Updated February, 2025
The Lord’s Prayer bristles with a hopeful, contrary agitation. A finely embroidered version of it may hang in the family kitchen under a picture of the praying hands, exuding an air of simple piety, but this prayer is hardly an invitation to tranquillity. On the contrary, the Lord’s Prayer urges us to examine our loves and loyalties and engages us in personal and social transformation. Who will you serve? Who will you trust? What do you hope for? What loyalties set your agenda? The Lord’s Prayer invites followers of Jesus to struggle with these existential questions. Time and again it summons the church to pray for the radical renewal of all things, disturbing the status quo and provoking a hopeful, contrary agitation—a longing for the coming of shalom.
The liturgies in this series grew out of our desire to plumb each petition within the Lord’s Prayer—to rattle heaven’s doors using Christ’s own words—in search of justice that neither starts nor stops far from home. Each week one petition is added. To invite concentrated contemplation, we coupled Taizé and similar music with poetic imagery and periods of silence.
Many of the prayers were inspired by or adapted from Gifts of Many Cultures (Cleveland: United Church Press, 1995), which includes several prayers expanding the Lord’s Prayer. Those uses are indicated with the abbreviation GMC and the
page number.
Although Fellowship originally developed the series for Lent, it can be used at any time you wish to focus on justice issues. As originally used, the series contemplated “for yours is the kingdom” on Palm Sunday and celebrated the “Amen” on Easter Sunday, for only in the power of Jesus raised from the dead can we pray and live the Lord’s Prayer.
—Roy Berkenbosch and Cheryl Mahaffy
Our Father in heaven,
hallowed be your name.
Opening Litany
On this day, we step boldly, humbly into the presence of our God, praying with our suffering Savior as he taught us to pray:
Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name.
With voices around the world, we call:
Creator God of many names, the beginning and the end of all there is, who created sacred ground out of chaos and birthed the earth: blessed be your name.
Great Spirit whose home is anywhere and everywhere, beyond stars and moon, who lives in Afghanistan, Cuba, and Eritrea, with the hungry and dying children in Somalia, Bosnia, and Iraq: hallowed be your name.
—GMC, p. 48ff.
Our Parent God in heaven, who works in schools, farms, and faraway places, who doctors the sick and ministers to the poor and unwanted: holy is your name.
Our God in heaven, holy is your name.
Silence: A time of reflection
Song: “The Lord’s Prayer” (st. 1) (West Indian setting in five stanzas found in Worshiping Ecumenically , p. 101; an eight-stanza setting is also found in PsH 562)
Passing of God’s peace
Prayer of Confession
We confess that we are a brokenhearted people, unable to change.
We do not hallow your name in your children, made in your image, who go to school hungry or not at all, in the emotionally and mentally fragile who walk the streets alone.
We confess that we are a brokenhearted people.
We do not hallow your name in children sent to war, in the elderly left homeless, in our inability to forgive.
We do not hallow your name or each other—the ones who sit or walk beside us without hope.
We are a broken people.
Song: “How I Have Longed” (Songlines [New York: The Cross Road Publishing Co., 1996], p. 43)
We bring our broken lives to you, the One who hallows life. Encircle us with your healing, won through sacrifice, with your many-colored cord of grace.
Extend to us this cord of life, assure us of your forgiveness, and give us the courage to honor the holiness of your hallowed name.
Holy is your Name!
We are threads bound together in that name: friends, brothers, sisters of Christ. A hundred hands, held together and washed by the blood of the lamb.
Silence
Assurance of Pardon: Psalm 103:13-14, 17-18
Song: “Nothing Can Trouble” (Taizé; available from GIA Publications)
Proclamation of the Word
Scripture: Matthew 9:1; Ezekiel 36:22-28; John 12:23ff.
Sermon Notes: “Hallowed Be Your Name”
Addressing God as our Father reminds us that God clings to us with parental determination and love, particularly when we remember that the idea of God as Father stems from Israel’s experience of
liberation: “out of Egypt I have called my son.” By addressing our prayers to God in heaven, we are reminded that our help lies not in the transitory and arbitrary, but in the steadfastness of heaven.
This first petition, make your name holy, is really asking God to live up to God’s own reputation among the nations. As we see in Ezekiel, the
holiness of God’s name is completely wrapped up in God’s actions of justice, mercy and salvation. The way God’s name is made holy is by restoring what has been ruined—renovating the run-down, resettling the refugees, embracing the exile.
