Revised Common Lectionary - Ash Wednesday,
5 March 2014
PRAYER: Thematic
Righteous God,
in humility and repentance
we bring our failures in caring, helping,
and loving,
we bring the pain we have caused other,
we bring the injustice in society of
which we are a part,
to the transforming power of your grace.
Grant us the courage to accept the
healing you offer
and to turn again toward the sunrise of
your reign,
that we may walk with you in the promise
of peace
you have willed for all the children of
the earth,
and have made known to us in Christ
Jesus. Amen.
Intercessory
Gracious and merciful God,
you see into the secret places of our
hearts,
where we mourn our sins.
As we turn again to your grace, receive
our prayers.
Prayers of the People, concluding with:
Look with mercy on our contrite hearts,
wash from us the stain of iniquity,
and create a new and right spirit in us,
that we may declare your praise
and offer an acceptable sacrifice in
these Lenten days;
through Christ Jesus, who bore our sins
on the cross. Amen.
Scripture
O God, you delight not in pomp and show,
but in a humble and contrite heart.
Overturn our love of worldly possessions
and fix our hearts more firmly on you,
that, having nothing,
we may yet possess everything,
a treasure stored up for us in heaven.
Amen.
Lectionary Readings
(Courtesy of Vanderbilt Divinity Library)
Ash Wednesday
Joel 2:1 Blow the trumpet in Zion,
and sound an alarm in my holy mountain!
Let all the inhabitants of the land
tremble,
for the day of Yahweh comes,
for it is close at hand:
2 A day of darkness and gloominess,
a day of clouds and thick darkness.
As the dawn spreading on the mountains,
a great and strong people;
there has never been the like,
neither will there be any more after them,
even to the years of many generations.
12 “Yet even now,” says Yahweh, “turn to
me with all your heart,
and with fasting, and with weeping, and with mourning.”
13 Tear your heart, and not your garments,
and turn to Yahweh, your God;
for he is gracious and merciful,
slow to anger, and abundant in loving kindness,
and relents from sending calamity.
14 Who knows? He may turn and relent,
and leave a blessing behind him,
even a meal offering and a drink offering to Yahweh, your God.
15 Blow the trumpet in Zion!
Sanctify a fast.
Call a solemn assembly.
16 Gather the people.
Sanctify the assembly.
Assemble the elders.
Gather the children, and those who nurse from breasts.
Let the bridegroom go out of his room,
and the bride out of her room.
17 Let the priests, the ministers of
Yahweh, weep between the porch and the altar,
and let them say, “Spare your people, Yahweh,
and don’t give your heritage to reproach,
that the nations should rule over them.
Why should they say among the peoples,
‘Where is their God?’”
Isaiah 58:1 “Cry aloud, don’t spare.
Lift up your voice like a trumpet.
Declare to my people their disobedience,
and to the house of Jacob their sins.
2 Yet they seek me daily,
and delight to know my ways.
As a nation that did righteousness,
and didn’t forsake the ordinance of their God,
they ask of me righteous judgments.
They delight to draw near to God.
3 ‘Why have we fasted,’ say they, ‘and
you don’t see?
Why have we afflicted our soul, and you don’t notice?’
“Behold, in the day of your fast you find
pleasure,
and oppress all your laborers.
4 Behold, you fast for strife and
contention,
and to strike with the fist of wickedness.
You don’t fast today so as to make your voice to be heard on high.
5 Is this the fast that I have chosen?
A day for a man to humble his soul?
Is it to bow down his head like a reed,
and to spread sackcloth and ashes under himself?
Will you call this a fast,
and an acceptable day to Yahweh?
6 “Isn’t this the fast that I have
chosen:
to release the bonds of wickedness,
to undo the straps of the yoke,
to let the oppressed go free,
and that you break every yoke?
7 Isn’t it to distribute your bread to
the hungry,
and that you bring the poor who are cast out to your house?
When you see the naked,
that you cover him;
and that you not hide yourself from your own flesh?
