592. What is the sense of the petition "Give us this day our daily bread"?
Asking God with the filial trust of children for the daily nourishment which is necessary for us all we recognize how good God is, beyond all goodness. We ask also for the grace to know how to act so that justice and solidarity may allow the abundance of some to remedy the needs of others.
Further reading: CCC 2828-2834, 2861593. What is the specifically Christian sense of his petition?Since "man does not live by bread alone but by every word that comes from the mouth of God" (
Matthew 4:4), this petition equally applies to hunger for the
Word of God and for the
Body of Christ received in the Eucharist as well as hunger for the Holy Spirit. We ask this with complete confidence for
this day - God's "today" - and this is given to us above all in the Eucharist which anticipates the banquet of the Kingdom to come.
Further reading: CCC 2835-2837, 2861594. Why do we say "Forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us"?
By asking God the Father to pardon us, we acknowledge before him that we are sinners. At the same time we proclaim his mercy because in his Son and through the sacraments "we have redemption, the forgiveness of sins" (Colossians 1:14). Still our petition will be answered only if we for our part have forgiven first.
Further reading: CCC 2838-2839, 2862
595. How is forgiveness possible?
Mercy can penetrate our hearts only if we ourselves learn how to forgive - even our enemies. Now even if it seems impossible for us to satisfy this requirement, the heart that offers itself to the Holy Spirit can, like Christ, love even to love's extreme; it can turn injury into compassion and transform hurt into intercession. Forgiveness participates in the divine mercy and is a high-point of Christian prayer.
Further reading: CCC
888-890, 939