The Lord’s Prayer and the Call to Forgive
Opening Reflection
If you’ve spent time in a Protestant church, you’ve likely prayed the Lord’s Prayer—often aloud, often in unison, and often without the space to slow down and absorb its depth. Recently, I opened my Bible study tools and began examining the prayer in the original Greek. Looking at the Greek often reveals layers of meaning that English alone doesn’t fully capture.
This time, one part of the prayer stopped me. Verse 12. And then verses 14–15, which sharpen its meaning. These verses felt personal—direct, even.
The Prayer Itself
“Our Father in heaven,
hallowed be Your name.
Your kingdom come,
Your will be done,
on earth as it is in heaven.
Give us today our daily bread.
And forgive us our debts,
as we also have forgiven our debtors.
And lead us not into temptation,
but deliver us from the evil one.”
(Matthew 6:9–13)
Jesus immediately adds:
“If you forgive others, your Father will forgive you. But if you do not forgive others, your Father will not forgive you.”
(Matthew 6:14–15)
These two verses are not optional footnotes. They are the interpretive key.
A Closer Look at Verse 12
“Forgive” — ἀφίημι (aphiēmi)
This word comes from apo, meaning “away from.” It carries the sense of:
- releasing
- sending away
- letting go
- dismissing a claim
- yielding up something held against another
Forgiveness, in Jesus’ prayer, is not passive. It is an intentional act of release.
“Debts” — ὀφείλημα (opheilēma)
This word means:
- something owed
- a moral fault
- an obligation
- a burden carried because of wrongdoing
So Jesus teaches us to pray:
“Father, release us from what we owe— as we release others from what they owe us.”
Verses 14–15: The Clarifying Lens
“Trespasses / Offenses” — παράπτωμα (paraptōma)
This word means:
- a slip
- a deviation
- an unintentional error
- a willful transgression
- a fall, fault, or offense
In other words, everything from accidental hurt to deliberate wrongdoing.
Jesus’ teaching is direct:
- If we forgive others, God forgives us.
- If we refuse, God withholds forgiveness.
This is not abstract theology. It is relational. It is covenantal. It is aimed at the heart.
A Personal Question
These verses make me ask:
- Have I truly forgiven everyone?
- Or have I reclassified certain wrongs as “not really needing forgiveness”?
- Do I excuse my own hesitations while expecting God’s mercy without measure?
Verse 12 uses us. Verses 14–15 use you.
Jesus shifts from communal prayer to personal accountability.
Scripture repeatedly calls us to consider others above ourselves, yet I often struggle to know what that looks like in a way that honors God. Forgiveness is one of the clearest places to begin.
Unity Series — Related Posts
For further reflection: Considering Others
The Larger Context: Matthew 6
The Lord’s Prayer sits in the middle of Jesus’ teaching on:
- giving in secret
- praying sincerely
- fasting without display
- storing treasure in heaven
- trusting God instead of worrying
- seeking the Kingdom first
The prayer is not isolated. It is a Kingdom posture.
Closing Reflection
Forgiveness is not sentimental. It is not easy. It is not optional.
It is a deliberate act of releasing others—because God has released us.
The Lord’s Prayer invites us into a rhythm of:
- remembering who God is
- surrendering our will
- trusting His provision
- releasing debts
- resisting temptation
- resting in His deliverance
At the center of it all is forgiveness—received and given.
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