8 Then your light will break out as the
morning,
and your healing will appear quickly;
then your righteousness shall go before
you;
and Yahweh’s glory will be your rear guard.
9 Then you will call, and Yahweh will
answer;
you will cry for help, and he will say, ‘Here I am.’
“If you take away from among you the
yoke,
finger pointing,
and speaking wickedly;
10 and if you pour out your soul to the
hungry,
and satisfy the afflicted soul:
then your light will rise in darkness,
and your obscurity will be as the noonday;
11 and Yahweh will guide you continually,
and satisfy your soul in dry places,
and make your bones strong;
and you shall be like a watered garden,
and like a spring of water,
whose waters don’t fail.
12 Those who shall be of you shall build
the old waste places;
you shall raise up the foundations of many generations;
and you shall be called Repairer of the
Breach,
Restorer of Paths with Dwellings.
Psalm 51: For the Chief Musician. A Psalm
by David, when Nathan the prophet came to him, after he had gone in to
Bathsheba.
1 Have mercy on me, God, according to
your loving kindness.
According to the multitude of your tender mercies, blot out my
transgressions.
2 Wash me thoroughly from my iniquity.
Cleanse me from my sin.
3 For I know my transgressions.
My sin is constantly before me.
4 Against you, and you only, have I
sinned,
and done that which is evil in your sight;
that you may be proved right when you
speak,
and justified when you judge.
5 Behold, I was born in iniquity.
In sin my mother conceived me.
6 Behold, you desire truth in the inward
parts.
You teach me wisdom in the inmost place.
7 Purify me with hyssop, and I will be
clean.
Wash me, and I will be whiter than snow.
8 Let me hear joy and gladness,
That the bones which you have broken may rejoice.
9 Hide your face from my sins,
and blot out all of my iniquities.
10 Create in me a clean heart, O God.
Renew a right spirit within me.
11 Don’t throw me from your presence,
and don’t take your holy Spirit from me.
12 Restore to me the joy of your
salvation.
Uphold me with a willing spirit.
13 Then I will teach transgressors your
ways.
Sinners shall be converted to you.
14 Deliver me from the guilt of
bloodshed, O God, the God of my salvation.
My tongue shall sing aloud of your righteousness.
15 Lord, open my lips.
My mouth shall declare your praise.
16 For you don’t delight in sacrifice, or
else I would give it.
You have no pleasure in burnt offering.
17 The sacrifices of God are a broken
spirit.
A broken and contrite heart, O God, you will not despise.
2 Corinthians 5:20 We are therefore
ambassadors on behalf of Christ, as though God were entreating by us: we beg
you on behalf of Christ, be reconciled to God. 21 For him who knew no sin he
made to be sin on our behalf; so that in him we might become the righteousness
of God.
6:1 Working together, we entreat also
that you not receive the grace of God in vain, 2 for he says,
“At an acceptable time I listened to you,
in a day of salvation I helped you.”[a]
Behold, now is the acceptable time.
Behold, now is the day of salvation. 3 We give no occasion of stumbling in
anything, that our service may not be blamed, 4 but in everything commending
ourselves, as servants of God, in great endurance, in afflictions, in
hardships, in distresses, 5 in beatings, in imprisonments, in riots, in labors,
in watchings, in fastings; 6 in pureness, in knowledge, in patience, in
kindness, in the Holy Spirit, in sincere love, 7 in the word of truth, in the
power of God; by the armor of righteousness on the right hand and on the left,
8 by glory and dishonor, by evil report and good report; as deceivers, and yet
true; 9 as unknown, and yet well known; as dying, and behold, we live; as
punished, and not killed; 10 as sorrowful, yet always rejoicing; as poor, yet
making many rich; as having nothing, and yet possessing all things.
Footnotes:
a. 2 Corinthians 6:2 Isaiah 49:8
Matthew 6:1 “Be careful that you don’t do
your charitable giving before men, to be seen by them, or else you have no
reward from your Father who is in heaven. 2 Therefore when you do merciful
deeds, don’t sound a trumpet before yourself, as the hypocrites do in the
synagogues and in the streets, that they may get glory from men. Most certainly
I tell you, they have received their reward. 3 But when you do merciful deeds,
don’t let your left hand know what your right hand does, 4 so that your
merciful deeds may be in secret, then your Father who sees in secret will
reward you openly.
