Together, we have faith

Dec 13, 2025
Week #49 — Day 7
What We Really Need
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”
“God has anointed us with the graces, the holy unction of his Spirit. Grace is a seed of God, a blossom of eternity. The graces are the impressions of the divine nature, stars to enlighten us, spices to perfume us, diamonds to enrich us! And if God has adorned the hidden man of the heart with these sacred jewels, it may well make us content, though we have but short fare, and that coarse too. God has given his people better things than corn and wine; he has given those who which he cannot give in anger, and which cannot stand with reprobation, and they may say as David, "The lines have fallen unto me in pleasant places; yes, I have a goodly heritage." Psalm 16:6. Didimus was a blind man—but very holy; Anthony asked him, if he was not troubled for the lack of his eyes, and he told him he was; Anthony replied, "Why are you troubled? You lack that which flies and birds have—but you have that which angels have." So I say to Christians, if God has not given you the purse, he has given you his Spirit. If you lack that which rich men have, God has given you that which angels have, and are you not content?” (Thomas Watson, The Lord’s Prayer)
What we really need. Watson concludes his exposition of this fourth petition in the Lord’s Prayer with two notes — “Realize that some have been much lower than you, who have been better than you, and, Let us labor to have the interest cleared between God and our souls.” On the latter point Watson says “He who can say, "My God," has enough to rock his heart quiet in the lowest condition. What can he lack who has El-Shaddai, the all-sufficient God for his portion? Though the nether springs fail—yet he has the upper springs. Though the bill of fare grows short—yet an interest in God is a pillar of support to us, and we may, with David, encourage ourselves in the Lord our God!” This is an oft-repeated phrase of the Puritans — “to encourage ourselves in the Lord our God.” So, whether you have little or much of the world’s goods today, as a Christian you have the all-sufficient God as your portion and you can say with David, “The lines have fallen to me in pleasant places”(Psalm 16:6)
A Puritan Prayer —
GOD OF MY END . . .
“O how desirable, how profitable to the Christian life
is a spirit of holy watchfulness
and godly jealousy over myself,
when my soul is afraid of nothing
except grieving and offending thee,
the blessed God, my Father and friend,
whom I then love and long to please,
rather than be happy in myself!
Knowing, as I do, that this is the pious temper,
worthy of the highest ambition,
and closest pursuit of intelligent creatures and holy Christians,
may my joy derive from glorifying and delighting thee.
I long to fill all my time for thee,
whether at home or in the way;
to place all my concerns in thy hands;
to be entirely at thy disposal,
having no will or interest of my own.
Help me to live to thee for ever,
to make thee my last and only end,
so that I may never more in one instance love my sinful self.”
Excerpt From
The Valley of Vision
Edited by Arthur Bennett


