April/May
2014 - Vol. 73
On
the Lord's Prayer
From
a sermon by Origen, 3rd century
Thy Kingdom Come
'The kingdom of God is within us,' that is, on our lips and in our hearts.
(Luke 17:21) Therefore anyone who prays that the kingdom of God may not
delay its coming is praying that it may be consolidated, extended, and
reach its fullness within him.
Our Lord in fact dwells in all holy people who recognize God as their
king and obey his spiritual laws. The Father is present in the perfect
soul and Christ reigns together with the Father, according to his own actual
word `If someone loves me ... we will come to him and make our home with
him.' (John 14:23)
The kingdom will not reach its fullness in each of us until wisdom and
the other virtues are perfected in us. Perfection is reached at the end
of a journey, so we ought to be `forgetting what lies behind and straining
forward to what lies ahead.' (Philippians 3:13)
In other words, on the one hand the believer is a tireless traveler
and on the other hand the kingdom of God will reach its completion in us
only when the words of the Apostle are fulfilled: `When he has subjected
all things, Christ will deliver up the kingdom to the Father, that God
may be all in all.' (cf.1 Corinthians15:24-28)
Let us subdue our members to produce the fruits of the Spirit.
Then the Lord will walk with us as in a spiritual paradise. He alone will
reign in us, together with Christ. And we shall already possess the benefits
of the new birth and of the resurrection.
[Breviario Patristico © 1971 Piero Gribaudi
Editore, Turin, Italy; translated by Paul Drake]
Commentary
on the Lord's Prayer
»
The
Privilege and Responsibility of Calling God Father, by Cyril of Alexandria
»
God
Our Father, by Cyril of Jerusalem
»
Who
art in Heaven, by Gregory of Nyssa
»
Hallowed
by thy Name, by Origen
»
Thy
Kingdom Come, by Origen
»
Thy
will be done, by Origen
»
Give
us our daily bread, by Gregory of Nyssa
»
Forgive
us our trespasses, by Cassian
»
And
lead us not into temptation, by Origen
»
But
deliver us from evil, by Cyprian of Carthage |