Manchester, Simon (1953-). Lord's Prayer - Matthew 6:9-13 - Family Service. Moore Theological College. 1990. Retrieved from the Atla Digital Library, https://images.quartexcollections.com/moore/thumbnails/preview/f0e2fa9a-64b3-4195-b70d-00fdd7e34040.
APA citation style
Manchester, S. (1990). Lord's Prayer - Matthew 6:9-13 - Family Service. Retrieved from the Atla Digital Library, https://images.quartexcollections.com/moore/thumbnails/preview/f0e2fa9a-64b3-4195-b70d-00fdd7e34040.
Chicago citation style
Manchester, Simon (1953-).Lord's Prayer - Matthew 6:9-13 - Family Service. Moore Theological College. 1990. Retrieved from the Atla Digital Library, https://images.quartexcollections.com/moore/thumbnails/preview/f0e2fa9a-64b3-4195-b70d-00fdd7e34040.
Note:
These citations are programmatically generated and may be incomplete.
Manchester speaks on the Lord's Prayer from Matthew 6:9-13. Manchester presents the Lord’s Prayer as a correction to both overconfident and underconfident prayer, offering a framework on which believers can build. The prayer directs and reshapes priorities, dividing into “God-ward” and “Man-ward” petitions. The opening, “Our Father in heaven,” points to exclusive access to God, humbling the believer while stirring thankfulness for this relationship. To hallow God’s name is to give Him the honor He deserves, while praying for His Kingdom seeks the rule of Christ. Manchester challenges listeners to consider whether they truly pray the petitions of the Lord’s Prayer. Believers express contentment in God’s provision, seeking forgiveness that restores fellowship with fellow Christians, expressing the forgiveness already received from God. The prayer concludes with dependence on God for protection from temptation and falling into sin.
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