Together, we have faith

Dec 12, 2025
Week #49 — Day 6
Enjoying God’s Blessings
Q. 104. What do we pray for in the fourth petition?
A. In the fourth petition, which is, Give us this day our daily bread,” we pray, that of God’s
free gift we may receive a competent portion of the good things of this life, and enjoy his
blessing with them.
Matt. 6:11; Prov. 30:8-9; Gen. 28:20; 1 Tim. 4:4-5.
Give us this day our daily bread,
“The catechism also reminds us that it is not enough to have a competent portion of this world’s goods; we also need to be able to “enjoy his blessing with them” (see Eccl. 6:1–2). One can gain the whole world, but without God’s favor, it will be a burden. Having everything but being unable to enjoy it is one of this world’s great vanities. We know this by experience—a guilty conscience keeps us from enjoying what we have. The thief can never enjoy God’s blessing with what he has.”
Excerpt From Glorifying and Enjoying God: 52 Devotions through the Westminster Shorter Catechism (Boekestein & Cruse & Miller)
Enjoying God’s blessings. Have you ever met people who seem to “have it all” and yet are troubled, anxious and generally unhappy? I have. Nice homes, lots of money, best schools for their kids, travel around the world, yet unhappy. Ecclesiastes puts it this way — Ecclesiastes 6:1-2 “There is an evil that I have seen under the sun, and it lies heavy on mankind: a man to whom God gives wealth, possessions, and honor, so that he lacks nothing of all that he desires, yet God does not give him power to enjoy them, but a stranger enjoys them. This is vanity; it is a grievous evil.” It is not that “happiness” alone is our goal in this petition, but rather contentment with God, self and others.
Watson talks about the “uses” of this petition. He gives ten. I cited five yesterday. Here are the other five — “To make us content with "daily bread," though God straitens us in our allowance, think seriously of the danger there is in a high, prosperous condition; If God keeps us to a spare diet—if he gives us less temporal things—he has made it up in spiritual things; If you have but daily bread enough to suffice nature, be content. Consider that it is not having an abundance, which makes us content; If you have less daily bread, you will have less account to give; You who have but a small competence in outward things, may be content to consider how much you look for hereafter.” The Puritans knew how to prize heaven and hold only loosely to earth and its baubles. Have we?
A Puritan Prayer —
“O GOD MOST HIGH, MOST GLORIOUS,
The thought of thine infinite serenity cheers me,
For I am toiling and moiling, troubled and distressed,
but thou art for ever at perfect peace.
Thy designs cause thee no fear or care of unfulfilment,
they stand fast as the eternal hills.
Thy power knows no bond,
thy goodness no stint.
Thou bringest order out of confusion,
and my defeats are thy victories:
The Lord God omnipotent reigneth.
I come to thee as a sinner with cares and sorrows,
to leave every concern entirely to thee,
every sin calling for Christ’s precious blood;
Revive deep spirituality in my heart;
Let me live near to the great Shepherd,
hear his voice, know its tones, follow its calls.
Keep me from deception by causing me to abide in the truth,
from harm by helping me to walk in the power of the Spirit.
Give me intenser faith in the eternal verities,
burning into me by experience the things I know;
Let me never be ashamed of the truth of the gospel,
that I may bear its reproach,
vindicate it,
see Jesus as its essence,
know in it the power of the Spirit.”
Excerpt From
The Valley of Vision
Edited by Arthur Bennett


