Is the "Our Father" problematic?

The bishop of York has raised the issue that the Our Father of the Lord's prayer problematic, primarily because some people have never known a caring father--suffering abuse from the person they knew as Dad, Story here

I tend to think it also raises the question of the patriarchy of the prayer. My wife, who was raised as Christian Scientist learned to begin the prayer with "Our Father/Mother" Took me a while to see their point.

What say you?

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Comments

  • stetsonstetson Shipmate
    Gramps49 wrote: »
    My wife, who was raised as Christian Scientist learned to begin the prayer with "Our Father/Mother"

    I can't help but wondering if that was related to what I have heard about attempts by the Church Of Christ, Scientist to kinda sorta deify Mrs. Eddy. I believe she actually was refered to as "Mother" in certain contexts?
  • I tend to think Jesus was quite aware that some people have never known a caring father.

    I also think he Jesus gave what we call the Lord’s Prayer or the Our Father as a model—“pray like this.” I doubt God is bothered when we follow that model in ways that work for us, and I’m not bothered at all when people pray the prayer in the way most comfortable to them.

  • Can you drop the f-bomb on this board? Don't worry. I only want to express my frustration.

    The bit that irks me is that the comment was an aside in a speech about unity, and yet it is the issue that gets the media asking for people's opinions. It reminds me of The Day Today parody where two people come on the show to announce a peace deal, and Chris Morris, the presenter, convinces each one that the other is threatening them, prompting a declaration of war.

    As for the issue presented, people should pray what they are moved to pray. The Lord's prayer is a model, as Nick says.

    I was practicing a hymn yesterday evening, and one ewetube version of the song had changed most of the lyrics into non-gendered language. But they left Lord alone. I thought that was weird. Maybe we should just go back to Latin.

  • Simon Toad wrote: »
    Can you drop the f-bomb on this board? Don't worry. I only want to express my frustration.

    The bit that irks me is that the comment was an aside in a speech about unity, and yet it is the issue that gets the media asking for people's opinions.

    Yes. The Abp's comment about "Father" was quite clearly not the main substance of what he was saying. In fact I think it's an almost "throwaway" comment which he included as he thought, "Ah! If I start talking about the Lord's Prayer some people will pull me up on the use of the term 'Father'. I must acknowledge that as I don't want to get stuck on it, then I can move on". Clearly his strategy didn't quite work! Perhaps he should have used Jesus' prayer for unity in John 17 as his text, although I can see the appeal of beginning with the Lord's Prayer.
  • Alan29Alan29 Shipmate
    My wife grew up without a father - he died when she was a baby. She used to find it difficult to relate to calling God Father, not having experienced a father's love. She grew up with a very strong (not in a good way) mother and grandmother.
  • SignallerSignaller Shipmate
    Gramps49 wrote: »
    My wife, who was raised as Christian Scientist learned to begin the prayer with "Our Father/Mother"
    My mother's family were Christian Scientists (in the UK) from the 1920s to the 1990s, and never came across such a usage, so I presume it is a recent thing.
  • The person who introduced me to Quakerism was wont to say to people "Do you believe in God? I do, She's very important to me".
  • DoublethinkDoublethink Admin, 8th Day Host
    Would it not be simpler to start the prayer “Our God, who art in heaven”
  • Bishops FingerBishops Finger Shipmate
    edited July 2023
    Or even *Our God, who is in heaven*...or just *Our God in heaven*...
    :wink:

    Good point, though. Mind you, I can see the traditionalists objecting...
  • PomonaPomona Shipmate
    Signaller wrote: »
    Gramps49 wrote: »
    My wife, who was raised as Christian Scientist learned to begin the prayer with "Our Father/Mother"
    My mother's family were Christian Scientists (in the UK) from the 1920s to the 1990s, and never came across such a usage, so I presume it is a recent thing.

