Him to make His name holy. If God is to make His name holy, where and
how will that prayer be answered? Some
possibilities…
-
In the world? – not likely- In the church? – still a bit of a stretch
- In my own life and heart? – Absolutely!
Now, that brings
me to an issue – what does it mean to be holy?
There are a number of words in the New Testament that describe various
aspects of holiness, but the word hagiaz,
is special. I have a working
definition drawn from Vine's
Expository Dictionary of New Testament Words.
To be holy is to be:
·
More and higher than just sacred, outwardly
associated with God· More than just worthy and honorable
· More than just pure, free from defilement
To be holy is more comprehensive
than other terms that describe our character and our relationship and service to
God. Holiness is characteristically godlikeness.
To address God as our Father
without a deep, unswerving commitment to personal holiness borders on
blasphemy.
Coram deo
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