Evangelical Reflections - Tuesday of the First Week of Lent, February 23, 2021

Tuesday of the First Week of Lent
Matthew 6:7-15
This is it. A simple directive...therefore shall you pray: The Our Father. It’s a prayer that we say at every Mass and one of the first prayers that many of us learned when we were children. It’s a prayer that, admittedly, I can say outloud and not realize the words that I am actually saying because it is so familiar.
When we look at the Our Father, look at the first two words that Jesus tells us to say: “our” and “father”. He doesn’t tell us to call God our “king” or our “lord”, but our Father. This tells us right away that our relationship with God is supposed to be one of the familial kind, a close, intimate relationship. We can go to God as a child to their earthly father.
We continue on through the prayer to praise God and to ask that His will be done in our lives. We then say, “give us this day our daily bread”; notice that we don’t say our “weekly” bread or our “monthly” bread. It’s daily. God gives us what we need for one day at a time, if only we ask for it.
As we come towards the end of the prayer, we ask that God “forgives us our trespasses, as we forgive those who trespass against us”. This, I would say, is the most difficult part of the whole prayer. We obviously want to be forgiven by God of our sins and He is always ready to do so. But we say, “as we forgive those who trespass against us”.
How do I forgive those who hurt me? Do I hold a grudge and talk behind their back? Even if someone has done something horrible to us, we don’t need to have a relationship with that person, but we do need to forgive them, even if they don’t ask for that forgiveness. Why?
Because God is going to forgive us how we forgive others. If we are asking God for mercy, we should show that same mercy towards others.
Let us, today, pray the Our Father anew. Let us truly reflect on the words that Jesus taught us to say. And let us ask God to help us live out those words and not just be mumbling coming from our lips.