    It sounds almost more Mormon to me, though modern Mormon leadership have been doing their best to suppress discussions of Heavenly Mother in current teachings. In terms of attracting converts I would have thought that having a Heavenly Mother would make Mormonism more attractive, though probably not while women cannot receive the priesthood (which in Mormonism is very different to in other denominations - all adult men receive it and it's a lay office not clergy).
  • ForthviewForthview Shipmate
    If Christians believe that Christ is indeed God (second person of the Trinity) and Christ gave as a model prayer 'Our Father' what is wrong with using that ?
    I accept that some people have not known for various reasons a father's love but some people have never lived in a house so should we not use the word 'house' in case it upsets someone ? The same could be said about practically any thing or person which some of us will either not have experienced personally or will have bad memories of.
  • Would it not be simpler to start the prayer “Our God, who art in heaven”
    Simpler, perhaps, but not quite the same, as the relationship aspect is missing, and that seems important.

    Forthview wrote: »
    If Christians believe that Christ is indeed God (second person of the Trinity) and Christ gave as a model prayer 'Our Father' what is wrong with using that ?
    I don’t think it’s so much that it’s “wrong,” as it is acknowledging that for some people, because of their lived experiences, “Father” may be a stumbling block. And we’ve been counseled to be mindful of those things that may be stumbling blocks for others.

    As has been said a number of times already, including by you, it’s a model prayer. To me, that means Jesus expected his disciples to follow the model—or, if you will, the pattern—but using words that are authentically their own.

  • BroJamesBroJames Purgatory Host
    edited July 2023
    Forthview wrote: »
    I<snip>
    I accept that some people have not known for various reasons a father's love <snip>

    For some people their experience of a human father is hugely worse than not having known a father’s love. They may have been physically harmed and severely psychologically traumatised. I wouldn’t advocate not using ‘Our Father…’ because for others it is hugely positive, but I think it’s right to be aware of and sensitive to those for whom the associations with the word are fear, violence or abuse.
  • CameronCameron Shipmate
    I don’t get it. I did not have experience of a good relationship with my father (quite the reverse), but I saw enough of other people’s families to realise it was possible - and to wish that I had the same. I think other people filled that space for me, as maybe God - in prayer - has also.

    Moreover, I worry about the idea that we might have personal experience of one bad individual, and because of that eliminate the mention of anyone who shares a particular characteristic with them. That feels completely wrong.
  • Gramps49 wrote: »
    The bishop of York has raised the issue that the Our Father of the Lord's prayer problematic, primarily because some people have never known a caring father--suffering abuse from the person they knew as Dad, Story here

    I tend to think it also raises the question of the patriarchy of the prayer. My wife, who was raised as Christian Scientist learned to begin the prayer with "Our Father/Mother" Took me a while to see their point.

    What say you?

    I say it's the Archbishop of York.

    He's sort of next to the Archbishop of Canterbury in the pecking order.

    But then the Pope is the 'Bishop of Rome.'

    I'll get me coat.
  • PomonaPomona Shipmate
    Cameron wrote: »
    I don’t get it. I did not have experience of a good relationship with my father (quite the reverse), but I saw enough of other people’s families to realise it was possible - and to wish that I had the same. I think other people filled that space for me, as maybe God - in prayer - has also.

    Moreover, I worry about the idea that we might have personal experience of one bad individual, and because of that eliminate the mention of anyone who shares a particular characteristic with them. That feels completely wrong.

    This may come as a shock to you, but some survivors of abuse at the hands of their fathers feel differently to you. Also, absolutely nobody has suggesed eliminating the mention of fatherhood.
  • DafydDafyd Hell Host
    edited July 2023
    Would it not be simpler to start the prayer “Our God, who art in heaven”
    I think for most of us who didn't grow up in polytheistic cultures, God is something of an empty signifier until it's fleshed out by metaphor and analogy.
    But of course that doesn't mean that any one metaphor or analogy should be regarded as obligatory for all audiences and contexts.
  • CameronCameron Shipmate
    Pomona wrote: »
    Cameron wrote: »
    I don’t get it. I did not have experience of a good relationship with my father (quite the reverse), but I saw enough of other people’s families to realise it was possible - and to wish that I had the same. I think other people filled that space for me, as maybe God - in prayer - has also.

    Moreover, I worry about the idea that we might have personal experience of one bad individual, and because of that eliminate the mention of anyone who shares a particular characteristic with them. That feels completely wrong.

