[See Feb. 22, 2026 for translation and Reflection 1.]
1st Petition: Your name be made holy!
The first three petitions put us in a right relationship with God. They are made on God’s behalf. Praying them puts us in our rightful place, in submission to God.
In regard to the first one, interestingly, we often miss the fact that this sentence is a petition in the imperative mood and not a statement about the nature of God. God is holy, of course. However, Jesus is telling us that the primary desire of our hearts is to long for God to be made known as holy. These words are to be the first prayer out of our lips! This is our first petition.
Let’s
develop this petition a little more. “Name”
in the culture behind the text is easy to grasp. It represented the person. In that world, the spoken word was something
vital, almost tangible, because it comes into being by one’s life breath. So, to proclaim one’s name invoked the vital
character of that person. For example,
if a king’s courtier were to come up to a group of peasants, hold out the
king’s signet ring, and say, “In the name of the King, come!” they would jump
up and come. The name of God, known to
Israel as “YHWH,”1 references the full character of the one true
God.
“Make
holy” is a hard concept. Holiness is as
hard to grasp as gravity. It refers to
the absolute transcendent distinctiveness of God -- One without spot, blemish,
imperfection, etc. As such, God is
sanctified, that is recognized as set apart as holy. God is totally other than you and me. Isaiah says that as the heavens are higher
than the earth, God’s thoughts and ways are not comparable to ours (Isa.
55:8-9). Recognizing the holiness of God,
God’s totally pure “otherness,” is the starting point to a right relationship
with God. It makes a good first
petition.
However, lest
we speak this first petition complacently, there is a stunning, astounding
twist about it. Throughout Scripture,
God puts the responsibility for revealing God’s holiness back on you and me, on
God’s people! The disciples knew
that. Israel was called to be a blessing
to all nations by being God’s holy people.
When Isaiah condemns people of Israel for calling evil good and good
evil, for calling darkness light and light darkness, the charge is that they
are spurning the Holy One of Israel (Isa. 5:20-24). We, the Church, are called to be holy. Over and over, “Be holy! Be holy!
Be holy!” (See, for example, Lev
19:2; Matt 5:48 which precedes our text; 1Thes 4:7; 1Pet 1:14-16.)
Like
the illustration that pointing a finger at someone points three back at
ourselves, we cannot pray, “Your name be made holy” without pointing at
ourselves. Jesus calls us to be holy so
that others will know the holiness of God.
This is an imperative. This is
who we are to be as followers of Jesus.
I look at myself, my example, and cringe. Still, the Holy One says to us, “For I am
YHWH your God, holding you by your right hand, saying to you, ‘Do not be
afraid, I will help you’” (Isa. 41:13).
The Holy Spirit can work God’s holiness into even me.
Journal
Reflections
- The primary desire of our hearts is to see God revealed as holy. Is it? What does this say about me, my heart? About you?
- What are some ways that you, like me, have become accustomed to unholiness?
- If we are to accept the charge to be holy, what is one thing about you today that you need the Holy Spirit to address?
- During Lent, we reflect on how the holy life that Jesus lived, how everything he did glorified the Father. What does that reflection mean to you?
Prayer quote:
“He [God] encourages us to ask as freely for the impossible as for the possible, since to him all difficulties are the same size – less than Himself.” (J. Oswald Sanders, Effective Prayer, p. 26.)
Note:
- When God gives this name YHWH (from Hebrew) to Moses (Exod 3:14; often spelled “Yahweh” or rendered “LORD”), that answer is a word play on the Hebrew verb for “to be/to exist.” For Moses, who was from a polytheistic cultural setting, it was necessary to know the name of a god in order to know what particular function that god had, as well as to be able invoke it magically. The name God gives in response, in a sense, is no name, because God is no lower-case “god” that is limited and manipulable. God is who God is, the sovereign God. This is what Moses and the people in slavery in Egypt learn as they learn about following the God of Abraham, YHWH.
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