5 “When you pray, you shall not be as the
hypocrites, for they love to stand and pray in the synagogues and in the
corners of the streets, that they may be seen by men. Most certainly, I tell
you, they have received their reward. 6 But you, when you pray, enter into your
inner room, and having shut your door, pray to your Father who is in secret,
and your Father who sees in secret will reward you openly.
16 “Moreover when you fast, don’t be like
the hypocrites, with sad faces. For they disfigure their faces, that they may
be seen by men to be fasting. Most certainly I tell you, they have received
their reward. 17 But you, when you fast, anoint your head, and wash your face;
18 so that you are not seen by men to be fasting, but by your Father who is in
secret, and your Father, who sees in secret, will reward you.
19 “Don’t lay up treasures for yourselves
on the earth, where moth and rust consume, and where thieves break through and
steal; 20 but lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor
rust consume, and where thieves don’t break through and steal; 21 for where
your treasure is, there your heart will be also.
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John Wesley’s Notes/Commentary:
Ash Wednesday
Joel 2:1-2, 12-17
II A farther description of the
desolation of the land, ver. 1-11. An earnest call to repentance, ver. 12-17. A
promise of all good things to the penitent, ver. 18-27. A prophecy of the
Messiah's kingdom, ver. 28-32.
Verse 1. Blow ye - The prophet continues
his exhortation to the priests, who were appointed to summon the solemn
assemblies.
Verse 2. A day of darkness - A time of
exceeding great troubles and calamities. And this passage may well allude to
the day of judgment, and the calamities which precede that day. As the morning
- As the morning spreads itself over all the hemisphere and first upon the high
mountains, so shall the approaching calamities overspread this people. A great
people - This seems more directly to intend the Babylonians.
Verse 13. And repenteth him - He turneth
from executing the fierceness of his wrath.
Verse 14. He will return - God doth not
move from one place to another; but when he withholds his blessings, he is said
to withdraw himself. And so when he gives out his blessing, he is said to
return. And leave a blessing behind him - Cause the locusts to depart before
they have eaten up all that is in the land.
Verse 16. The children - Though they
understand little what is done, yet their cities ascend, and God with pity
looks on their tears. These that suck - Their cries and tears may perhaps move
the congregation to more earnest supplication to God for mercy. So the
Ninevites, Jonah iii, 7, 8. The bridegroom - Let the new married man leave the
mirth of the nuptials and afflict himself with the rest.
Verse 17. The porch - That stately porch
built by Solomon, 1 Kings vi, 3. The altar - The altar of burnt-offering, which
stood at some distance from this porch, and here are the priests commanded to
stand, fasting and praying, whence they might be heard and seen by the people
in the next court, in which the people were wont to pray. To reproach - Famine,
though by locusts is a reproach to this thine heritage; it will be greater
reproach to be slaves to the nations signified by the locusts, therefore in
mercy deliver us from both one and the other.
Isaiah 58:1-12
LVIII The hypocrisy of the Jews, in their
fasts, ver. 1-5. A true fast described, ver. 6, 7. Promises to Godliness, ver.
8-12. To the keeping of the sabbath, ver. 13, 14.
Verse 2. Yet - They cover all their
wickedness with a profession of religion. Delight - There are many men who take
some pleasure in knowing God's will and word, and yet do not conform their
lives to it. As - As if they were a righteous people. Forsook - As if they were
not guilty of any apostacy from God, or disobedience to God's precepts. Ask -
As if they resolved to observe them. In approaching - In coming to my temple to
hear my word, and to offer sacrifices.