    This may come as a shock to you, but some survivors of abuse at the hands of their fathers feel differently to you. Also, absolutely nobody has suggesed eliminating the mention of fatherhood.

    Thank you for sharing your experience, and yes, all of us who have had damaging relationships with our fathers are broken, but in different ways.

    Nevertheless, it is difficult to see how the thread is not, at least in part, about finding ways to avoid saying ‘father’ - some posts offer explicit alternatives.
  • Nick TamenNick Tamen Shipmate
    edited July 2023
    Cameron wrote: »
    Pomona wrote: »
    Cameron wrote: »
    I don’t get it. I did not have experience of a good relationship with my father (quite the reverse), but I saw enough of other people’s families to realise it was possible - and to wish that I had the same. I think other people filled that space for me, as maybe God - in prayer - has also.

    Moreover, I worry about the idea that we might have personal experience of one bad individual, and because of that eliminate the mention of anyone who shares a particular characteristic with them. That feels completely wrong.

    This may come as a shock to you, but some survivors of abuse at the hands of their fathers feel differently to you. Also, absolutely nobody has suggesed eliminating the mention of fatherhood.
    Nevertheless, it is difficult to see how the thread is not, at least in part, about finding ways to avoid saying ‘father’ - some posts offer explicit alternatives.
    There’s a difference between offering some alternatives and effectively banning the use of “Father.”

    I don’t think anyone is suggesting the latter—“Father” is going to continue to be the default, and I don’t think anyone is suggesting you shouldn’t use it if it carries positive meaning for you. What is being suggested is making room for alternatives for those for whom “Father” does carry negative meaning, instead of just telling those folks to deal with it. And those alternatives just might enrich the understandings of the rest of us.

    Simon Toad wrote: »
    I was practicing a hymn yesterday evening, and one ewetube version of the song had changed most of the lyrics into non-gendered language. But they left Lord alone. I thought that was weird. Maybe we should just go back to Latin.
    The current denominational practice in my tribe is to use inclusive language for people and expansive language for God. Inclusive language means not using a masculine generic and avoiding language that may exclude some people. Expansive language about God means not eliminating all masculine language referring to God, but balancing that language with other language—particularly scriptural language—that can expand our understanding of God.

    With regard to “Lord,” the position has been that it is so rooted in Scripture, both as a substitute for the Name of the God of Israel and as a claim as to who Jesus is, that it needs to be preserved. Likewise as to “Father, Son and Holy Spirit.” But that doesn’t mean other language can’t be used where appropriate as well.

  • CameronCameron Shipmate
    Nick Tamen wrote: »
    Cameron wrote: »
    Pomona wrote: »
    Cameron wrote: »
    I don’t get it. I did not have experience of a good relationship with my father (quite the reverse), but I saw enough of other people’s families to realise it was possible - and to wish that I had the same. I think other people filled that space for me, as maybe God - in prayer - has also.

    Moreover, I worry about the idea that we might have personal experience of one bad individual, and because of that eliminate the mention of anyone who shares a particular characteristic with them. That feels completely wrong.

    This may come as a shock to you, but some survivors of abuse at the hands of their fathers feel differently to you. Also, absolutely nobody has suggesed eliminating the mention of fatherhood.
    Nevertheless, it is difficult to see how the thread is not, at least in part, about finding ways to avoid saying ‘father’ - some posts offer explicit alternatives.
    There’s a difference between offering some alternatives and effectively banning the use of “Father.”

    I don’t think anyone is suggesting the latter—“Father” is going to continue to be the default, and I don’t think anyone is suggesting you shouldn’t use it if it carries positive meaning for you. What is being suggested is making room for alternatives for those for whom “Father” does carry negative meaning, instead of just telling those folks to deal with it. And those alternatives just might enrich the understandings of the rest of us.

    Simon Toad wrote: »
    I was practicing a hymn yesterday evening, and one ewetube version of the song had changed most of the lyrics into non-gendered language. But they left Lord alone. I thought that was weird. Maybe we should just go back to Latin.
    The current denominational practice in my tribe is to use inclusive language for people and expansive language for God. Inclusive language means not using a masculine generic and avoiding language that may exclude some people. Expansive language about God means not eliminating all masculine language referring to God, but balancing that language with other language—particularly scriptural language—that can expand our understanding of God.

