48.
All things that we ought, indeed all that we are able, to ask of
God, are contained in this formula, and as it were rule, of prayer delivered by
Christ, our divine Master, whom the Father has appointed to be our teacher, and
to whom alone he would have us to listen (Matth. 17:5). For he ever was the
eternal wisdom of the Father, and being made man, was manifested as the
Wonderful, the Counsellor (Isa. 11:2; 9:6). Accordingly, this prayer is complete
in all its parts, so complete, that whatever is extraneous and foreign to it,
whatever cannot be referred to it, is impious and unworthy of the approbation of
God. For he has here summarily prescribed what is worthy of him, what is
acceptable to him, and what is necessary for us; in short, whatever he is
pleased to grant. Those, therefore, who presume to go further and ask something
more from God, first seek to add of their own to the wisdom of God (this it is
insane blasphemy to do); secondly, refusing to confine themselves within the
will of God, and despising it, they wander as their cupidity directs; lastly,
they will never obtain anything, seeing they pray without faith. For there
cannot be a doubt that all such prayers are made without faith, because at
variance with the word of God, on which if faith do not always lean it cannot
possibly stand. Those who, disregarding the Master's rule, indulge their own
wishes, not only have not the word of God, but as much as in them lies oppose
it. Hence Tertullian (De Fuga in Persecutione) has not less truly than
elegantly termed it Lawful Prayer, tacitly intimating that all other
prayers are lawless and illicit.
This book has been accessed more than 146668 times since June 1, 2005.