Verse 3. Afflicted - Defrauded our
appetites with fasting, of which this phrase is used, Levit xvi, 29. Ye find -
Either you indulge yourselves in sensuality, as they did, chap. xxii, 13. But
this does not agree with that afflicting of their souls which they now
professed, and which God acknowledges; or you pursue and satisfy your own
desires: though you abstain from bodily food, you do not mortify your sinful
inclinations. Exact - Your money, got by your labour, and lent to others,
either for their need or your own advantage, which you require either with
usury, or at least with rigor, when either the general law of charity, or God's
particular law, commanded the release, or at least the forbearance of them.
Verse 4. Behold - Your fasting days,
wherein you ought in a special manner to implore the mercy of God, and to shew
compassion to men, you employ in injuring or quarrelling with your brethren,
your servants or debtors, or in contriving mischief against them. Heard - In
strife and debate. By way of ostentation.
Verse 5. Chosen - Approve of, accept, or
delight in, by a metonymy, because we delight in what we freely chuse. For a
day - This may be understood, either for a man to take a certain time to
afflict his soul in, and that either from even to even, Lev. xxiii, 32, or from
morning to evening, or for a little time. Wilt thou call - Canst thou suppose
it to be so? A fast - It being such an one as has nothing in it, but the dumb
signs of a fast, nothing of deep humiliation appearing in it, or, real
reformation proceeding from it. Acceptable day - A day that God will approve
of.
Verse 6. The bands - The cruel
obligations of usury and oppression.
Verse 7. Cast out - And thereby become wanderers,
having no abiding place. To thy house - That thou be hospitable, and make thy
house a shelter to them that have none of their own left. Hide not - That seek
no occasion to excuse thyself. Thy own flesh - Some confine this to our own
kindred; but we can look on no man, but there we contemplate our own flesh, and
therefore it is barbarous, not only to tear, but not to love and succor him.
Therefore feed him as thou wouldest feed thyself, or be fed; shelter him as
thou wouldest shelter thyself, or be sheltered; clothe him as thou wouldest
clothe thyself, or be clothed; if in any of these respects thou wert in his
circumstances.
Verse 8. Thy light - Happiness and
prosperity. Break forth - It shall not only appear, but break forth, dart
itself forth, notwithstanding all difficulties, as the sun breaks, and pierces
through a cloud. Thy health - Another metaphor to express the same thing.
Righteousness - The reward of thy righteousness. Before thee - As the
morning-star goes before the sun. The glory - His glorious power and
providence. Thy rereward - Thus the angel of his presence secured the
Israelites when they came up out of Egypt.
Verse 9. Answer - He will give an
effectual demonstration, that he hears thee. Here l am - A phrase that notes a
person to be ready at hand to help. Take away - From among you. The yoke - All
those pressures and grievances before mentioned. Putting forth - Done by way of
scoff, or disdainful insulting. Vanity - Any kind of evil words.
Verse 10. Draw out - Or, open, as when we
open a store, to satisfy the wants of the needy. Thy soul - Thy affection, thy
pity and compassion. Thy darkness - In the very darkness of the affliction
itself thou shalt have comfort.
Verse 11. Guide thee - Like a shepherd.
And he adds continually to shew that his conduct and blessing shall not be
momentary, or of a short continuance, but all along as it was to Israel in the
wilderness. Satisfy - Thou shalt have plenty, when others are in scarcity. Make
fat - This may be spoken in opposition to the sad effects of famine, whereby
the flesh is consumed away, that it cannot be seen, and the bones that were not
seen, stick out. A garden - If thou relieve the poor, thou shalt never be poor,
but as a well-watered garden, always flourishing. Fail not - Hebrew. deceive
not, a metaphor which farther notes also the continuance of this flourishing
state, which will not be like a land-flood, or brooks, that will soon be dried
up with drought. Thou shalt be fed with a spring of blessing, that will never
fail.
Verse 12. They shall be of thee - Thy
posterity. Waste places - Cities which have lain long waste; that shall
continue for many generations to come. The breach - Breach is put for breaches,
which was made by God's judgment breaking in upon them in suffering the walls
of their towns and cities to be demolished. Paths - Those paths that led from
city to city, which being now laid desolate, and uninhabited, were grown over
with grass, and weeds. To dwell in - These accommodations being recovered,
their ancient cities might be fit to be re-inhabited.