    With regard to “Lord,” the position has been that it is so rooted in Scripture, both as a substitute for the Name of the God of Israel and as a claim as to who Jesus is, that it needs to be preserved. Likewise as to “Father, Son and Holy Spirit.” But that doesn’t mean other language can’t be used where appropriate as well.

    I didn’t suggest that anyone should ‘just deal with it’; instead I was trying to find a place for my own experience of a word that could have been a horror for me, but was redeemed. All of which led me to express confusion and concern about the focus of the debate and what that might mean. So I am glad to learn from different experiences.

    However, I now don’t understand how the expansive approach you outline, which uses masculine and other language, would not leave people ‘just dealing with’ the word ‘father’ in amongst the rest.
  • Gramps49Gramps49 Shipmate
    I had two friends who chose not to become fathers because of their experiences with their fathers. They did not want to pass the father's abusive behaviors on. I aways thought that was too bad because they were great friends. I never knew what was happening in the family until much later.

    I want to pick up on what Nick said. As I understand it, he said we should be careful not to create stumbling blocks for others. This is what Paul sort of says when he said while Christians could eat meat (that had been offered to idols) we should refrain from this if it would be an offense to someone who objects to it.

    I remember once participating in a sermon series on the Ten Commandments. The command I had be assigned was: Honor your father and mother. The week before the sermon, I counselled three people who had abusive parents. They certainly changed what I had been planning to preach. That was over 40 years ago, so I cannot remember the details now.

    While the statement of the Archbishop seems like a throwaway line to some people on this thread, it seemed like a serious comment to several news sources. I just cannot discount it.
  • Cameron wrote: »
    Nick Tamen wrote: »
    Cameron wrote: »
    Pomona wrote: »
    Cameron wrote: »
    I don’t get it. I did not have experience of a good relationship with my father (quite the reverse), but I saw enough of other people’s families to realise it was possible - and to wish that I had the same. I think other people filled that space for me, as maybe God - in prayer - has also.

    Moreover, I worry about the idea that we might have personal experience of one bad individual, and because of that eliminate the mention of anyone who shares a particular characteristic with them. That feels completely wrong.

    This may come as a shock to you, but some survivors of abuse at the hands of their fathers feel differently to you. Also, absolutely nobody has suggesed eliminating the mention of fatherhood.
    Nevertheless, it is difficult to see how the thread is not, at least in part, about finding ways to avoid saying ‘father’ - some posts offer explicit alternatives.
    There’s a difference between offering some alternatives and effectively banning the use of “Father.”

    I don’t think anyone is suggesting the latter—“Father” is going to continue to be the default, and I don’t think anyone is suggesting you shouldn’t use it if it carries positive meaning for you. What is being suggested is making room for alternatives for those for whom “Father” does carry negative meaning, instead of just telling those folks to deal with it. And those alternatives just might enrich the understandings of the rest of us.

    Simon Toad wrote: »
    I was practicing a hymn yesterday evening, and one ewetube version of the song had changed most of the lyrics into non-gendered language. But they left Lord alone. I thought that was weird. Maybe we should just go back to Latin.
    The current denominational practice in my tribe is to use inclusive language for people and expansive language for God. Inclusive language means not using a masculine generic and avoiding language that may exclude some people. Expansive language about God means not eliminating all masculine language referring to God, but balancing that language with other language—particularly scriptural language—that can expand our understanding of God.

    With regard to “Lord,” the position has been that it is so rooted in Scripture, both as a substitute for the Name of the God of Israel and as a claim as to who Jesus is, that it needs to be preserved. Likewise as to “Father, Son and Holy Spirit.” But that doesn’t mean other language can’t be used where appropriate as well.

    I didn’t suggest that anyone should ‘just deal with it’; instead I was trying to find a place for my own experience of a word that could have been a horror for me, but was redeemed.
    My apologies. That “just telling folks to deal with it” was intended to be a more general observation, and wasn't directed at you or prompted by what you said. I’m sorry I didn’t make that clear.

