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From Petition to Praise

08/30/2023

In this illuminating episode of The Reformed Brotherhood, hosts Jesse Schwamb and Tony Arsenal delve into the often-debated doxology of the Lord's Prayer: "For thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory, forever. Amen." While addressing the textual questions surrounding its inclusion in Scripture, they focus primarily on its profound theological significance. The hosts explore how this concluding phrase transforms our understanding of prayer from mere petition to confident declaration, grounding our requests in God's sovereign authority. Through careful analysis of each component—the kingdom, power, and glory—they reveal how the doxology serves as both the climactic crescendo of the Lord's Prayer and a theological foundation that empowers all our prayers with certainty in God's character and promises.

Key Takeaways

  • Textual Considerations: While absent from the oldest manuscripts, the doxology has ancient origins in the early church and theological consistency with Scripture, making it worthy of serious consideration regardless of its contested status.
  • The Bookend Effect: The doxology creates a beautiful theological symmetry with the opening of the Lord's Prayer, beginning with acknowledging God as Father in heaven and ending with affirming His eternal kingdom, power, and glory.
  • Definitive Articles: The use of "the" before kingdom, power, and glory emphasizes God's comprehensive and exclusive possession of these attributes—not just some power but THE power.
  • The Transformation of Prayer: The doxology shifts prayer from uncertain petition to confident declaration, anchoring our requests in the certainty of who God is and His ability to answer.
  • The Power of God: Acknowledging God's omnipotence reminds us that our prayers are addressed to the One who has absolute authority to accomplish His will and answer our petitions.
  • From Spoken to Declared: The doxology transitions us from asking God to act to affirming who He is, effectively dragging the answer into the present through confident declaration.
  • Community Affirmation: The concluding "Amen" functions as a communal stamp of agreement, making the doxology particularly powerful when recited together in worship.

The Kingdom, Power, and Glory: God's Exclusive Domain

The doxology's use of definite articles ("the kingdom," "the power," "the glory") is theologically significant. As Tony Arsenal points out, God doesn't merely possess some kingdom among many, or a portion of power—He possesses THE kingdom, THE power, and THE glory. All other authorities, capabilities, and excellencies in creation are merely derivative, pale reflections of God's ultimate sovereignty. This understanding shapes our prayer life profoundly, as we recognize that every authority figure, from kings to parents, exercises only delegated power under God's ultimate authority. When we pray, we're approaching the source of all authority and power, not merely one power among many. This recognition produces both humility (as we acknowledge our dependence) and confidence (as we trust in God's supreme ability to answer our prayers according to His perfect will).

The Prayer's Crescendo: From Petition to Declaration

Rather than seeing the doxology as a gentle conclusion that winds down the Lord's Prayer, both hosts emphasize its function as a powerful crescendo. Throughout the prayer, we petition God to act—to give us bread, forgive our debts, lead us not into temptation. But the doxology shifts dramatically from asking to declaring. As Jesse Schwamb notes, this is where we effectively "drag the answer into the present" by confidently affirming God's eternal character and capabilities. This shift transforms our entire approach to prayer—we're not tentatively asking a reluctant deity to consider our requests, but confidently entrusting our needs to the One who possesses all authority and power to answer. The doxology isn't merely an add-on; it's the theological foundation that empowers all the petitions that came before it.

Memorable Quotes

"When you get to the end of this prayer, there's no ambiguity about the fact that the One who has the power is the one you just spoke to and He will bring it to pass." — Jesse Schwamb

"All of our theology sprang forward in a context where this was considered to be the Scripture, so we can't just ignore it. We can't just chop it out of our Bibles and pretend like it doesn't exist... because this prayer is so central to the life of the church." — Tony Arsenal

"This grounds all of our prayers and our entire ability to pray and to trust God that He not only can but will answer our prayers, that He wants to answer the prayers of His people." — Tony Arsenal

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