Psalm 51:1-17
PS 51 David prays for pardon, ver. 1, 2.
Confesses his sins, ver. 3- 5. Prays for renewing grace, ver. 6-14. Promises
unfeigned thankfulness, ver. 15-17. Prays for the whole church, ver, 18, 19. To
the chief musician, A psalm of David, when Nathan the prophet came unto him,
after he had gone in to Bathsheba.
Verse 4. Thee only - Which is not to be,
understood absolutely, because he had sinned against Bathsheba and Uriah, and
many others; but comparatively. So the sense is, though I have sinned against
my own conscience, and against others; yet nothing is more grievous to me, than
that I have sinned against thee. Thy sight - With gross contempt of thee, whom
I knew to be a spectator of my most secret actions. Justified - This will be
the fruit of my sin, that whatsoever severities thou shalt use towards me, it
will be no blemish to thy righteousness, but thy justice will be glorified by
all men. Speakest - Hebrew. in thy words, in all thy threatenings denounced
against me. Judgest - When thou dost execute thy sentence upon me.
Verse 5. Behold - Nor is this the only
sin which I have reason to bewail before thee; for this filthy stream leads me
to a corrupt fountain: and upon a review of my heart, I find, that this heinous
crime, was the proper fruit of my vile nature, which, ever was, and still is
ready to commit ten thousand sins, as occasion offers.
Verse 6. Truth - Uprightness of heart;
and this may be added; as an aggravation of the sinfulness of original corruption,
because it is contrary to the holy nature and will of God, which requires
rectitude of heart: and, as an aggravation of his actual sin, that it was
committed against that knowledge, which God had wrote in his heart.
Verse 7. Hyssop - As lepers, are by thy
appointment purified by the use of hyssop and other things, so do thou cleanse
me a leprous and polluted creature, by thy grace, and by that blood of Christ,
which is signified by those ceremonial usages.
Verse 8. Joy - By thy spirit, seal the pardon
of my sins on my conscience, which will fill me with joy. Rejoice - That my
heart which hath been sorely wounded may be comforted.
Verse 10. Create - Work in me an holy
frame of heart, whereby my inward filth may be purged away. Right - Hebrew.
firm or constant, that my resolution may be fixed and unmoveable. Spirit -
Temper or disposition of soul.
Verse 12. The joy - The comfortable sense
of thy saving grace, promised and vouchsafed to me, both for my present and
everlasting salvation. Free - Or, ingenuous, or liberal, or princely. Which he
seems to oppose to his own base and illiberal and disingenuous and servile
spirit, which he had discovered in his wicked practices: a spirit, which may
free me from the bondage of sin, and enable me chearfully to run the way of
God's precepts.
Verse 14. Thy righteousness - Thy
clemency and goodness.
Verse 15. My lips - Which are shut with
shame and grief.
Verse 16. Not sacrifice - This is not to
be understood absolutely, with respect to David's crimes, which were not to be
expiated by any sacrifice.
Verse 17. A broken spirit - This is of
more value than many sacrifices.
2 Corinthians 5:20b-6:10
Verse 20. Therefore we are ambassadors
for Christ-we beseech you in Christ's stead - Herein the apostle might appear
to some "transported beyond himself." In general he uses a more calm,
sedate kind of exhortation, as in the beginning of the next chapter. What
unparalleled condescension and divinely tender mercies are displayed in this
verse! Did the judge ever beseech a condemned criminal to accept of pardon?
Does the creditor ever beseech a ruined debtor to receive an acquittance in
full? Yet our almighty Lord, and our eternal Judge, not only vouchsafes to
offer these blessings, but invites us, entreats us, and, with the most tender
importunity, solicits us, not to reject them.
Verse 21. He made him a sin offering, who
knew no sin - A commendation peculiar to Christ. For us - Who knew no
righteousness, who were inwardly and outwardly nothing but sin; who must have
been consumed by the divine justice, had not this atonement been made for our
sins. That we might be made the righteousness of God through him - Might
through him be invested with that righteousness, first imputed to us, then
implanted in us, which is in every sense the righteousness of God.
