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The Blue Letter Bible
Study Resources :: Dictionaries :: Lord's Prayer

Dictionaries :: Lord's Prayer

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Below are articles from the following 3 dictionaries:
Easton's Bible Dictionary

Lord's Prayer:

the name given to the only form of prayer Christ taught his disciples (Mat 6:9-13). The closing doxology of the prayer is omitted by Luke (Luk 11:2-4), also in the R.V. of Mat 6:13. This prayer contains no allusion to the atonement of Christ, nor to the offices of the Holy Spirit. "All Christian prayer is based on the Lord's Prayer, but its spirit is also guided by that of His prayer in Gethsemane and of the prayer recorded John 17. The Lord's Prayer is the comprehensive type of the simplest and most universal prayer."

Smith's Bible Dictionary

Lord's Prayer:

the prayer which Jesus taught his disciples (Matthew 6:9-13; Luke 11:2-4). "In this prayer our Lord shows his disciples how an infinite variety of wants and requests can be compressed into a few humble petitions. It embodies every possible desire of a praying heart, a whole world of spiritual requirements; yet all in the most simple, condensed and humble form, resembling, in this respect, a pearl on which the light of heaven plays."-Lange. "This prayer contains four great general sentiments, which constitute the very soul of religion,-sentiments which are the germs of all holy deeds in all worlds.

(1). Filial reverence: God is addressed not as the great unknown, not as the insearchable governor, but as a father, the most intelligible, attractive and transforming name. It is a form of address almost unknown to the old covenant, now and then hinted at as reminding the children of their rebellion (Isaiah 1:2; Malachi 1:6). Or mentioned as a last resource of the orphan and desolate creature (Isaiah 63:16) but never brought out in its fullness, as indeed it could not be, till he was come by whom we have received the adoption of sons."-Alford.

(2). "Divine loyalty : 'Thy kingdom come.'

(3). Conscious dependence : 'Give us this day, ' etc.

(4). Unbounded confidence : 'For thine is the power, ' etc."-Dr. Thomas' Genius of the Gospels.

The doxology, "For thine is the kingdom" etc., is wanting in many manuscripts. It is omitted in the Revised Version; but it nevertheless has the authority of some manuscripts, and is truly biblical, almost every word being found in 1 Chronicles 29:11 and is a true and fitting ending for prayer.

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The Blue Letter Bible ministry and the BLB Institute hold to the historical, conservative Christian faith, which includes a firm belief in the inerrancy of Scripture. Since the text and audio content provided by BLB represent a range of evangelical traditions, all of the ideas and principles conveyed in the resource materials are not necessarily affirmed, in total, by this ministry.