A second window of insight comes from John 12:23ff. Jesus announces that by his suffering and death he will glorify the Father’s name. From this we learn that the holiness of God is a cross, a crown of thorns, a wounded man. Jesus’ death is a consequence of his radical obedience to the demands of love and justice, his commitment to renewal. In the words of Martin Luther, we need to see God’s
holiness in the crucified son of man.
So the summons to “be holy as God is holy” is not an invitation out of the world but into the world in a life of service and self-denial. In a word, holiness looks for justice.
We Go Forth
Most High in heaven, hallowed be your name.
Song: “Sing a Song of Jubilation” (Songlines, p. 65)
Your kingdom come, your will be done
on earth as it is in heaven.
Opening Litany
On this day, we step boldly, humbly into the presence of our God, praying with our suffering Savior the prayer he taught us to pray:
Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name, your kingdom come, your will be done on earth as it is in heaven.
With voices around the world we call:
May your kingdom come!
Voices: to those who are hungry,
those who are weeping,
those who are despairing,
those who suffer from wars,
those who have waited centuries for a truly human life.
Grant us hope that will strengthen our resolve to work for this world, despite so many conflicts, threats, and shortcomings.
We acknowledge that much is broken, and yet we believe in working for renewal, for justice and peace.
Voices: May the earth shine in its beauty, in its ability to heal.
May we see possibilities before us.
Grant us vision . . .
that we may boldly add our voices to a story unfolding through history: the coming of God’s kingdom.
Grant us courage to do your will—at all times, in all places, for all people.
May your kingdom come like a spring rain, like streams running to rivers.
Silence: A time of reflection
Song: “The Lord’s Prayer” (st. 1-2)
Passing of God’s peace
Song: “Isaiah the Prophet”Patterson
Prayer of Confession
We confess, God of heaven and earth, that our fears and our insecurities, our pride and our stubbornness lead us away from your kingdom.
We fail to see the beauty and the complexity of your world . . . the people, cultures, languages, geographies that you have woven together.
Give us open eyes to see the world as it is and to see ourselves as we are.
Give us hope to continue believing in what you intend us all to be.
We come to you, bowed by the evidence of earth torn and heaven scorned. Yet you will make both new. Encircle us and our world with your healing won through sacrifice.
Extend to us your cord of life, assure us of your forgiveness, and give us the courage to call your kingdom near.
On earth as it is in heaven!
We are your family, your image on earth, friends, brothers, sisters of Christ. One world community with Christ as our center.
Song: “Seek Ye First” (st. 1-2)Lafferty
Prayer: People are invited to pray their petitions in silence
Song: “Nothing Can Trouble”
Proclamation of the Word
Scripture: Matthew 20:20-28
Sermon Notes: “The Kingdom for Which We Pray”
The petition “your kingdom come, your will be done on earth as it is in heaven” is a profound prayer with implications in many directions. It asks for God to exercise God’s rule and authority in every part of the creation. That implies a rejection of other rules and authorities that are out of sync with the reign of God.
Who is king in our lives? Unless God is King, kingship brings no blessing but rather steals blessing from the very people it was meant to serve. Power and wealth, might and militia, apart from the staying, guiding hand of godly wisdom, turns to bitter ideology and wasted lives.
The gospel points us to Jesus as the true King. He redefines kingship. And his kingdom reverses the usual way of doing things.
Response to the Word
Song: “God Is Alive” (st. 1-4)Hass
Offering
Song: “You, God, Are My Firmament” (st. 1)Winter
Prayer: People are invited to offer prayers of praise in silence
Song: “You, God, Are My Firmament” (st. 2-3)Winter
Service of Communion
We Go Forth
Go into the world with faith, hope, and love, knowing that God hears our petitions.
Let us recommit ourselves to working diligently for God’s creation, for the people living next to us, for those who are suffering in this world.
Let us never tire of working and praying for God’s kingdom to unfold in all its glory.
Your will be done!
Song: “Sent by the Lord Am I”Aguiar
Give us today our daily bread.
Opening Litany
Leader: On this day, we step boldly, humbly into the presence of our God, praying with our suffering Savior the prayer he taught us to pray:
People: Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name, your kingdom come, your will be done on earth as it is in heaven. Give us today our daily bread.
Leader: With voices around the world, we call:
People: Give bread!
Leader: Give us today our daily bread:
Reader 1: This day, God, people are hungry—
Reader 2: Children lie down at night with empty stomachs.
Reader 1: People everywhere search with broken hearts.
People: We are hungry for justice and mercy, for peace and compassion.
