From a treatise on the Lord's Prayer by Saint Cyprian, bishop and martyr
He has given us life: he has also taught us how to pray |
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Dear
brothers, the commands of the Gospel are nothing else than God’s
lessons, the foundations on which to build up hope, the supports for
strengthening faith, the food that nourishes the heart. They are the
rudder for keeping us on the right course, the protection that keeps our
salvation secure. As they instruct the receptive minds of believers on
earth, they lead safely to the kingdom of heaven.
God willed that many things should be said by the
prophets, his servants, and listened to by his people. How much greater
are the things spoken by the Son. These are now witnessed to by the very
Word of God who spoke through the prophets. The Word of God does not
now command us to prepare the way for his coming: he comes in person and
opens up the way for us and directs us toward it. Before, we wandered
in the darkness of death, aimlessly and blindly. Now we are enlightened
by the light of grace, and are to keep to the highway of life, with the
Lord to precede and direct us.
The Lord has given us many counsels and commandments
to help us toward salvation. He has even given us a pattern of prayer,
instructing us on how we are to pray. He has given us life, and with his
accustomed generosity, he has also taught us how to pray. He has made
it easy for us to be heard as we pray to the Father in the words taught
us by the Son.
He had already foretold that the hour was coming when
true worshipers would worship the Father in spirit and in truth. He
fulfilled what he had promised before, so that we who have received the
spirit and the truth through the holiness he has given us may worship in
truth and in the spirit through the prayer he has taught.
What prayer could be more a prayer in the spirit than
the one given us by Christ, by whom the Holy Spirit was sent upon us?
What prayer could be more a prayer in the truth than the one spoken by
the lips of the Son, who is truth himself? It follows that to pray in
any other way than the Son has taught us is not only the result of
ignorance but of sin. He himself has commanded it, and has said: You
reject the command of God, to set up your own tradition.
So, my brothers, let us pray as God our master has
taught us. To ask the Father in words his Son has given us, to let him
hear the prayer of Christ ringing in his ears, is to make our prayer one
of friendship, a family prayer. Let the Father recognize the words of
his Son. Let the Son who lives in our hearts be also on our lips. We
have him as an advocate for sinners before the Father; when we ask
forgiveness for our sins, let us use the words given by our advocate. He
tells us: Whatever you ask the Father in my name, he will give you.
What more effective prayer could we then make in the name of Christ than
in the words of his own prayer?
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