Tuesday of Trinity VII - Devotion in semi-Exile
Lection for Tuesday after Trinity VII
1 Samuel 13:1-18 Acts 23:12-35
1 Samuel 13:1-18 Acts 23:12-35
A question I have been asked, or at least a topic that has been
brought to my attention is, “Pastor, how should I pray? I do not know how?”
Well, as we have been taking an excursion into Luther’s Large Catechism, that
is a question Christians have asked of every age – and Luther addresses. Ever
notice how the Lord’s Prayer and the Ten Commandments are tied together?
Today we continue in the “Third Part” of Luther’s Large
Catechism, “Of Prayer,” specifically, the 4th Petition.
OK, I will quit so that you may read what Luther says.
Large Catechism —— Third Part: Of Prayer
The Lord’s Prayer – The Fourth Petition
71] Give us this day our daily bread.
72] Here, now, we consider the poor bread basket, the necessaries
of our body and of the temporal life. It is a brief and simple word, but it has
a very wide scope. For when you mention and pray for daily bread, you pray for
everything that is necessary in order to have and enjoy daily bread and, on the
other hand, against everything which interferes with it. Therefore you must
open wide and extend your thoughts not only to the oven or the flour-bin, but
to the distant field and the entire land, which bears and brings to us daily
bread and every sort of sustenance. For if God did not cause it to grow, and
bless and preserve it in the field, we could never take bread from the oven or
have any to set upon the table.
73] To comprise it briefly, this petition includes everything that
belongs to our entire life in the world, because on that account alone do we
need daily bread. Now for our life it is not only necessary that our body have
food and covering and other necessaries, but also that we spend our days in
peace and quiet among the people with whom we live and have intercourse in
daily business and conversation and all sorts of doings, in short, whatever
pertains both to the domestic and to the neighborly or civil relation and
government. For where these two things are hindered [intercepted and disturbed]
that they do not prosper as they ought, the necessaries of life also are
impeded, so that ultimately life cannot be maintained. 74] And there is,
indeed, the greatest need to pray for temporal authority and government, as
that by which most of all God preserves to us our daily bread and all the
comforts of this life. For though we have received of God all good things in
abundance, we are not able to retain any of them or use them in security and
happiness, if He did not give us a permanent and peaceful government. For where
there are dissension, strife, and war, there the daily bread is already taken
away, or at least checked.
75] Therefore it would be very proper to place in the coat-of-arms
of every pious prince a loaf of bread instead of a lion, or a wreath of rue, or
to stamp it upon the coin, to remind both them and their subjects that by their
office we have protection and peace, and that without them we could not cat and
retain our daily bread. Therefore they are also worthy of all honor, that we
give to them for their office what we ought and can, as to those through whom
we enjoy in peace and quietness what we have, because otherwise we would not
keep a farthing; and that, in addition, we also pray for them that through them
God may bestow on us the more blessing and good.
76] Let this be a very brief explanation and sketch, showing how
far this petition extends through all conditions on earth. Of this any one
might indeed make a long prayer, and with many words enumerate all the things
that are included therein, as that we pray God to give us food and drink,
clothing, house, and home, and health of body; also that He cause the grain and
fruits of the field to grow and mature well; furthermore, that He help us at
home towards good housekeeping, that He give and preserve to us a godly wife,
children, and servants, that He cause our work, trade, or whatever we are
engaged in to prosper and succeed, favor us with faithful neighbors and good
friends, etc. 77] Likewise, that He give to emperors, kings, and all estates,
and especially to the rulers of our country and to all counselors, magistrates,
and officers, wisdom, strength, and success that they may govern well and
vanquish the Turks and all enemies; to subjects and the common people,
obedience, peace, and harmony in their life with one another; 78] and on the
other hand, that He would preserve us from all sorts of calamity to body and
livelihood, as lightning, hail, fire, flood, poison, pestilence, cattle-plague,
war and bloodshed, famine, destructive beasts, wicked men, etc. 79] All this it
is well to impress upon the simple, namely, that these things come from God,
and must be prayed for by us.
80] But this petition is especially directed also against our
chief enemy, the devil. For all his thought and desire is to deprive us of all
that we have from God, or to hinder it; and he is not satisfied to obstruct and
destroy spiritual government in leading souls astray by his lies and bringing
them under his power, but he also prevents and hinders the stability of all
government and honorable, peaceable relations on earth. There he causes so much
contention, murder, sedition, and war, also lightning and hail to destroy grain
and cattle, to poison the air, etc. 81] In short, he is sorry that any one has
a morsel of bread from God and eats it in peace; and if it were in his power,
and our prayer (next to God) did not prevent him, we would not keep a straw in
the field, a farthing in the house, yea, not even our life for an hour,
especially those who have the Word of God and would like to be Christians.
82] Behold, thus God wishes to indicate to us how He cares for us
in all our need, and faithfully provides also for our temporal support. 83] And
although He abundantly grants and preserves these things even to the wicked and
knaves, yet He wishes that we pray for them, in order that we may recognize
that we receive them from His hand, and may feel His paternal goodness toward
us therein. For when He withdraws His hand, nothing can prosper nor be
maintained in the end, as, indeed, we daily see and experience. 84] How much
trouble there is now in the world only on account of bad coin, yea, on account
of daily oppression and raising of prices in common trade, bargaining and labor
on the part of those who wantonly oppress the poor and deprive them of their
daily bread! This we must suffer indeed; but let them take care that they do
not lose the common intercession, and beware lest this petition in the Lord's
Prayer be against them.
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