Learning to Pray … Again: Part Three

By Dr. Scott Rodin    


May 30, 2023

Learning To Pray … Again: Part Three – The Steward’s Confidence

We are on a five-week journey reflecting on Jesus’s instructions to His disciples on how they should pray – what we know as The Lord’s Prayer. We are considering how The Lord’s Prayer reflects the journey of the faithful steward, and to do so, we are breaking it down into five sections:

We are using the text from Matthew 6 from the New International Version, and today we will meditate on the following words, “Give us this day our daily bread.”

I hope to share with you the wonderful blessing as the Spirit teaches us how our commitment to being faithful stewards is beautifully woven into this way of praying. While that shouldn’t surprise us, it can revolutionize our prayer life. So I hope there is a substantial blessing for you in this journey.

With this third phrase, we come to a significant pivot point in this prayer. The first two parts focus on God; hallowed be your name, your kingdom come, your will be done. After these three ‘your’ statements, we come to four ‘us’ petitions. It is essential to understand the importance of this shift. According to Jesus’s instructions, praise and surrender precede our petitions. Put another way, when we have praised God for His Majesty, affirmed the intimacy of our relationship with Him as our Father, surrendered ourselves fully that His kingdom may be known through us, and sought to be guided according to His will in all we do, then, and only then are we in the right place to lay our petitions before Him.

In these first two petitions, we have claimed our role as stewards, not owners. From that same steward’s heart, we are instructed to lay our requests before him. Honestly, I wish the wording were different. Here’s why.

If you’re familiar with the Strengths Finder tool, you will know that each person is assigned their five top strengths based on a completed assessment. My two top strengths are Strategic and Futuristic. The description for my Futuristic theme states, “When the present proves too frustrating and the people around you too pragmatic, you conjure up your visions of the future, and they energize you.” Yup, that’s me, always living in the future. So, you can imagine how challenging it is for me to say this simple prayer, “give us this day our daily bread.” The focus on the present is stated twice for emphasis. The request is what we would ask of God today, and what we ask is for daily needs. Not tomorrow’s, Thursday’s, or next year’s, but today’s. One way to interpret the term “daily bread” is those things that we need to sustain us for the work for which you have called us in this day. However, remembering that Jesus called Himself the ‘bread of life,’ and “Then Jesus declared, “I am the bread of life. Whoever comes to me will never go hungry, and whoever believes in me will never be thirsty” (John 6:35). Perhaps, we can also interpret daily bread as a prayer to keep us abiding in Christ. What might it mean if we prayed that Jesus would be our daily bread, sustenance, and that in Him we have all that we need?

I am discovering that for me to pray this prayer requires the disciplined heart of a faithful steward. There are three reasons why I say this. First, it recognizes that every day is a gift from God. We don’t own it, we lay no claim to it, nor should we see it as some form of right or entitlement. Psalm 118:24 proclaims, “This is the day the Lord has made, we will rejoice and be glad in it.” If we enter this day as though it were a precious gift from God, then this prayer rolls easily off our lips. What else would we ask but that God would supply us with what we need for the day He has given us, including Himself? What else would we need? It is a statement of trust that the God who created this day for us, and us for it, also will provide the means for us to live it for Him.

If we start the day with the mindset of an owner, on the other hand, it will be easy to get caught up in the fears and stresses of life. As owners, we must control outcomes to secure our happiness. However, controlling outcomes is an exhausting endeavor. To ensure that everything turns out the way we want, we need much more than “daily bread.” It is less about providing what we need to do God’s work and more about arming us with all we must have to meet our goals and secure our success. Stewards and owners will see their needs very differently, and as a result, this prayer will either satisfy or frustrate them.

The second reason this prayer requires the steward’s heart is that it presupposes we cannot meet our daily needs ourselves. It places us in a position of want, almost helplessness. To pray this prayer sincerely means we accept that if God had not provided us our daily bread, we would go without. This is a great challenge, especially for first-world Christians. Our refrigerators are well-stocked, our bank accounts have money in them, our gas tanks are full, we have enough clothes in our closets for ten people, and so on. Can we truly, honestly pray this prayer with a heart that believes that if God does not provide, we will go without? This is why it was so important that Jesus started His prayer where He did. Considering the resources around us as ours, this prayer is nonsensical. Only with the steward’s heart, one that lays no claim of ownership on anything, can we look at the abundance in which we live and still sincerely pray for daily bread. The same God who supplied what we needed will be counted on to continue to supply. It is a prayer of humility, a prayer of surrender, and a prayer of ultimate alignment of our priorities with His.

Finally, this prayer requires a steward’s heart because it refuses to let the failures of yesterday or the fears of tomorrow steal the joy of today. In the next part of the prayer, we will talk about forgiveness, but here, in this plea for daily bread, we must not rehash or rehearse any guilt or sorrow from yesterday. That is the devil’s work. I believe the enemy knows that the most dangerous person on earth is a surrendered follower of Jesus who focuses on God’s work today. So, to distract us, he throws up all past failures to burden us and steal our daily joy. Remember, “When the enemy reminds you of your past, remind him of his future.” It is our inheritance to claim the victory Jesus won for us and to send the enemy fleeing.

In addition to the past, fears of tomorrow can also keep us from seeing and being satisfied with God’s provision of daily bread. The sign on the wall of an African American church is a good reminder, “Don’t borrow the sorrow from tomorrow.” We cannot ask for tomorrow’s bread today. Like the children of Israel who could only gather manna for the day, we come humbly to God with a faithful steward’s heart, asking Him to provide according to His promises. And we leave tomorrow for tomorrow. As Jesus said in the Sermon on the Mount, “But seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things shall be added to you. Therefore, do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about its own things. Sufficient for the day is its own trouble” (Matthew 6:33-34).

My prayer is that you can make this prayer your own. This day is God’s gift for you. Ask Him for all you need to steward it wisely, including a fresh awareness of His presence as your daily bread. Everything you need for this day God will provide, but it all comes from Him, acknowledge that. Finally, whatever happened yesterday, or whatever might happen tomorrow, spend this day seeking first the kingdom of God and His righteousness. And trust God to take care of all other things.

Dr. Scott Rodin    

Dr. Rodin is the Founder and Content Expert of the Center for Steward Leader Studies. He also serves as President of Kingdom Life Publishing and Rodin Consulting Inc.

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