Leader: We call out for daily bread, for daily needs:
Reader 1: for water that flows pure from a mountain,
Reader 2: for air that blows clean across the prairies,
Reader 1: for foods planted, tended, harvested, and shared,
Reader 2: for land and sky filled with life and renewal,
Reader 1: for governments that are just,
Reader 2: for homes that are places of rest and play,
Reader 1: for families, friends, partners, neighbors who walk with us, comfort us, love us . . .
People: Give people everywhere their living Bread.
Silence: A time of reflection
Song: “The Lord’s Prayer” (st. 1-3)
Passing of God’s Peace
Prayer of Confession
Leader: We confess, God, that we have hoarded and misused the bread you so generously send.
Reader 1: We have carelessly paved over places that are better suited for growing food and sustaining life;
Reader 2: we have poisoned waters better used for drinking;
Reader 1: we have polluted the air your creation breathes every day.
People: Forgive us, nurturing God.
Reader 2: Give us open eyes to see the way of renewal.
Reader 1: Give us open hands to share abundantly.
People: Give us faith to know that you hold every day in your hands.
Song: “I Am the Bread of Life” SNC 152 (st. 1-2, 4)
Surely, God is the eternal giver of bread, the One Source of everlasting life. Come, feast freely in that grace.
Men: Today we open ourselves to the power of bread freely given in our lives and our world.
Women: Today we extend our hands in caring toward humanity.
Silence
Song: “God Bless to Us Our Bread” (Love and Anger, from the Iona Community , 58)
Prayer: People are invited to pray in silence
Song: “Nothing Can Trouble”
The Word Proclaimed
Scripture: Matthew 6:11; Exodus 16; John 6
Sermon Notes: “Give Us Today Our Daily Bread”
This prayer has obvious and immediate application to the problems of hunger, poverty, and injustice around the world. What is sobering about this
petition is the awareness that hundreds of millions of people on our planet do not have their daily bread. Upwards of 25,000 children die of hunger-related causes each day.
In Exodus 16, God shows Israel that they have truly been delivered from Egypt’s economy of scarcity and are now free to live in the assurance of God’s daily provision. Hence the prohibition against hoarding manna and the warning that what is hoarded will rot. Between the storehouses of Egypt (symbol of the economy of death) and the tent of meeting, God graciously gives Israel an experience of daily provision in the wilderness.
In John 6, Jesus announces that he is the bread of life. Our prayer for daily bread thus becomes a prayer for fellowship with him. Life with Jesus is life in the kingdom, and that implies justice for all, including daily bread. Note that this petition asks for our daily bread. And it opens out to expressions of gratitude for bread received, and for careful living so that all may eat.
We Go Forth
Go into the world with faith, hope and love, knowing that God hears our petitions.
Let us recommit ourselves daily: hallowing God’s name, doing God’s will, bringing God’s kingdom to earth.
Seek bread for the people living next to us, for those who are suffering, for those who are hungry.
Let us never tire of working and praying for the daily bread that all of humanity and all of creation need.
Song: “Taste and See” (Psalm 34)
Forgive us our debts,
as we also have forgiven our debtors.
Opening Litany
On this day, we step boldly, humbly into the presence of our God, praying with our suffering Savior the prayer he taught us to pray:
Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name, your kingdom come, your will be done on earth as it is in heaven. Give us today our daily bread. Forgive us our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors.
With voices around the world, we call:
Forgive!
Forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us.
Put aside from us our wicked ways, as we put aside the deeds of all who do us wrong.
—GMC, p. 48
Silence: A time of reflection
Song: “The Lord’s Prayer” (st. 1-4)
Passing of God’s Peace
Prayer of Confession
Leader: Our God and Lord, we confess our trespasses with shame:
Reader 1: We have remained deaf to the cries of those who hurt. We have remained dumb in the face of evil. We have allowed the shadow of death to hover over the innocently condemned. We have failed to proclaim with conviction your liberation for the oppressed.
People: We repent.
Men: Forgive our selfishness and greed, our unfaithfulness and pride, and give us the grace to forgive.
Women: Help us, through forgiving others, to
experience your forgiveness.
People: For you will treat us as we treat others, and help us to fulfill our debts.
—GMC, p. 51
Leader: You change our lives, Lord, and shatter our complacency.
Reader 2: You take away the quietness of a clear conscience and guide us to forgiveness. You forgive every debt, every trespass and crossed boundary. Only then is that other peace made: Your peace.
