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STUDIES IN THE LORD'S PRAYERCopyright © Rosemary Bardsley 2002STUDY THREE: HALLOWED BE YOUR NAMEIn the Lord's Prayer Jesus indicated that the first consideration in prayer is not us or other people, but God himself. Jesus listed the first request, the first concern, as 'hallowed be your name'. What does this mean, and what are we praying when we put this request, this desire of ours to our Father in heaven? A. THE MEANING OF 'HALLOWED''Hallow' means 'to make holy', 'to honour as holy' 'to treat as totally other' - distinct, separate, unique, one of a kind. When we pray this we are praying that God will be given the honour and respect and adoration due to him as the one, true, holy, God. We are requesting, and committing ourselves to, the glory of his name. To pray this prayer we must ourselves be convinced that God is indeed 'holy', or, at the least, want to be convinced that he is holy. After his confrontation with God in the temple Isaiah would have had no difficulty grasping hold of the concept of the holiness of God. Nor would others who had similar meetings. Study the following and note what is revealed about God in each of them:
These were all rather frightening and awesome visions of God. Yet they were only visions. We who know Jesus Christ have, if only we were aware of it, something far better, something much more able to teach us of God's holiness, of his right to ask us to pray that his name be hallowed. We have seen God in human flesh - not with our physical eyes as the disciples did, but with our hearts, souls, minds and spirits, as the Spirit of God has revealed the truth about Jesus to us through the words about Jesus recorded by the apostles. As John wrote :
John also wrote:
These Old Testament people, and these disciples, knew from vision and personal encounter that God was holy. Their response to this knowledge was to uphold that name, to make it hallowed and honoured in the presence of men, and by men. B. CONCERN FOR GOD'S NAME IN THE OLD TESTAMENTWherever there is idolatry, wherever there are false concepts of God, wherever people seek after other powers and put substitutes in God's place, there God's name is dishonoured, there God's name is not hallowed. And wherever those who claim him as their God do not live according to his character and his commands, there his name is dishonoured and not hallowed. This concern for God's name runs through the Old Testament, as we can see in the references listed in Worksheet 3. Go to Worksheet 3, and read the references listed there. Write out the relevant section of each reference.When we pray 'hallowed be your name' we are aligning ourselves with this over-riding concern of the Old Testament: we are expressing our desire that God's name will be honoured all over the earth, and in our own lives; we are praying that all that is contrary to his holy name, all false gods, all false powers, will be brought low. We are also praying that God will work in us so that we will not sin against his name. C. THE EXAMPLE OF JESUS CHRISTIn John 17, when Jesus prayed to his Father, he summed up his life in this way:
The whole life of Christ on earth, as we have seen previously, was a manifestation, a revelation, of God. All that Jesus did, all that Jesus said, all that Jesus was, reveals to us the glory, power and holiness of God. [For extended studies on Christ's revelation of the Father go to the Who is Jesus? studies on this website.] D. THE CONCERN OF THE NEW TESTAMENTThe concern for the honour of God's name also permeates the New Testament. It is this, and not our salvation, which is taught as the motivation for right living. Jesus said:
Paul said:
James spoke of those
Peter said:
In Revelation we read that:[1] The name of the Lord is honoured and exalted:
[2] The name of the Lord is blasphemed:
SUMMARY:This phrase of the Lord's prayer teaches us that our Number One priority in prayer is God's honour - the honour of his name. This phrase teaches us that all of our praying must be subservient to this, that right praying, valid praying, falls within the boundary set by this first prayer 'hallowed be your name'. PERSONAL CHALLENGE BASED ON STUDY THREE:We pray 'hallowed be your name'. Do we mean it? Check it out in the table below.
Think about it next time you pray 'hallowed be your name'. Do we really mean it in the nitty-gritty of our lives? |
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