1. We then not only beseech, but as
fellow-labourers with you, who are working out your own salvation, do also
exhort you, not to receive the grace of God - Which we have been now
describing. In vain - We receive it by faith; and not in vain, if we add to
this, persevering holiness.
Verse 2. For he saith - The sense is, As
of old there was a particular time wherein God was pleased to pour out his
peculiar blessing, so there is now. And this is the particular time: this is a
time of peculiar blessing. Isaiah xlix, 8.
Verse 3. Giving, as far as in us lies, no
offense, that the ministry be not blamed on our account.
4. But approving ourselves as the
ministers of God - Such as his ministers ought to be. In much patience - Shown,
Verse 1. In afflictions, necessities,
distresses - All which are general terms.
Verse 2. In stripes, imprisonments,
tumults - Which are particular sorts of affliction, necessity, distress
Verse 3. In labours, watchings, fastings
- Voluntarily endured. All these are expressed in the plural number, to denote
a variety of them. In afflictions, several ways to escape may appear, though
none without difficulty in necessities, one only, and that a difficult one; in
distresses, none at all appears.
Verse 5. In tumults - The Greek word
implies such attacks as a man cannot stand against, but which bear him hither
and thither by violence.
Verse 6. By prudence - Spiritual divine;
not what the world terms so. Worldly prudence is the practical use of worldly
wisdom: divine prudence is the due exercise of grace, making spiritual
understanding go as far as possible. By love unfeigned - The chief fruit of the
Spirit.
Verse 7. By the convincing and converting
power of God - Accompanying his word; and also attesting it by divers miracles.
By the armour of righteousness on the right hand and the left - That is, on all
sides; the panoply or whole armour of God.
Verse 8. By honour and dishonour - When
we are present. By evil report and good report - When we are absent. Who could
bear honour and good report, were it not balanced by dishonour? As deceivers -
Artful, designing men. So the world represents all true ministers of Christ.
Yet true - Upright, sincere, in the sight of God.
Verse 9. As unknown - For the world
knoweth us not, as it knew him not. Yet well known - To God, and to those who
are the seals of our ministry. As dying, yet behold - Suddenly, unexpectedly,
God interposes, and we live.
Verse 10. As sorrowing - For our own
manifold imperfections, and for the sins and sufferings of our brethren. Yet
always rejoicing - In present peace, love, power, and a sure hope of future
glory. As having nothing, yet possessing all things - For all things are ours,
if we are Christ's. What a magnificence of thought is this!
Matthew 6:1-6, 16-21
1. In the foregoing chapter our Lord
particularly described the nature of inward holiness. In this he describes that
purity of intention without which none of our outward actions are holy. This
chapter contains four parts,
1. The right intention and manner of
giving alms, ver. 1-4.
2. The right intention, manner, form, and
prerequisites of prayer, ver. 5-15.
3. The right intention, and manner of
fasting, ver. 16-18.
4. The necessity of a pure intention in
all things, unmixed either with the desire of riches, or worldly care, and fear
of want, ver. 19-34. This verse is a general caution against vain glory, in any
of our good works: All these are here summed up together, in the comprehensive
word righteousness. This general caution our Lord applies in the sequel to the
three principal branches of it, relating to our neighbour, ver. 2-iv, to God,
ver. 5, vi, and to ourselves, ver. 16-18. To be seen - Barely the being seen,
while we are doing any of these things, is a circumstance purely indifferent.
But the doing them with this view, to be seen and admired, this is what our
Lord condemns.
Verse 2. As the hypocrites do - Many of
the scribes and Pharisees did this, under a pretense of calling the poor
together. They have their reward - All they will have; for they shall have none
from God.
Verse 3. Let not thy left hand know what
thy right hand doth - A proverbial expression for doing a thing secretly. Do it
as secretly as is consistent,
Verse 1. With the doing it at all.
2. With the doing it in the most
effectual manner.