—inspired by a prayer from Dom Helder Camara in
Bread of Tomorrow: Prayers for the Church Year
Leader: Give us the insight to know which boundaries to respect, and which to overcome.
People: Give us the strength to take down the barbs that keep us from each other, and from You.
Leader: Give us the understanding to know that we have all trespassed, that we have all been forgiven.
People: We cross the boundary into forgiveness! All thanks to Christ, who died for us—for each one of us.
Silence
Song: “Forgive Our Sins as We Forgive” PsH 266, PH 347, TH 494 (st. 1-4)
Prayer: People are invited to pray their petitions in silence
Song: “Nothing Can Trouble”
The Word Proclaimed
Scripture: Matthew 6:9-15; 18:21-35
Sermon Notes: “Forgive Us Our Trespasses”
The marvelous parable that Jesus tells in Matthew 18 is at once a story of abundant grace and profound warning, for the merciful master becomes, at the refusal of passed on forgiveness, the stern judge.
This petition is really a prayer for release from whatever prevents us from moving into the hopeful future made possible by Jesus Christ. Forgiveness among humans is not in the order of absolution, but freedom from the past. When we do not forgive others their debt to us, we are in fact not free
ourselves, for we remain attached to them. And as we hold them bound, so we remain bound. The good news is that the forgiveness we extend to others does not well up from our own strength, but comes from our own experience of having been forgiven in the first place by God.
Forgiveness is God’s answer to the banal cycles of hostility, violence, and revenge. This petition thus becomes a prayer for an end to wars, feuds, and grudges. It calls for restorative justice and mediation as ways of resolving conflict and dispute in peaceable ways that promote renewal and restoration of persons to their communities.
We Go Forth
We thank you, gracious God, for forgiving our trespasses against you and against each other; for restoring the boundaries we trample, heedless of respect, care, or consideration; for paying our debt.
We thank you for giving us the way to try again, the means to extend our hands and cross the boundaries to one another—and to you.
We are indebted to you, O God, for each gift in our lives.
Help us to forgive debts and mend what is
broken; give us all new hearts. Amen.
And lead us not into temptation,
but deliver us from the evil one.
Opening Litany
On this day, we step boldly, humbly into the presence of our God, praying with our suffering Savior the prayer he taught us to pray:
Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name, your kingdom come, your will be done on earth as it is in heaven. Give us today our daily bread. Forgive our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors. And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from the evil one.
Sustaining God, we know that peace lies in the heart of darkness—in the wilderness of the soul.
Something prompts us to keep still, to trust and to listen to your voice.
—adapted from a prayer by Thomas Merton in New Seeds of
Contemplation (New York: New Directions, 1972), p. 237
Lead us not into temptation.
Deliver us from evil.
Lord, lead us not into the temptation of self-righteousness. Keep us from false use of our tongues, or inappropriate silence. Do not let us fall into the temptation of self-righteousness or believing that we are free from sin.
Save us Lord, from earth-destruction—this can’t be your will; save us from all that is evil, without and within. Grant commitment to that which is wholesome, and help us to be good to our neighbor, as we would have you do to us.
Silence: A time of reflection
Song: “My Faith Looks up to Thee” PsH 262, PH 383, RL 446, TH528, TWC 552 (st. 1, 3)
Passing of God’s Peace
Prayer of Confession
We bring to you, O Lord, the wastelands of our lives, when faith and hope are dust and ashes, when the fruit of the Spirit is not in evidence, when love does not find expression in us.
—adapted from Worshiping Ecumenically (Geneva: WCC Publications, 1995), pp. 32-33
Help us to follow you into the desert to fast, denying false luxury values, refusing the tempting ways of self-indulgence, the way of success at all costs. Jesus, our Brother, help us to follow you.
Help us to follow you to town and city, to heal and restore, to cast out self-destructive fears.
Jesus, our Savior, help us to follow you.
—adapted from a prayer by Christopher Duraisingh (India) in Bread of Tomorrow, pp. 64-65
You give us shelter in the wilderness and make for us a home in the wastelands.
From you comes the courage to discover that the risen Christ will lead us from temptation and deliver us from evil.
You offer daily bread, Lord, in this desert, in this wasteland of temptation; you extend living water.
Holy is your name!
Temptation flees from your light, O Lord, and evil cowers in the shadows.
