Daily Gospel Exegesis

Tuesday of Week 1 of Lent - Matt 6: 7-15

52 snips
Feb 23, 2026
A verse-by-verse look at Matthew 6:7-15 focusing on how Jesus teaches prayer. Short and memorable forms of prayer are compared with long, formulaic practices. The meaning of the Our Father petitions is unpacked, including daily bread, forgiveness, temptation, and deliverance from evil. Catholic Catechism passages are referenced to deepen the theological context.
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INSIGHT

Why Jesus Rejects Long Wordy Prayers

  • Jesus contrasts wordy pagan prayers with simple Christian prayer to reject the idea that length or formula makes God hear you.
  • Logical Bible Study explains pagans used magic formulas hoping words forced a god to listen, while Jesus says God already knows our needs.
ADVICE

Avoid Long Prayers To Force God's Attention

  • Do not make prayers long and wordy with the expectation that length makes God hear you.
  • Logical Bible Study warns Christians against the pagan attitude that certain words or long formulas force divine attention.
INSIGHT

Start With God Then Ask For Needs

  • The Our Father orders petition: start with God (hallowing his name, kingdom, will) then move to our needs, linking God's will to the coming of the Kingdom.
  • Logical Bible Study highlights 'your will be done on earth as it is in heaven' meaning the kingdom expands when God's will is done.
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