P1619:5, 144:3.1
But the apostles were not yet satisfied; they desired Jesus to give them a
model prayer which they could teach the new disciples. After listening to
this discourse on prayer, James Zebedee said: "Very good, Master, but we do
not desire a form of prayer for ourselves so much as for the newer believers
who so frequently beseech us, `Teach us how acceptably to pray to the Father
in heaven.'"
P1620:1, 144:3.2
When James had finished speaking, Jesus said: "If, then, you still desire
such a prayer, I would present the one which I taught my brothers and sisters
in Nazareth":
P1620:2, 144:3.3
Our Father who is in heaven, Hallowed be your name.
Your kingdom come; your will be done On earth as it is in heaven.
Give us this day our bread for tomorrow; Refresh our souls with the water
of life.
And forgive us every one our debts As we also have forgiven our debtors.
Save us in temptation, deliver us from evil,
And increasingly make us perfect like yourself.
P1620:11, 144:3.4
It is not strange that the apostles desired Jesus to teach them a model prayer
for believers. John the Baptist had taught his followers several prayers;
all great teachers had formulated prayers for their pupils. The religious
teachers of the Jews had some twenty-five or thirty set prayers which they
recited in the synagogues and even on the street corners. Jesus was particularly
averse to praying in public. Up to this time the twelve had heard him pray
only a few times. They observed him spending entire nights at prayer or worship,
and they were very curious to know the manner or form of his petitions. They
were really hard pressed to know what to answer the multitudes when they asked
to be taught how to pray as John had taught his disciples.
P1620:12, 144:3.5
Jesus taught the twelve always to pray in secret; to go off by themselves
amidst the quiet surroundings of nature or to go in their rooms and shut the
doors when they engaged in prayer.
P1620:13, 144:3.6
After Jesus' death and ascension to the Father it became the practice of many
believers to finish this so-called Lord's prayer by the addition of -- "In
the name of the Lord Jesus Christ." Still later on, two lines were lost in
copying, and there was added to this prayer an extra
clause, reading: "For
yours is the kingdom and the power and the glory, forevermore."
P1620:14, 144:3.7
Jesus gave the apostles the prayer in collective form as they had prayed it
in the Nazareth home. He never taught a formal personal prayer, only group,
family, or social petitions. And he never volunteered to do that.
P1620:15, 144:3.8
Jesus taught that effective prayer must be: