Sixth Petition:
13. And lead us not into temptation--He who honestly seeks and
has the assurance of, forgiveness for past sin, will strive to avoid
committing it for the future. But conscious that "when we would do good
evil is present with us," we are taught to offer this sixth petition,
which comes naturally close upon the preceding, and flows, indeed,
instinctively from it in the hearts of all earnest Christians. There is
some difficulty in the form of the petition, as it is certain that God
does bring His people--as He did Abraham, and Christ Himself--into
circumstances both fitted and designed to try them, or test the
strength of their faith. Some meet this by regarding the petition as
simply an humble expression of self-distrust and instinctive shrinking
from danger; but this seems too weak. Others take it as a prayer
against yielding to temptation, and so equivalent to a prayer for
support and deliverance when we are tempted; but this seems to go
beyond the precise thing intended. We incline to take it as a prayer
against being drawn or sucked, of our own will, into
temptation, to which the word here used seems to lend some
countenance--"Introduce us not." This view, while it does not put into
our mouths a prayer against being tempted--which is more than the
divine procedure would seem to warrant--does not, on the other hand,
change the sense of the petition into one for support under
temptation, which the words will hardly bear; but it gives us a subject
for prayer, in regard to temptation, most definite, and of all
others most needful. It was precisely this which Peter needed to
ask, but did not ask, when--of his own accord, and in spite of
difficulties--he pressed for entrance into the palace hall of the high
priest, and where, once sucked into the scene and atmosphere of
temptation, he fell so foully. And if so, does it not seem pretty clear
that this was exactly what our Lord meant His disciples to pray against
when He said in the garden--"Watch and pray, that ye enter not
into temptation"?
(Mt 26:41).
Seventh Petition:
But deliver us from evil--We can see no good reason for
regarding this as but the second half of the sixth petition. With far
better ground might the second and third petitions be regarded as one.
The "but" connecting the two petitions is an insufficient reason for
regarding them as one, though enough to show that the one thought
naturally follows close upon the other. As the expression "from evil"
may be equally well rendered "from the evil one," a number or superior
critics think the devil is intended, especially from its following
close upon the subject of "temptation." But the comprehensive character
of these brief petitions, and the place which this one occupies, as
that on which all our desires die away, seems to us against so
contracted a view of it. Nor can there be a reasonable doubt that the
apostle, in some of the last sentences which he penned before he was
brought forth to suffer for his Lord, alludes to this very petition in
the language of calm assurance--"And the Lord shall deliver me from
every evil work (compare the Greek of the two passages), and
will preserve me unto his heavenly kingdom"
(2Ti 4:18).
The final petition, then, is only rightly grasped when regarded as a
prayer for deliverance from all evil of whatever kind--not only from
sin, but from all its consequences--fully and finally. Fitly, then, are
our prayers ended with this. For what can we desire which this does not
carry with it?
For thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory, for ever.
Amen--If any reliance is to be placed on external evidence, this
doxology, we think, can hardly be considered part of the original text.
It is wanting in all the most ancient manuscripts; it is wanting in the
Old Latin version and in the Vulgate: the former mounting up to
about the middle of the second century, and the latter being a revision
of it in the fourth century by JEROME,
a most reverential and
conservative as well as able and impartial critic. As might be expected
from this, it is passed by in silence by the earliest Latin fathers; but
even the Greek commentators, when expounding this prayer, pass by
the doxology. On the other hand, it is found in a majority of
manuscripts, though not the oldest; it is found in all the Syriac versions, even the Peschito--dating probably as
early as the second
century--although this version lacks the "Amen," which the doxology, if
genuine, could hardly have wanted; it is found in the Sahidic or
Thebaic version made for the Christians of Upper Egypt, possibly as
early as the Old Latin; and it is found in perhaps most of the later
versions. On a review of the evidence, the strong probability, we think,
is that it was no part of the original text.
JFB.
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