The Story Isn't Over

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WalterandDebbie

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Friday 9-23-22 6th. Day Of The Weekly Cycle, Elul 26 5782 2nd. Fall Day

The Story Isn’t Over
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Read: Matthew 6:9–13 | Bible in a Year: Song of Songs 1–3; Galatians 2
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Your kingdom come, your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven. Matthew 6:10


When British drama Line of Duty concluded, record numbers watched to see how its fight against organized crime would end. But many viewers were left disappointed when the finale implied that evil would ultimately win. “I wanted the bad guys brought to justice,” one fan said. “We needed that moral ending.”

Sociologist Peter Berger once noted that we hunger for hope and justice—hope that evil will one day be overcome and that those who caused it will be made to face their crimes. A world where the bad guys win goes against how we know the world should work. Without probably realizing it, those disappointed fans were expressing humanity’s deep longing for the world to be made right again.

In the Lord’s Prayer, Jesus is realistic about evil. It exists not only between us, requiring forgiveness (Matthew 6:12), but on a grand scale, requiring deliverance (v. 13). This realism, however, is matched with hope. There’s a place where evil doesn’t exist—heaven—and that heavenly kingdom is coming to earth (v. 10). One day God’s justice will be complete, His “moral ending” will come, and evil will be banished for good (Revelation 21:4).

So when the real-life bad guys win and disappointment sets in, let’s remember this: until God’s will is done “on earth as it is in heaven,” there is always hope—because the story isn’t over.

Why do you think we hunger for hope and justice? How can praying the Lord’s Prayer help you face evil and disappointment?

Heavenly Father, may Your kingdom come, Your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven!

INSIGHT

In Matthew’s gospel, the Lord’s Prayer is a key part of Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount. Jesus’ teaching on prayer particularly challenged the religiosity of the day because He indicted both the hypocritical religious leaders who used their worship of God as a means of drawing attention to themselves (6:5) and the pagans who used their prayers as a means of binding their gods with “babbling” incantations or heaped up words (v. 7).

Jesus offered instead an alternative that’s both intimate and submissive. The Lord’s Prayer is a quiet and private conversation between the one praying and God Himself. It doesn’t seek to toss a bridle around the Creator of the universe but positions the one praying in trusting submission to the compassionate Father. Prayer in Jesus’ teaching is an expression of trust, devoid of pride and pretense.

For Further Study, Read Living Justly, Loving Mercy

By Sheridan Voysey |September 23rd, 2022

In Justice Matthew Six:9-13

9 After this manner therefore pray ye: Our Father which art in heaven, Hallowed be thy name.

10 Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done in earth, as it is in heaven.

11 Give us this day our daily bread.

12 And forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors.

13 And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil: For thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory, for ever. Amen.

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Love, Walter and Debbie
 
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Pearl

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When British drama Line of Duty concluded, record numbers watched to see how its fight against organized crime would end. But many viewers were left disappointed when the finale implied that evil would ultimately win. “I wanted the bad guys brought to justice,” one fan said. “We needed that moral ending.”

Sociologist Peter Berger once noted that we hunger for hope and justice—hope that evil will one day be overcome and that those who caused it will be made to face their crimes. A world where the bad guys win goes against how we know the world should work. Without probably realizing it, those disappointed fans were expressing humanity’s deep longing for the world to be made right again.
I have thought for a long time that the reason so many of us like crime/police dramas or hospital/medical dramas is that the bad guys nearly always get caught and the poorly ones get made better.
 

Behold

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Christ's coming back is the beautiful ending that we all hope for,, as He is going to resolve all the wrong in this evil secular world, and make it RIGHT.

No longer will the bad be rewarded and the good die young.
No longer will the faithful be persecuted and the evil be elevated.

This world is like a bad ending in a horror movie, that just keeps on going.
Jesus is coming back to redirect the SHOW, and set things ARIGHT.
And the born again, will be with Him.... ruling and reigning with Jesus.
We are going to be a part of His REIGN.

Lord, come soon.
Today. !