News

Is the Lord’s Prayer a Christian Prayer?

Observers weigh in as a judge considers the question.

Is the Lord's Prayer a Christian Prayer?

Is the Lord's Prayer a Christian Prayer?

In Mullin v. Sussex County, Delaware, a U.S. District Court must answer whether the Lord’s Prayer is sectarian. Four residents sued the county council for opening meetings with the prayer. The county says it’s not Christian “because no Christian tradition existed” when Jesus prayed it. The judge called the case difficult “because there is no reference to Jesus or Allah.” Observers weigh in on whether the Lord’s Prayer is a Christian prayer.

“The Lord’s Prayer is ‘the’ Christian prayer. It comes up more than any other text in Christian liturgies since the first century. And its context in Matthew and Luke gives explicitly Christian meanings to terms such as Father and kingdom.”

Telford Work, author, Ain’t Too Proud to Beg

“It is distinctly Christian. In the New Testament, it is Jesus who gives us the prayer. Throughout the Christian church—whether Catholics, Protestants, or Eastern Orthodox—people pray that prayer. You will not find it in a Jewish synagogue.”

Simon Kistemaker, New Testament professor, Reformed Theological Seminary

“It is a Christian prayer. Jesus was certainly influenced by certain Jewish models of prayer, but he gave it to his disciples specifically. So it’s a direct inheritance for us as Christians.”

Arthur Boers, author, Lord, Teach Us to Pray

“The Lord’s Prayer is both Jewish and Christian. Jesus, a Jew, was teaching his Jewish followers to pray. But the fact that it is a part of both traditions fails to make it sufficiently nonsectarian to pass constitutional muster.”

J. Brent Walker, executive director, Baptist Joint Committee for Religious Liberty

“You could consider it a prayer for multiple religions, because Jesus is considered to be a rabbi or a great teacher by many of the world’s religions. It was not originally delivered as a Christian prayer; it was simply a teacher teaching his disciples a good way to pray.”

Clayton Schmit, professor, Fuller Theological Seminary

“The prayer in and of itself does not explicitly espouse the precepts of Christianity. It recognizes God, but does not proselytize a particular religion. And case law does not support a mandatory total prohibition of prayer at public gatherings.”

Brad Dacus, president, Pacific Justice Institute

Copyright © 2012 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Related Elsewhere:

Previous topics for Under Discussion include mercury pollution and the pro-life fight, the relationship between the same-sex marriage debate and pro-life advocacy, trademarking church names and logos, the liturgical calendar, pastors and marriage for cohabitating couples, church disruptions, politicians and infidelity, politicians and religious persecution, faith healing and legal protection, pastors’ housing allowances, sacred spaces, stinginess, TSA screening, and Christmas carols with questionable theology.

See Christianity Today‘s news section and liveblog for more news updates.

Also in this issue

The CT archives are a rich treasure of biblical wisdom and insight from our past. Some things we would say differently today, and some stances we've changed. But overall, we're amazed at how relevant so much of this content is. We trust that you'll find it a helpful resource.

News

Nontraditional Believers Recover Christian Community

Melody J. Wachsmuth in Zagreb, Croatia

Defending Scripture. Literally.

News

Violence in Nigeria: Breaking the Country's Fatal Deadlock

Sunday Agang in Kagoro, Nigeria

Discipling the Eyes Through Art in Worship

W. David O. Taylor

Review

Polarizing Politics by Defending the Declaration

Andrew Walker

Chuck Colson: Evangelicals Should Be Uniters, Not Dividers

'God Is Not a Genie in a Bottle': Ways We Misuse the Bible

Interview by Owen Strachan

My Top 5 Books on Christianity in North Korea

Carl Moeller

Review

Tolerance—Or Else: Coercive Attempts to Impose Secular Beliefs

Editorial

How Pastors' Ponzis Affect Our Gospel Witness

A Christianity Today Editorial

News

Mass Appeal: Evangelicals Copy More of Catholic Playbook to Oppose Contraception Ruling

Sarah Pulliam Bailey

Review

Blue Like Jazz

Josh Hurst

Do Pets Go to Heaven?

Wesley Smith, Karen Swallow Prior, and Ben DeVries

Becoming Donald Miller

Mark Moring

What Good Grief Looks Like When a Daughter Dies

Ben Witherington

Excerpt

Connecting Christ

Paul Metzger

News

Sex Sect The Family Cleans House

James A. Beverley

News

Go Figure

Jesus Disappoints Everyone

John Koessler

Proof of a Good God: 'Crucified Under Pontius Pilate'

News

Quotation Marks

News

The Problem 'Son': Debate Continues Over Translating 'Son of God' for Muslims

Collin Hansen

News

Passages

Letters to the Editor

Journaling Grief: How Web-Based Publishing Is Changing Everything

Jesus Through Jewish Eyes

Books to Note

Wilson's Bookmarks

John Wilson

Employers Can Limit Employees' Speech, TBN’s Lawsuit, Bar Boots Catholic Group, and More News

News

Contract Concern: USAID Policy on Hiring Alarms Charities

Bobby Ross Jr.

Review

October Baby

Morgan Feddes

Jeremy Lin, Tim Tebow, Josh Hamilton: Muscular Christianity's Newest Heroes

Interview: Why Sarah Macintosh Ran Away from CCM and Went Back

Mark Moring

Review

Wrecking Ball

Andy Whitman

Review

The Clearing

Kristin Garrett

Review

Feathers & Twine

Andy Argyrakis

Review

Songs of Praise & Scorn

Jeremy V. Jones

View issue

Our Latest

Looking Past Bell Bottoms, Beads, Coffeehouses, and Communes

In 1971, CT said the Jesus People were not just another baby boomer fad.

I Have Chronic Pain. I Still Love the Olympics.

Aberdeen Livingstone

After a life-changing injury, I can’t compete like I used to. Watching the Olympics—the newest games starting tonight—brings me joy.

The Bulletin

International Surrogacy, Midterm Forecasts, and Temple Mount Prayer

Mike Cosper, Clarissa Moll, Russell Moore

Foreigners hire US citizens as surrogate mothers, midterm elections approach, and changes to prayer rules at Jerusalem holy site.

Review

Reckoning with Race, Immigration, and Power

Three books to read this month on politics and public life.

From Our Community

Where The Church Gathers, Listens, and Grows Together

How The Big Tent Initiative is fostering unity in the Church.

The Just Life with Benjamin Watson

Jemar Tisby: The History the Church Avoids

Understanding the past is essential for interpreting the present.

News

Families of Venezuelan Political Prisoners Pray for Their Release

The acting president proposed an amnesty law, yet hundreds remain in prison.

News

The Jewish Archaeologist Who Inspired a Generation of American Christians

Gordon Govier

Pastors, students, and researchers have Gabriel Barkay to thank for insights into biblical history.

Apple PodcastsDown ArrowDown ArrowDown Arrowarrow_left_altLeft ArrowLeft ArrowRight ArrowRight ArrowRight Arrowarrow_up_altUp ArrowUp ArrowAvailable at Amazoncaret-downCloseCloseEmailEmailExpandExpandExternalExternalFacebookfacebook-squareGiftGiftGooglegoogleGoogle KeephamburgerInstagraminstagram-squareLinkLinklinkedin-squareListenListenListenChristianity TodayCT Creative Studio Logologo_orgMegaphoneMenuMenupausePinterestPlayPlayPocketPodcastprintRSSRSSSaveSaveSaveSearchSearchsearchSpotifyStitcherTelegramTable of ContentsTable of Contentstwitter-squareWhatsAppXYouTubeYouTube