Silence
Song: “Go to Dark Gethsemane” PsH 381, PH 97, TWC 225 (st. 1)
Silence: The people are invited to pray in silence
Song: “Nothing Can Trouble”
The Word Proclaimed
Scripture: Matthew 6:5-13; James 1:12-18
Sermon Notes: “Lead Us Not into Temptation”
The Heidelberg Catechism teaches that we have three sworn enemies: the devil, the world, and our own flesh. Jesus teaches us to pray this petition because he knows the softness of our own convictions and the hard reality of deep temptation. He knows our tendency to take the road most traveled—the path of least resistance.
The Bible takes the devil seriously. It says we have an adversary, a destroyer, the deceiver of the whole world who misrepresents God and creates
confusion. He is sometimes called the accuser, for he despises God’s love for us; sometimes Diabolos, which means the splitting one—for he seeks to divide us from God and against each other and even against ourselves, causing us to dis-integrate. He prowls around this world like a lion looking for whom he might destroy like Tolkein’s Dark Lord.
But we should not restrict our understanding of the evil one to just a personal threat. Consider also what Paul calls the “powers and principalities”—those organized, pervasive cultural forces that rage against the kingdom of God. These include the
ideologies of “the economy,” “nation,” and “race.”
The world tells us that when it comes to the powers, our task is to adjust, to adapt. Jesus tells us to pray: protect us from the seductive powers of our age, the cultural powers and forces that rationalize and perpetuate evil.
We Go Forth
We thank you, sustaining God, for deserts, places in which we wait—places of self-discovery.
Lead us not into temptation, Lord, but deliver us from the evil one. Amen!
Song: “The Song of St. Patrick” (Gather Comprehensive , 703)
For yours is the kingdom
and the power and the glory forever. Amen.
Opening Litany
We gather on this day to celebrate God’s everlasting power: our Maker, ever creating. Christ on a donkey, our King. Holy Spirit, brooding over the world.
Holy, Holy, Holy, One God Almighty, your glory fills all the heavens and the earth!
Song: “O Lord, Hear My Prayer” SNC 203 (st. 2)
Silence
We wrestle God in prayer, as Christ taught:
Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name, your kingdom come, your will be done on earth as it is in heaven. Give us today our daily bread. Forgive us our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors. And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from the evil one. For yours is the kingdom and the power and the glory forever.
Silence: A time of reflection
Song: “Majesty”
Passing of God’s Peace
Prayer of Confession
Like Jerusalem, O Christ, our sin must cause you to weep: For we confess, the things that make for peace are hidden from our eyes.
We seek your mercy.
Your house of prayer for all the nations, we have made a den of robbers.
God, forgive us.
With the crowds, we shout hosanna, little knowing who you really are.
Christ, show us grace.
Do not be afraid, daughter of Zion. Look, your king is coming, sitting on a donkey’s colt! (John 12:17)
Hosanna! Blessed is the one who comes in the name of the Lord! (John 12:13)
This is the prophet Jesus from Nazareth in Galilee.
Peace in heaven, and glory in the highest heaven!
Hear the promise of this servant king: “Truly I tell you, if you say to this mountain, ‘Be taken up and thrown into the sea,’ and if you do not doubt in your heart, but believe that what you say will come to pass, it will be done for you. So I tell you, whatever you ask for in prayer, believe that you have received it, and it will be yours.” (Mark 11:23-24)
Song: “Meekness and Majesty” SNC 109
Silence
Song: “Nothing Can Trouble”
Prayer: The people are invited to pray their petitions in silence
Proclamation of the Word
Scripture: Matthew 21:1-11
Sermon Notes: “Yours Is the Kingdom . . .”
Words like kingdom, power, and glory are risky words. The world loves them. Kings and presidents build kingdoms and defend them with murderous intensity. Power is often used for self-interest and the control of others. And glory is what comes to those who wield more power than others.
The meaning of these three words is captured and summarized in the life of Jesus. Ideas of power and glory that are divorced from his life and ministry are either false or incomplete. He wields neither the power of the sword nor of the popular vote, but the power of obedience to the law of unfailing love, the power of forgiven sin, the power of relinquishment. The power of embrace. The subversive power of powerlessness.
His glory is not that of raised flags and marching bands but of scars that speak of sacrificial love. His glory is, of all things, a cross. He is nothing like what the people expected then or even today. He is a
contrary king, a contrary power, a contrary glory.
And he bids us follow him. What might the world be like if we did? What might I be like?
We Go Forth
Go into the world knowing that the kingdom, the power, and the glory are God’s.
The world is charged with the grandeur of God.
Song: “Now to the One” or “To God Be the Glory” PsH 632