Blog Archive

Thursday, July 24, 2025

GIVE US TODAY...


Luke’s Jesus prayed a lot. But Jesus’ prayers, and the prayer he taught his disciples, were not individualistic, pietistic supplications. They were community prayers; prayers on actualizing God’s reign on earth. In the Gospel of Luke and its sequel, the Acts of the Apostles, the test of one’s relationship with God was proven by one's relationship with people, especially the poor, the orphans, the widows, the strangers. 

When Luke’s Jesus prays, “Give us this day our daily bread,” he was lifting up a peasant’s petition for today’s food, echoing the farmer’s prayer for daily sustenance in the book of Proverbs; he was mouthing the hope of the Jubilee Year for dispossessed farmers for land, and the dream of day labourers, the daily wage earners, for justice. Moreover, his prayers resonates with the experience of The Tabernacle, when God "dwelt abundantly" with God's people which made sure that everyone's basic needs were met. 

When Luke’s Jesus prays, “Give us this day our daily bread,” he celebrates the peasants’ capacity to serve generously, sharing of the little they had, even rising at midnight to give three loaves of bread to a persistent friend in need; he affirms poor communities’ capacity to share meals and all things in common, selling their meager possessions, and distributing the proceeds to all, as they had need; he believes that God’s reign has
come and God has chosen to reveal it among shepherds, among the poor, the oppressed, the marginalized, the Lumads, and, yes, the Lupang Ramos community.

When Luke's Jesus prays, "Give us today our daily bread," he proclaims good news to the poor and affirms the day when everyone, especially those who gargle water for breakfast, sip warm water for lunch, and force themselves to sleep in place of supper, actually gets to eat a warm meal! And we are all enjoined to make sure that day will come. Sooner than later. 

Friends, shalom, for those whose only hope is God, is not eternal life nor a mansion over a hilltop. It is a warm meal. Today. 

#ChooseJustice
#FreePalestine
#EndTheCultureOfImpunity
#ClemencyForMaryJane
#JusticeForEJKVictims
#LoveGodServePeople 

*art, "The Insistent Friend," JESUS MAFA, 1973, Cameroon (available at vanderbilt divinity library digita archives).

No comments:

THIEVES IN THE NIGHT

Many accepted Jesus as their Personal Lord and Savior, fueled by the terror of eternal damnation, after watching the movie "A Thief in ...