
"I
pledge allegiance"
(I promise to be true)
"to the flag"
(to the symbol of our country)
"of the United States of America"
(each state that has joined to make our country)
"and to the
Republic"
(a republic is a country where the people choose others to make laws for
them
-- the government is for the people)
"for which it
stands,"
(the flag means the country)
"one Nation"
(a single country)
"under God,"
(the people believe in a supreme being)
"indivisible,"
(the country cannot be split into parts)
"with liberty and
justice"
(with freedom and fairness)
"for
all."
(for each person in the country...you and me!)
The pledge says you are promising to be
true to the United States of America!
Our Father, who art in heaven, hallowed
be thy name.
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When Moses approached God on Mount
Sinai, he heard a voice saying, "Do not come near; put
off your shoes from your feet, for the place on which you are standing is
holy ground." An infinite chasm
separates us from the transcendent God.
In the Lord's Prayer, Jesus invites us to
draw near to God who is beyond human understanding, who dwells in mystery,
who is all holy.
We can call God "our Father".
Calling God "Father" does not mean that God is masculine. God is beyond the categories of gender,
of masculine or feminine. None of
our descriptions of God is adequate.
God, who is "in heaven", whose name is holy, cannot be
fully known by us.
By calling God "Father" we are more
rightly describing ourselves and our relationship with God. Jesus
teaches that we have a filial relationship with God; God sees us as if we
were a daughter or a son. And we, on our part, can approach God in the familiar
confident way a child approaches a loving parent. What is more, we approach God through
God's only Son, Jesus Christ, who unites us to himself .
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Thy Kingdom come, thy will be done, on
earth as it is in heaven.
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God's kingdom.
Jesus often said that God's power
would appear and renew all creation.
God like a mighty king would rule over the earth according to a plan
that unfolds from the beginning of the world. God's kingdom would be
marked by peace and justice.
Good would be rewarded and evil
punished. The kingdom, according to
Jesus,
is not far off, but already present in our midst, though not yet revealed.
In the Lord's prayer we pray that God's kingdom come, that God's will,
which is for our good, be done on earth as it is in heaven.
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Give us this day our daily bread.
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We are God's children. What can
be more childlike than this petition in which we
pray for our daily bread, a word that describes all those physical, human
and spiritual gifts we need to live.
With the confidence of children we say:
"Give us this day what we need."
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Forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive those who trespass
against us.
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This petition of the Lord's Prayer is a demanding
one. Not only do we ask God's
forgiveness for our daily offenses, but we link
God's forgiveness of us with our forgiveness of others. Forgiving others is not always easy to
do. We need God's help to do
it. But it
must be done or we ourselves cannot receive God's mercy.
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And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. Amen.
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Life is not easy.
It is a daily battle. Trials
like sickness and failure can crush our spirits. False values and easy promises can entice
us and even destroy our souls. And so we ask God to keep us from failing when we are
tested, to help us to know the right thing to do, to deliver us from the
evil awaits us in life.
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