Posts Tagged “Bread”

The Beggar and the Bread

There’s a danger that we can dress up our message too much, over analyse things too much, until it becomes something that no one wants. This is a story I came across that illustrates this very well. I hope it gives you food for thought, it certainly did me.

The Beggar and the Bread

A beggar came and sat before me. “I want bread,” he said.

“How wise you are,” I assured him. “Bread is what you need. And you have come to the right bakery.” So I pulled my cookbook down from my shelf and began to tell him all I knew about bread.

I spoke of flour and wheat, of grain and barley. My knowledge impressed even me as I cited the measurements and recipe. When I looked up, I was surprised to see he wasn’t smiling. “I just want bread,” he said.

“How wise you are.” I applauded his choice. “Follow me, and I’ll show you our bakery.” Down the hallowed halls I guided him, pausing to point out the rooms where the dough is prepared and the ovens where the bread is baked.

“No one has such facilities. We have bread for every need. But here is the best part,” I proclaimed as I pushed open two swinging doors. “This is our room of inspiration.” I knew he was moved as we stepped into the auditorium full of stained-glass windows.

The beggar didn’t speak. I understood his silence. With my arm around his shoulder, I whispered, “It overwhelms me as well.” I then leaped to the podium and struck my favorite pose behind the lectern.

“People come from miles to hear me speak. Once a week, my workers gather, and I read to them the recipe from the cookbook of life.”

By now the beggar had taken a seat on the front row. I knew what he wanted. “Would you like to hear me?”

“No,” he said, “but I would like some bread.”

“How wise you are,” I replied. And I led him to the front door of the bakery.

“What I have to say next is very important,” I told him as we stood outside.

“Up and down this street you will find many bakeries. But take heed; they dont serve the true bread. I know of one who adds two spoons of salt rather than one. I know of another whose oven is three degrees too hot. They may call it bread,” I warned, “but it’s not according to the book.”

The beggar turned and began walking away. “Don’t you want bread?” I asked him.

He stopped, looked back at me, and shrugged, “I guess I lost my appetite.”

I shook my head and returned to my office. “What a shame,” I said to myself. “The world just isn’t hungry for true bread anymore.”

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Give us today our daily bread

When Jesus said, “Give us today our daily bread”, he wasn’t suggesting that we make a trip to our local supermarket for a loaf of Warburtons finest bread. He was, though, making the point that it’s okay and right to consider our daily needs in our prayers. After all, without the strength we need for each day, we will find it difficult to truly do his will and serve his kingdom.

Some of the early Church Fathers spiritualized the bread to refer to the bread which was served at Holy Communion. Part of the reason at least, which is easy to understand, was that it seemed too earthly praying for something as mundane as groceries, after praying for God’s glory.

Yet, “daily bread” does mean just that, daily bread. The word, “bread” refers to that food which sustains us. And in the wider sense too, bread refers to all that we as humans need to live. Food for our next meal matters to our Father in heaven, he does concern himself with what’s on our shopping list.

The word translated as “daily” — the focus of this petition — proved to be a bewildering one for scholars for centuries. I understand it doesn’t appear anywhere else either inside or outside of the Bible. It was eventually translated because of a housewife’s shopping list that was found on a scrap of papyrus by an archaeologist a, relatively, few years ago. She had written this word for “daily” next to several items on her list. It’s thought that it meant something like, “enough for the coming day”.

With our fridges and freezers solving our longer term storage problems, we rarely need to purchase food for a single day nowadays. We store up such an abundance of food that we’ve become less aware of its production and gathering, less thankful for it.

When we pray, “Give us this day our daily bread”, we’re not asking for everything from the Harrods Food Hall. We’re praying for bread, the necessities for life rather than luxuries. Enough for the day to come, not enough to store up for years to come.

When we pray, “Give us this day our daily bread”, we’re asking not just for ourselves but other family members too. If we are given two loaves, and our brother or sister none, then our prayer for daily bread has been answered — we have to share rather than hoard. That should apply corporately as well as personally. It is said that God provides enough for everyone’s need, but not for everyone’s greed.

We can bring all of our requests to God, even the small, mundane, ones. We can pray for all the things that matter to us — bread, a coat, a pair of shoes; enough for the coming day. If we need them, then as well as mattering to us, they matter to our heavenly Father too.


This is the sixth post in a series offering a reflection based on each of the clauses of the Lord’s Prayer


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