October 8, 2014
by
Mark Latta

Creighton's School of Dentistry
click here for photo and information about the writer

Wednesday of the Twenty-seventh Week in Ordinary Time
Lectionary: 463

Galatians 2:1-2, 7-14
Psalm 117:1bc, 2
Luke 11:1-4

Praying Ordinary Time

My first reaction to the Gospel reading was “The Lord’s Prayer — what can I say about that?” A prayer from youth to now — taken for granted and recited ritualistically.  Given my over-caffeinated, over-tasked and under reflective recent working environment my reaction was a sign and symptom — of the lack of understanding and depth of Jesus’s gift in this prayer.

The prayer begins with the word Abba — something translated into colloquial English today as “Daddy.” Not a formal petition of praise or petition but an intimate request for an encounter with our loving God. In our busy world, where God’s presence and movements are denied or obscured, this prayer gives us a way to engage our Father. Jesus gives us this gift of prayer to help overcome our self-absorption and reflect on matters we often neglect: our own forgiveness that we receive from our loving Father and the expectation for us to forgive.

This is not a prayer of petition for our ill-conceived desires, but a reminder to understand what is really going on and what will prevail in our world. We can be comforted by the grace that God is working at in all of creation and in and through those of us who are his servants.

This prayer is a celebration-not of what we want from God but of what the Father does for us. It is a celebration of what God the Father is consistently and continually doing in the world and in our personal lives. Jesus does not direct us to pray for what we wish he would start doing but asks us to recognize “your Kingdom come” is here and now. In faith we accept his gifts of what we most urgently need and setting aside our insecurities, fear, uncertainties and trials we luxuriate in his most perfect love for us. Jesus has opened the way to heaven by his death and resurrection and has given us salvation. Let us pray with joy and confidence to Abba — our Father!

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marklatta@creighton.edu

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