Only Once Continually – Again

Give us this day our daily bread.” Matthew 6:11 NASB

Daily – The Greek word epiousion is one of the most unusual words in the entire Bible. It occurs only in the Lord’s Prayer. In order to understand the meaning of most Biblical expressions, scholars often look to other uses either in the Bible or outside the Bible. But this word appears here in this verse for the first time.  It is not found in any other Biblical context and has no clear cognates in other ancient languages. All of this is even more unusual since the meaning of the word certainly must have been clear to Yeshua’s disciples and the early Jewish believers.

Of course, Yeshua spoke this prayer in Hebrew. So if we translate it back into its Hebrew form, the word becomes tamid. Gordon and Johnson note that, “tamid is rich in meaning, which makes it difficult to translate into English. The closest approximation in English to the word tamid is ‘continually,’ although some prefer to translate it as ‘daily.’”[1] As Gordon and Johnson point out, if Yeshua had spoken the Greek word epiousion to the crowd, no one would have understood Him. But the use of tamid is perfectly understandable in Hebrew.

Tamid is particularly useful because of the symbolic meaning of bread in Scripture. Lehem means both physical sustenance and spiritual nourishment. Since Yeshua places emphasis on both, it is particularly appropriate that He would use a word that means having enough every day. Digesting God’s word is just as important as eating the bread on the table. In fact, it is sometimes more important.

This much is clear. This petition in the Lord’s Prayer pushes aside any claim that we might have on even the basic necessities of life as our rights. Life is not entitlement. Even life’s most basic needs are the gifts of God. It is not that we are to be content with only the most basic elements of life. Rather, we are to acknowledge that everything, even the necessities, come to us as gifts. When we think of this part of the verse, the word for “daily” begins to make some sense. We are part of the fellowship of the redeemed. More than anyone, we know that our basic needs must come to us one day at a time. We are healed for this day. We are helped for this day. We are whole for this day. The basic necessities of our lives cannot be stored up for tomorrow nor appropriated from yesterday. We can only live daily. When we say the Lord’s Prayer, the word daily has a special significance. This word summarizes our lives. One day at a time.

Learning to pray is learning the supreme sense of tamid. If prayer is a means of becoming human, then its daily exercise is as crucial as daily nourishment. A man without prayer is a man in a constant state of malnutrition.

Topical Index: daily, epiousion, tamid, continually, Matthew 6:11

[1] Nehemia Gordon and Keith Johnson, A Prayer to Our Father, p. 134.

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Monica

a man without prayer is a man in a constant state of malnutririon, what a powerful statement, in other words we ought to eat , and live out his words in our daily lives, for tomorrow is not promised to us , how awesome is our ”YAH’

carl roberts

Look. Find. Feast.

~ Your words were found, and I did eat them; and Your word was unto me the joy and rejoicing of mine heart: for I am called by Your Name, O LORD God of hosts ~
(Jeremiah 15.16)

Jesus (the One born in Bethlehem [the house of bread] said to them, “I AM the bread of life; he who comes to Me will not hunger, and he who believes in Me will never thirst.

Bread of Heaven, Bread of Heaven,
Feed me till I want no more;

Feed me till I want no more.

~ How sweet are Your words to my taste, sweeter than honey to my mouth! ~
(Psalm 119:103)

laurita hayes

How much of my insecurity is founded on the future that I attempt to project onto the present? How many prayers are about FUTURE bread; the bills next month, the job prospects next year, the retirement plans or the state of the nation or the world ‘tomorrow’? How many of my fears about what could happen, or what someone may think of me, or what I imagine I may be lacking drive my preoccupation with my present? But, I was not promised weekly bread or monthly bread, now was I?

And what about that past that I cannot change? How many of my present precious moments do I spend beating myself up in some fashion about that, all in the name of “never repeating it” – using guilt as the motive force for present righteousness?

Both guilt and fear can eat my present sustenance and take my very breath. Fear, or, stress, sends the body into shallow breathing that, over time, can leave toxic residues in body tissues and degrade the lungs. Guilt retained in body tissues can tighten muscles into knots and disfigure joints. Both can cause insomnia, that insistence on trying to ‘live’ in the past (guilt) or the future (fear), but both states require NO faith, and therefore are sin.

All sin fractures me not only from relating to others in the present, because if I am dwelling in the past or future, I am not present in my present, but it also fractures me from myself, for I can only live, and breathe, in that present too. But most of all, it separates me from the Source of my present, for He can only meet me in the present; He does not chase me around in the projected past or future with that breath and that bread. Why? Because He can only be in real places.

For decades, I lost my way in the present, but the pain of not being in that present, I sucked up and endured. I should have crashed and burned! Pain is a gift from heaven that says only one thing, and it is always the truth: “Stop!”. For years, I did the work, but forgot to show up at payday to pick up my check. “Present and accounted for” I did not have a clue of how to do.

“Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.” Repent for what? Fear, guilt and shame were my attempts to ‘manage’ ‘on my own’. When I started repenting for the panic; repenting for the lack of faith in the future, and repenting for the guilt, that kept me from repenting for that past, and repenting for all the shame that kept me in my bushes – that was when my light started to spring forth speedily, and I started showing up in that present. Sure enough, there was that table, spread for me. Just for today.

George Kraemer

“Give us this day (the only day we have) our daily bread (manna, everything we need)……”

The beginning of the end of the connective, conditional, climatic crescendo to the Lord’s Prayer manifesto that for me summarizes both the entire Bible story and the life of Yahweh.

…… and forgive us our trespasses (our debts) as we forgive those …… and lead us not into temptation (yetzer ha’ra) but deliver us from evil (we have met the enemy and he is us).

Continually.

Pracha

“Give us this day our daily bread” is one of the great needs in our daily life. Yeshua is the provider in all necessities for human to have a healthy and abundant life. Furthermore, Jeshua taught us how to pray which is a spiritual bread of life for human spiritual nourishment.

Psalm 1 says it all. “… But his delight is in the law of the Lord, and his law he meditates day and night. He shall be like a tree planted by the rivers of water, that brings forth its fruits in its season, whose leaf also shall not wither; and whatever he does shall prosper.”

Skip, thank you for the word to show me and others (I hope) how to live life now!

Peter

From the Greek word Usia, (substance) we have the word Epiousion = in substance
Give us daily our accentuate (ART)-os (bread) the one in substance
The essential (ART)-os, or “bread” in substance here, is the spiritual training…
ARTOS (bread) ART ARTIST all from same root