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Resting In God's Providenital Provision

  • Writer: Dr. Ray E. Heiple, Jr.
    Dr. Ray E. Heiple, Jr.
  • 5 minutes ago
  • 4 min read

Give us this day our daily bread. Matthew 6:11 NKJV

This morning we look at Westminster Larger Catechism Question 193, which asks, “What do we

pray for in the fourth petition?” It gives the answer, “In the fourth petition (which is, Give us this

day our daily bread,) acknowledging, that in Adam, and by our own sin, we have forfeited our

right to all the outward blessings of this life, and deserve to be wholly deprived of them by God,

and to have them cursed to us in the use of them; and that neither they of themselves are able to

sustain us, nor we to merit, or by our own industry to procure them; but prone to desire, get, and

use them unlawfully: we pray for ourselves and others, that both they and we, waiting upon the

providence of God from day to day in the use of lawful means, may, of his free gift, and as to his

fatherly wisdom shall seem best, enjoy a competent portion of them; and have the same

continued and blessed unto us in our holy and comfortable use of them, and contentment in

them; and be kept from all things that are contrary to our temporal support and comfort.”

Why do we give thanks to God when we sit down to eat? It was not God who came down from

heaven and cooked and presented the food. It was not God who packaged it, delivered it to the

grocery store, and put it on the shelf for us to purchase and carry home. It was not God who

plowed the field, planted the seeds, fertilized the soil, picked and gathered the crops, etc. Yet a

right understanding of God’s sovereignty will acknowledge God’s providential provision in every

one of these steps, as well as in many others. For instance: that the seed responds to the soil and

to the water and grows and produces a crop; that the food is nourishing and that our bodies

respond to and receive that nourishment; that we are able to identify, eat, and digest the food;

that we live in a time of peace and prosperity where food can be easily purchased and prepared,

etc., etc. In all of these things, it is only by the power and goodness of God that we have food and

are able to eat and be benefited by it. Thus, it is not only right for us to thank God for our food, it

is good for us to ask Him to give it to us each and every day. For in this way we remind ourselves

and acknowledge that it is only by the grace of God that we have food today.

However, as the Catechism rightly shows, this question is dealing with much more than food.

Jesus used the word bread to refer to the teaching of Himself and others, to the Word of God,

and to Himself. Bread can therefore refer to anything that is necessary for man in order to live

and serve God in this world. God made this physical world. He made man dependent upon

physical things for his life. And God is good to provide man an abundance of the physical things

necessary for this life. Furthermore, Jesus taught that while we are not to be overly concerned

with the necessities of this life (Mat. 6:31-32), we are to ask God that we have what we need. Thus,

we ask God for our daily bread. Here we acknowledge that God is sovereign and that He has

appointed for us what we are to have. We are to accept and rest in whatever He has appointed

for us, trusting in His wisdom and goodness, that this alone is what is best for us. So we are not to

look at someone else’s daily bread and covet it. Nor are we to look at our own bread and despise

it. We are to ask for what God has appointed for us and be content with it.

Now this fact does not mean that we are not to do all that we can to rightly improve our lot in life,

by hard work, education, and training. We should do all that we can to glorify God by making a

full use of our gifts and opportunities. We should always try to improve our lives and the lives of

those around us, in a righteous and godly fashion. And very often such diligence will be

rewarded with physical gain in this world. But whether it does or does not, we are to

acknowledge it was God who has given to us whatever we have, and we are to be content.

Finally, it is our daily bread. God’s mercies are new every morning and He would have us to come

to Him every day for what we need. God is not like the outlet store that we go to every so often in

order to stock up for a month or two! We do not ask God to give us today, the next two years’

worth of our daily bread! God created us with daily needs, that must be satisfied on a daily basis,

in order that we would come to Him every day to acknowledge and hope in His goodness. In this

way God has given us a continual opportunity to be reminded of His goodness to us and our

need of Him. May God give us this day – today – our daily bread, and may He cause us to be satisfied with it.

 
 
 
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