    However, I now don’t understand how the expansive approach you outline, which uses masculine and other language, would not leave people ‘just dealing with’ the word ‘father’ in amongst the rest.
    Fair point. I think the idea is that it’s the exclusive use of “Father” or of masculine terms that is particularly problematic. If other terms or images are used, then someone who finds “Father” difficult hopefully hears or is given the opportunity to use other ways of referring to or addressing God that balance that out. Similarly, I’ve often been in services where t people are invited to pray the Lord’s Prayer in the language most comfortable or familiar to them, which lets people know it okay substitute another word for “Father” if they want to—not to mention dealing with debts/trespasses/sins or those whose first language isn’t English.

  • ForthviewForthview Shipmate
    I agree that Jesus suggests rather than orders the use of 'father' which is to me a much more homely word than 'God' expressing a really close relationship.I quite accept that some people may have had an unfortunate relationship with their own father but the use of this word in the Lord's prayer can help us to learn that not all fathers are with type of person with whom we have had an unpleasant or unfortunate relationship.
  • Forthview wrote: »
    I agree that Jesus suggests rather than orders the use of 'father' which is to me a much more homely word than 'God' expressing a really close relationship.
    FYI, that words means something different on my side of The Pond than it does on your side. :wink: (It took me a while to work out what Tolkien meant in The Hobbit when he described Rivendell as “the Last Homely House.”)

    I quite accept that some people may have had an unfortunate relationship with their own father but the use of this word in the Lord's prayer can help us to learn that not all fathers are with type of person with whom we have had an unpleasant or unfortunate relationship.
    Yes, it can. But I don’t think that’s the kind of thing we can insist on. We can hope it will help us learn, but we can’t force that learning. And for some people, it will be a much harder lesson than for others. And even then, it may the sort of thing we know with our heads, but to which we still have a visceral reaction.

  • ForthviewForthview Shipmate
    Nick Tamen what does 'homely' mean on your side of the Pond ?
    To me it expresses a feeling of being comfortable and 'at home' in a relatively safe place.
  • Nick TamenNick Tamen Shipmate
    edited July 2023
    Forthview wrote: »
    Nick Tamen what does 'homely' mean on your side of the Pond ?
    To me it expresses a feeling of being comfortable and 'at home' in a relatively safe place.
    It means plain or unattractive, usually referring to a person’s appearance. At least in my part of the US, for a comfortable or “at home” feeling, you’d say “homey” or “homelike.”

    /tangent

  • PomonaPomona Shipmate
    Cameron wrote: »
    Pomona wrote: »
    Cameron wrote: »
    I don’t get it. I did not have experience of a good relationship with my father (quite the reverse), but I saw enough of other people’s families to realise it was possible - and to wish that I had the same. I think other people filled that space for me, as maybe God - in prayer - has also.

    Moreover, I worry about the idea that we might have personal experience of one bad individual, and because of that eliminate the mention of anyone who shares a particular characteristic with them. That feels completely wrong.

    This may come as a shock to you, but some survivors of abuse at the hands of their fathers feel differently to you. Also, absolutely nobody has suggesed eliminating the mention of fatherhood.

    Thank you for sharing your experience, and yes, all of us who have had damaging relationships with our fathers are broken, but in different ways.

    Nevertheless, it is difficult to see how the thread is not, at least in part, about finding ways to avoid saying ‘father’ - some posts offer explicit alternatives.

    I didn't share my experience anywhere in that comment.
  • finelinefineline Shipmate, Host Emeritus
    The 'plain appearance' use of homely seems to be just a extension of the simple homelike meaning, but Brits have extended the meaning to cosy, while North Americans use it more to mean plain in appearance. In Anne of Green Gables, Rachel Lynde declares that Anne is homely.

    I imagine that as society incorporates gender neutral terminology more, 'parent' may become a term to address a parent with, like 'father' and 'mother.' Certainly non-binary people are actively looking for non-gender-specific terms to refer to themselves. I use 'parent' sometimes in my personal prayers.

