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The Our Father

The prayer Jesus himself taught, prayed by every Christian tradition on earth — what each line means, why it covers everything, and the full words to pray.

Every Christian tradition on earth — Catholic, Orthodox, Anglican, Baptist, Pentecostal, and all the rest — prays this prayer. That alone makes it remarkable: churches that agree on little else all begin in the same place, because the words don't come from any of them. They come from Jesus. When his friends asked him, "Lord, teach us to pray," he didn't hand them a method or a mood. He gave them words (Luke 11:1–4). Two thousand years later, those words are still the first prayer most Christians ever learn, and the last many ever forget.

The whole prayer takes about twenty seconds to say, and a lifetime to mean. It holds, in seven short petitions, everything a human being needs to say to God: praise, surrender, need, sorrow, mercy, and a plea for protection. The great teachers of the faith have called it a summary of the entire gospel — if you lost every other prayer, this one would be enough.

What follows is a slow walk through what each line is actually saying — because the danger of a prayer this familiar is saying it without hearing it.

The Text

The Our Father (The Lord's Prayer)

Our Father, who art in heaven,
hallowed be thy name;
thy kingdom come,
thy will be done
on earth as it is in heaven.
Give us this day our daily bread,
and forgive us our trespasses,
as we forgive those who trespass against us;
and lead us not into temptation,
but deliver us from evil. Amen.

Many Christians close the prayer with this ancient line of praise — it has been added to the Lord's Prayer since the earliest centuries, and Catholics pray it at Mass moments after the Our Father. Whichever ending you grew up with, you are praying the same prayer.

The Doxology

For thine is the kingdom,
and the power, and the glory,
for ever and ever. Amen.

Where it comes from in Scripture

Jesus teaches the prayer in the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 6:9–13)
and again when his disciples ask him directly, "Lord, teach us to pray"
(Luke 11:1–4). Read both — they are short, and hearing the prayer in
Jesus' own setting makes every line warmer.

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