"Everything has been given over to Me by My Father. No one knows the Son except the Father and no one knows the Father except the Son –– and anyone to whom the Son wishes to reveal Him" (Lk 10:22). In today's Gospel passage, the only begotten Son gives us a formula for praying to His Father. In fact, we've been given permission to call the God of the universe, "Our Father" (Mt 6:9). "You did not receive a spirit of slavery leading you back into fear, but a spirit of adoption through which we cry out, ‘Abba!' (that is, ‘Father')" (Rm 8:15; cf Gal 4:6).
Although we repeat the Our Father countless times during our lives, we must guard against presumption: "In your prayer do not rattle on like the pagans. They think they will win a hearing by the sheer multiplication of words" (Mt 6:7). The Church has consistently taught prayer must lift us up to God. "Christian prayer tries above all to meditate on the mysteries of Christ" (Catechism of the Catholic Church, 2708).
In the end, even though "all mankind is grass" (1 Pt 1:24), God the Father still deeply cares for each of us. Accept the Lord's invitation to intimacy. You are His adopted child. Pray with hopeful expectation to your Father.
PRAYER: | "Lord, teach us to pray�" (see Lk 11:1) |
PROMISE: | "The Lord is close to the brokenhearted; and those who are crushed in spirit He saves." ––Ps 34:19 |
PRAISE: | Brenda, a wife and mother, rises very early to spend over two hours each day in prayer. |
Reprinted with permission from Presentation Ministries, a lay association of the Catholic Church that focuses on evangelization and discipleship through Bible teaching, daily Mass, the charisms of the Holy Spirit, and Small Christian Community. Their ministries include:
· One Bread, One Body
· Daily Bread Radio Program
· Annual Bible Institute
· Discipleship Retreats
· Guadalupe Bible College