    As someone who grew up with a very abusive mother, I actually like the idea of God as a mother, to be the loving mother I never had, and I know some people who had abusive fathers see the father aspect in that way. So it can go both ways, for both mothers and fathers, and to me there is definitely a need to go beyond specific gender roles. And the Bible of course has motherly imagery of God as well as fatherly, so I can see, when we pray the Lord's prayer aloud, it could be a case of people praying the parent they choose, in the same way as people can pray it in their own language, and even in English some pray 'thy,' feeling more of a connection with God when using thou and thy, while others pray 'you,' finding that a more natural pronoun.
  • It may well be possible to change Our Father to Our God, or something else, given what people have said about emotional and other issues with the word father, but where does that leave churches with a set liturgy?

    ISTM that it would be pretty well impossible to impose an alternative on the C of E, the Roman Catholics, and the Orthodox - and maybe many Lutheran churches as well.

    Are other churches (Baptist, Methodist, URC, and so on) able to alter things at will, for instance if a congregation decided to go with Our God in heaven for the Lord's Prayer?
  • Nick TamenNick Tamen Shipmate
    edited July 2023
    It may well be possible to change Our Father to Our God, or something else, given what people have said about emotional and other issues with the word father, but where does that leave churches with a set liturgy?

    ISTM that it would be pretty well impossible to impose an alternative on the C of E, the Roman Catholics, and the Orthodox - and maybe many Lutheran churches as well.
    Well, for one Anglican church, you might check out the alternative version of the Lord’s Prayer in A New Zealand Prayer Book | He Karakia Mihinare o Aotearoa (page 181 in the attached pdf, which starts on page 167).

    I think that instead of “impose” an alternative, the better way to approach it is “permit” an alternative. That is to say can an alternative be used in a particular service (as in A New Zealand Prayer Book), or by individuals even when others are using the traditional words?

    As I noted above, I’ve been in services where people are invited—either by a notice in the bulletin/service sheet or through the presider’s introduction to the prayer (or both)—to pray the Lord’s Prayer in the way most comfortable or familiar to them. The vast majority will pray using the traditional words, as that is what’s comfortable and familiar to most people. But other worshippers have been explicitly told it’s okay if, for example, they want to use a word other than “Father,” or even a language other than English.

    Most of the time, my experience is you can’t even tell that some people are using different words—unless some go for “debts/debtors” while others go for “trespasses.” But even when you can tell, dare I say there is something of Pentecost about it; you know that you’re all praying the same prayer, but using different words to pray it.

  • Bishops FingerBishops Finger Shipmate
    edited July 2023
    Thanks @Nick Tamen - yes, the word *permit* is far better than *impose*, and maybe NZ is showing the way forward...after all, many churches allow the use of s contemporary-language version, as well as the *traditional* one.
  • CameronCameron Shipmate
    Pomona wrote: »
    Cameron wrote: »
    Pomona wrote: »
    Cameron wrote: »
    I don’t get it. I did not have experience of a good relationship with my father (quite the reverse), but I saw enough of other people’s families to realise it was possible - and to wish that I had the same. I think other people filled that space for me, as maybe God - in prayer - has also.

    Moreover, I worry about the idea that we might have personal experience of one bad individual, and because of that eliminate the mention of anyone who shares a particular characteristic with them. That feels completely wrong.

    This may come as a shock to you, but some survivors of abuse at the hands of their fathers feel differently to you. Also, absolutely nobody has suggesed eliminating the mention of fatherhood.

    Thank you for sharing your experience, and yes, all of us who have had damaging relationships with our fathers are broken, but in different ways.

    Nevertheless, it is difficult to see how the thread is not, at least in part, about finding ways to avoid saying ‘father’ - some posts offer explicit alternatives.

    I didn't share my experience anywhere in that comment.

    I don’t understand. I thought you had experience of working or talking with some survivors of abuse, otherwise it’s hard to see the basis for your comment.
  • PomonaPomona Shipmate
    Cameron wrote: »
    Pomona wrote: »
    Cameron wrote: »
    Pomona wrote: »
    Cameron wrote: »
    I don’t get it. I did not have experience of a good relationship with my father (quite the reverse), but I saw enough of other people’s families to realise it was possible - and to wish that I had the same. I think other people filled that space for me, as maybe God - in prayer - has also.

