The Prayer of Jesus
The Prayer of Jesus
The Prayer of Jesus
By A D A L B E R T HAMMAN
foundation and the future of the Church, to the will of his Father. 1
This total dependence is expressed by Luke in the first and last
words which he records. 2
The synopfics all give an account of Peter's confession of faith at
Caesarea. Only Luke adds the detail that Jesus asked 'Who do the
multitude say that I am?' after prayer. The occasion is no less
solemn than the choice of his disciples. The confession of Caesarea
counter-balances the defection of numerous disciples; it is a turning-
point in the public life of Christ and a decisive moment for the
future of the Church. The prayer of Jesus was answered, since the
Father revealed to Peter the secret of Christ's messianic dignity.
The transfiguration took place exactly six days later. Such de-
tailed accuracy on the part of the evangelists shows the precision of
the memories they relied on, and also the connection made between
the confession of Caesarea and the answer of heaven which confirms
it. For Luke, and perhaps for Mark if we are to follow Origen, the
transfiguration is brought about by prayer: 'And even as he prayed,
the fashion of his face was altered'. ~
All the details of the setting are important. The mountain, in the
biblical tradition, is the place where God reveals himself. Moses and
Elias are men of prayer. The voice from heaven confirms the mission
of the suffering servant and the sonship of Christ. The disciples,
later to witness the Agony, were then able to discern the true coun-
tenance of their Master and catch a glimpse of the ineffable closeness
of Son and Father in prayer.
Another logion preserved by Luke enables us to determine the
purpose of his prayer: 'I have prayed for thee, that thy faith may
not fail'. 4 The Master does not divorce his mission from that of his
disciples. Committed by the faith revealed at Caesarea, Peter and
the others will have to proclaim the message of the good news to
their brethren and to the world. Their courage and confidence will
spring from their reliance on the prayer of the Lord.
I f we leave aside the Our Father, which is our prayer rather than
Christ's, the Gospels record three of his personal prayers: the
thanksgiving after the return of the disciples, the supplication in
Gethsemani, the prayer on the cross. John's Gospel adds still more
examples.
In all the recorded prayers, Jesus calls God Abba, Father. This
title was not a new one, although it was more often used by God
himself than by the Jews. The fatherhood of God was shown in the
extraordinary way he formed the chosen people and gave them their
supernatural mission. The post-exilic prophets especially stress this
theme. Jesus gives to the term a richness of meaning, a special fulfil-
ment. Jesus says: 'Father' or 'my Father', and this contrasts with
'your Father' which he uses in speaking to his disciples.
The originality of the title of Father as used by Jesus is that it
accomplishes the eschatological promises made by Yahweh to his
people. The Son of the Father has a mission of salvation: 'That is
why my people will know my name; they will understand on that
day that it is I who say: Here I am'. 1 That day has come with
Christ who completes the revelation of the tetragrammaton 2 made
to Moses. The mysterious name of God which expresses his nature
is Father. In that word all revelation is summed up: to acknowledge
the Son is to acknowledge the Father, to acknowledge the Father is
to acknowledge the Son. St. John's Gospel teaches this explicitly.
By calling God Father in his prayer, Jesus introduces humanity
to the mystery of his personal relationship with him, a n d on this
mystery his nature and mission depend. The personal prayer of
Jesus continues the revelation of the Father at his baptism and trans-
figuration. It is the answer of the Son to the voice of the Father.
Both share in the same mystery and the same work of salvation.
We have two accounts of Jesus' thanksgiving prayer, one in St.
Luke, the other in St. Matthew. Luke inserts this prayer of praise
after the return of the seventy disciples from their mission. Jesus
warns them against glorying in the powers given to them and against
the danger of claiming for themselves what is really the work of
God. Their joy should be made to depend simply on the fact
that they have been chosen. Luke adds that Jesus was 'filled with
gladness by the Holy Spirit'. The two versions are otherwise identi-
cal. 'At this time, J e s u s . . . said, O Father, who art Lord of heaven
and earth, I give thee praise that thou hast hidden all this from the
wise and the prudent, and revealed it to little children. Be it so,
Lord, since this finds favour in thy sight', a
This prayer of Jesus overthrows the values of the world and hu-
man wisdom, and sets up other, genuine values for those who are
poor in spirit and who recognise in the suffering of the just man the
1 Isal 5 -o, 6.
Literally, 'the word offbur letters' : the consonants of the sacred n a m e of God Yahweh.
3 Lk Io, 2 I ; M t xI, 25-26.
THE P R A Y E R OF JESUS i77
a J n x I , 4 x. * M k x x , 24. n MkIx,~5;Mt5,23-24.
THE PRAYER OF JESUS i79
CHRISTIAN P R A Y E R
P R A Y E R IN T H E C H U R C H
I P L 4, 523-4.
I80 THE P R A Y E R OF J~ESUS
1 Cf. Hilda C. Graef, The Scholar and the Cross (London I955), p. I26.
R o m I2, i.
THE PRAYER OF J E S U S 181
cution or of peace, his whole life must express the Amen of his faith.
Action and prayer, service of men and service of God, are but two
manifestations of the one charity of God which inflames the hearts
of his children. Prayer and christian living are both answers to the
grace which has been received.
EUCHARISTIC PRAYEI~
I R o m I~ 8.
I82 THE PRAYER O F JESUS
PRAYER AND E S C H A T O L O G Y