Our Daily Bread
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The “Our Father”
has a special place among Christian prayers because, according to the gospels
of Mathew and Luke, it’s “the Lord’s Prayer,” taught to his disciples by Jesus
himself.
But like all prayers
that we know from memory, it can become rote - mechanical and repetitious, bringing
to mind Jesus’ quotation from the prophet Isaiah in Mathew’s gospel: “This
people honors me with their lips, but their heart is far from me.”
I’ve tried to
become more conscious of the words in the Our Father as I pray, and the
prayer’s phrase, “Give us this day our daily bread,” has become especially
meaningful.
Easy Access
Many of us in the
western world have become so accustomed to having easy access to food, “our
daily bread,” that we never think about the possibility of it becoming scarce.
But the pandemic has changed that, just as it has changed many of our
presumptions about health and safety and contemporary humanity’s ability to
control things.
Citing the
pandemic and consequent labor shortages, problems with trucking and shipping,
severe weather and climate change, the news media and social media report lots
of empty shelves in many supermarkets.
"We're
really seeing the perfect storm," Phil Lempert, editor of the website
SupermarketGuru.com, told National Public Radio (NPR).
The NPR article
says the shortages are uneven throughout the country and that so far, have been
temporary. Still, they destroy the widely-held presumption that for those who
have money, food will always be there. And they make the phrase “Give us this
day our daily bread” much more meaningful.
A staple of the
diet of people living at the time of the writing of the Hebrew Bible, bread
also had several symbolic meanings, including wisdom. That seems to be the case
in the Book of Proverbs when the personified “Wisdom” urges her readers (or
listeners) to “Come, eat of my bread and drink of the wine I have mixed. Leave
simpleness, and live, and walk in the way of insight.”Google Image
For me, we are not
only asking God in the Our Father for a continuation of the availability of
food, for us and all humanity, but for wisdom, without which the search for God
is useless.
Wisdom, of course,
doesn’t mean “being smart,” nor does it require a college education or any
formal education. That’s because it’s not a matter of what you know but how you know, that is, how you see
yourself and reality and the ability to put things in perspective.
For people
searching for God, that means properly assessing our skills and abilities and
our place in the world and placing God in the center where God belongs, no
matter the doubt and no matter the trends in contemporary society.
Those of us
fortunate enough to have some “amount” of faith, and to belong to a community
of believers, rightly rely for our source of wisdom on the teachings of the
Bible and “tradition,” which Dominican priest Timothy Radcliffe describes as a
“continual source of newness and vitality.”
The Foolish to Shame the Wise
The apostle Paul
helped the Christians at Corinth put themselves in perspective. “For consider
your call, brethren,” he advised. “Not many of you were wise according to
worldly standards, not many were powerful, not many were of noble birth but God
chose what is foolish in the world to shame the wise, God chose what is weak in
the world to shame the strong….”
Those non-believers
who consider their search for God to be in vain can provisionally look to all
the wise people around us who continually show the spark of God’s wisdom.
In his book, “What
is the Point of Being a Christian,” Radcliffe quotes Mindy Thompson Fullilove, M.D., an
American social psychiatrist, writing about an
extinct neighborhood in Pittsburgh where Irish, Polish and Italian immigrants
struggled to reconcile differences.
“Neighborhoods
were not just places where people lived together,” she writes. “They
transmitted wisdom, the knowledge of how to resolve conflicts, of how to cope
with difference.” Lots of contemporary people do that on a daily basis.
Believers and non-believers
need both kinds of our daily bread.
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