“Give us today our daily bread.”
This petition speaks to the basic needs of food and clothing we all (indicated by the “us”) have every day. We should pray this petition not only for ourselves but for all people, everywhere. With these alone, God says we will be “content” (1 Timothy 6:8).
Pray for:
- Those in famine-ravaged countries, that food will reach them, particularly the children.
- Those who rely on food pantries and shelters, that people will be generous in their donations of food staples, and clothing.
- Opportunities to personally meet these needs: i.e. donating food to a pantry, buying gift cards to a fast-food establishment, or filling bags with simple food items (granola bars, trail mixes, apples, water bottles) and then giving them to those living on the streets.
- Opportunities to volunteer at a local pantry or shelter.
- Your heart to be “content” with what God provides every day, that you would be free from the greed for more, bigger, better.
- The joy, appreciation, and thankfulness for the daily provisions given by your gracious God.
4. For spiritual needs.
“Give us today our daily bread.”
“Our daily bread” can also refer to spiritual sustenance: prayers, comfort, strength, a sense of God’s peace and presence. The expression for daily bread indicates not merely “…for earthly nourishment; it is the bread for the eternal day of the Kingdom of God, for the nourishment of our immortal soul. This living, supersubstantial bread is Christ Himself. In the Lord’s Prayer, then, we are not asking merely for material bread for physical health, but for the spiritual bread for eternal life.”
To that end, ask Jesus, the Bread of Life, to spiritually sustain you, and those everywhere; to provide hope during your darkest times, peace during your turbulent times, comfort during your saddest times, strength during your weakest times.
5. When needing forgiveness.
“Forgive us our trespasses.”
This powerful petition is designed to draw us into deeper holiness. As “set apart” children of God, we should try to maintain lives of purity, as free from sin as we can, with the Spirit’s help. But when we do sin—and we will, being imperfect, fallen people—we have this simple petition to pray in the moment of humble conviction. “Lord, forgive me of my sin.”
God is more than willing and ready to forgive, then. “If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just and will forgive us our sins and purify us from all unrighteousness” (1 John 1:9).
And not just temptations, says author C.S. Lewis, but also struggles, trials, and tests: “What Jesus is really teaching us here is something akin to asking God to make our paths straight.”