    Moreover, I worry about the idea that we might have personal experience of one bad individual, and because of that eliminate the mention of anyone who shares a particular characteristic with them. That feels completely wrong.

    This may come as a shock to you, but some survivors of abuse at the hands of their fathers feel differently to you. Also, absolutely nobody has suggesed eliminating the mention of fatherhood.

    Thank you for sharing your experience, and yes, all of us who have had damaging relationships with our fathers are broken, but in different ways.

    Nevertheless, it is difficult to see how the thread is not, at least in part, about finding ways to avoid saying ‘father’ - some posts offer explicit alternatives.

    I didn't share my experience anywhere in that comment.

    I don’t understand. I thought you had experience of working or talking with some survivors of abuse, otherwise it’s hard to see the basis for your comment.

    Oh sorry, I think there's just been confusion about what you meant. I understood "your experience" as meaning my own personal experience of abuse - which I hadn't mentioned.

    I will say that it is quite widely documented that some people have difficulties with the idea of God as Father due to abuse - this is not at all a new concept, and not something that only eg a social worker would know.
  • TelfordTelford Shipmate
    In the gospel according to John, Jesus refers to God as being The Father on many occasions. I will always regard God as being The Father
  • PomonaPomona Shipmate
    Telford wrote: »
    In the gospel according to John, Jesus refers to God as being The Father on many occasions. I will always regard God as being The Father

    But the whole point of the Trinity is that God is not only the Father. Jesus also refers to God as the Holy Spirit.
  • KarlLBKarlLB Shipmate
    Pomona wrote: »
    Telford wrote: »
    In the gospel according to John, Jesus refers to God as being The Father on many occasions. I will always regard God as being The Father

    But the whole point of the Trinity is that God is not only the Father. Jesus also refers to God as the Holy Spirit.

    Which is also a potential issue with changing "Our Father" to "Our God". Not that I have a good solution; Our Parent sounds weird and you can get very tied up with alternative descriptors for the First Person of the Trinity which always seem to teeter on the edge of an accusation of one heresy or another.

    Does reclaiming the original term with something like "Perfect Father" have any legs?
  • finelinefineline Shipmate, Host Emeritus
    My point about 'our parent' is that it may well reach a point where it's the norm, and no longer feels odd, due to language changing to incorporate non-binary people. It's currently not used in a widespread way to actually address a parent, but it could be in the future, Or maybe a completely new word will be created.
  • fineline wrote: »
    My point about 'our parent' is that it may well reach a point where it's the norm, and no longer feels odd, due to language changing to incorporate non-binary people. It's currently not used in a widespread way to actually address a parent, but it could be in the future,
    Not unlike how “siblings” is becoming a more common alternative to “brothers and sisters” as a way to address or refer to people.

  • Gramps49Gramps49 Shipmate
    The one point that Jesus made in using: abba or אבא which means Daddy in Hebrew is how informal and intimate it is.

    This was unlike the formal Hebrew for Father which would be האב.

    The above alternative suggestions seem to miss that nuance.

    How can we capture that point?
  • Gill HGill H Shipmate
    edited July 2023
    Nick Tamen wrote: »
    As I noted above, I’ve been in services where people are invited—either by a notice in the bulletin/service sheet or through the presider’s introduction to the prayer (or both)—to pray the Lord’s Prayer in the way most comfortable or familiar to them. The vast majority will pray using the traditional words, as that is what’s comfortable and familiar to most people. But other worshippers have been explicitly told it’s okay if, for example, they want to use a word other than “Father,” or even a language other than English.

    Most of the time, my experience is you can’t even tell that some people are using different words—unless some go for “debts/debtors” while others go for “trespasses.” But even when you can tell, dare I say there is something of Pentecost about it; you know that you’re all praying the same prayer, but using different words to pray it.

    The problem comes when the pauses are in a different place. In German the prayer ends a whole line earlier than in English, as we noticed when going to various churches in Germany!

    Our service book has the traditional version printed in English and Welsh, although few people here would use the Welsh version. Hugal tends to use the modern English version from memory, which does sound rather unusual as no-one else is (the modern version didn't turn up in Wales until the early 80s, so far too late for me and others of my vintage to get it imprinted in my brain!)