5. The synagogues - These were properly
the places where the people assembled for public prayer, and hearing the
Scriptures read and expounded. They were in every city from the time of the
Babylonish captivity, and had service in them thrice a day on three days in the
week. In every synagogue was a council of grave and wise persons, over whom was
a president, called the ruler of the synagogue. But the word here, as well as
in many other texts, signifies any place of public concourse.
Verse 6. Enter into thy closet - That is,
do it with as much secrecy as thou canst.
Verse 1. Hallowed be thy name - Mayest
thou, O Father, he truly known by all intelligent beings, and with affections
suitable to that knowledge: mayest thou be duly honoured, loved, feared, by all
in heaven and in earth, by all angels and all men.
Verse 2. Thy kingdom come - May thy
kingdom of grace come quickly, and swallow up all the kingdoms of the earth:
may all mankind, receiving thee, O Christ, for their king, truly believing in
thy name, be filled with righteousness, and peace, and joy; with holiness and
happiness, till they are removed hence into thy kingdom of glory, to reign with
thee for ever and ever.
Verse 3. Thy will be done on earth, as it
is in heaven - May all the inhabitants of the earth do thy will as willingly as
the holy angels: may these do it continually even as they, without any
interruption of their willing service; yea, and perfectly as they: mayest thou,
O Spirit of grace, through the blood of the everlasting covenant, make them
perfect in every good work to do thy will, and work in them all that is well
pleasing in thy sight.
Verse 4. Give us - O Father (for we claim
nothing of right, but only of thy free mercy) this day - (for we take no
thought for the morrow) our daily bread - All things needful for our souls and
bodies: not only the meat that perisheth, but the sacramental bread, and thy
grace, the food which endureth to everlasting life.
Verse 5. And forgive us our debts, as we
also forgive our debtors - Give us, O Lord, redemption in thy blood, even the
forgiveness of sins: as thou enablest us freely and fully to forgive every man,
so do thou forgive all our trespasses.
Verse 6. And lead us not into temptation,
but deliver us from evil - Whenever we are tempted, O thou that helpest our
infirmities, suffer us not to enter into temptation; to be overcome or suffer
loss thereby; but make a way for us to escape, so that we may be more than
conquerors, through thy love, over sin and all the consequences of it. Now the principal
desire of a Christian's heart being the glory of God, (ver. 9, 10, ) and all he
wants for himself or his brethren being the daily bread of soul and body, (or
the support of life, animal and spiritual, ) pardon of sin, and deliverance
from the power of it and of the devil, (ver. 11, 12, 13, ) there is nothing
beside that a Christian can wish for; therefore this prayer comprehends all his
desires. Eternal life is the certain consequence, or rather completion of
holiness.
III. For thine is the kingdom - The
sovereign right of all things that are or ever were created: The power - the
executive power, whereby thou governest all things in thy everlasting kingdom:
And the glory - The praise due from every creature, for thy power, and all thy
wondrous works, and the mightiness of thy kingdom, which endureth through all
ages, even for ever and ever. It is observable, that though the doxology, as
well as the petitions of this prayer, is threefold, and is directed to the
Father, Son, and Holy Ghost distinctly, yet is the whole fully applicable both
to every person, and to the ever - blessed and undivided trinity. Luke xi, 2.
16. When ye fast? - Our Lord does not
enjoin either fasting, alms- deeds, or prayer: all these being duties which
were before fully established in the Church of God. Disfigure - By the dust and
ashes which they put upon their heads, as was usual at the times of solemn
humiliation.
Verse 17. Anoint thy head - So the Jews
frequently did. Dress thyself as usual.
Verse 19. Lay not up for yourselves - Our
Lord here makes a transition from religious to common actions, and warns us of
another snare, the love of money, as inconsistent with purity of intention as
the love of praise. Where rust and moth consume - Where all things are
perishable and transient. He may likewise have a farther view in these words,
even to guard us against making any thing on earth our treasure. For then a
thing properly becomes our treasure, when we set our affections upon it. Luke
xii, 33.
Verse 21. Luke xi, 34.
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