    Fixed quoting code. BroJames, Purgatory Host
  • Gill H wrote: »
    Nick Tamen wrote: »
    As I noted above, I’ve been in services where people are invited—either by a notice in the bulletin/service sheet or through the presider’s introduction to the prayer (or both)—to pray the Lord’s Prayer in the way most comfortable or familiar to them. The vast majority will pray using the traditional words, as that is what’s comfortable and familiar to most people. But other worshippers have been explicitly told it’s okay if, for example, they want to use a word other than “Father,” or even a language other than English.

    Most of the time, my experience is you can’t even tell that some people are using different words—unless some go for “debts/debtors” while others go for “trespasses.” But even when you can tell, dare I say there is something of Pentecost about it; you know that you’re all praying the same prayer, but using different words to pray it.
    The problem comes when the pauses are in a different place.
    In my experience, that’s not a problem if you decide to look at it as a feature rather than as a bug. But it does require people being willing to wait and to view it as No Big Deal.

    FWIW, I’m used to this—I’m Presbyterian, and we use traditionally use “debts/debtors.” At weddings and funerals and other occasions when there are more than a few people in the congregation who aren’t Presbyterian, there are always those who who use “trespasses.” We get very used to waiting after we say “as we forgive our debtors” while others say “as we forgive those who trespass against us.”

    In German the prayer ends a whole line earlier than in English, as we noticed when going to various churches in Germany!
    I wonder, is that a German-English difference or a Protestant-Catholic difference? In Catholic usage, the last line (“for the kingdom . . .”) isn’t part of the Our Father proper, but is said a little bit later, at least in the Mass.

  • GwaiGwai Epiphanies Host
    Gramps49 wrote: »
    The one point that Jesus made in using: abba or אבא which means Daddy in Hebrew is how informal and intimate it is.

    This was unlike the formal Hebrew for Father which would be האב.

    The above alternative suggestions seem to miss that nuance.

    How can we capture that point?

    Father is extremely formal too. That point is already utterly lost by the English original.

    I personally say parent. Gendering god feels bizarre and unnecessary to me. But I don't tell others what to say. My priest prays the prayer as written in the bulletin but regularly says "father and mother" for God in other places. My kids pray the prayer as written when they say anything aloud. If we all say what helps us connect to God, that's good enough surely.
  • Gwai wrote: »
    Gramps49 wrote: »
    The one point that Jesus made in using: abba or אבא which means Daddy in Hebrew is how informal and intimate it is.

    This was unlike the formal Hebrew for Father which would be האב.

    The above alternative suggestions seem to miss that nuance.

    How can we capture that point?

    Father is extremely formal too. That point is already utterly lost by the English original.
    And in the Greek original, which has Πάτερ/Pater. While Jesus is recorded as calling God “Abba” once (and Paul twice), it’s not used in the text of Lord’s Prayer.

    If we all say what helps us connect to God, that's good enough surely.
    This.

  • ForthviewForthview Shipmate
    I'm intrigued by gill H's statement that the Lord's prayer ends a line earlier in German than in English.
    About 60 years ago both the Catholic and the Lutheran churches came up with a common version of this prayer.
    In all that time it has only been changed once namely in the first line

    Vater unser,(der Du bist) im Himmel Our father (who art) in heaven
    Geheiligt werde Dein Name Hallowed be Thy name
    Dein Reich komme Thy kingdom come
    Dein Wille geschehe im Himmel Thy will be done in Heaven as it is on earth
    so wie auf Erden
    Unser taegliches Brot gib uns heute give us this day our daily bread
    Und vergib uns unsere Suende forgive us our sins
    Wie auch wir vergeben unseren Schuldigern as we forgive those who sin against us
    Fuehre uns nicht in Versuchung lead us not into temptation
    Sondern erloese uns von dem Boesen but deliver us from evil

    To those words taken from the Gospels the Lutherans usually add
    Denn Dein ist das Reich und die Kraft und die Herrlichkeit in Ewigkeit.Amen
    For Thine is theKingdom,the Power and the Glory Amen

    Catholics follow the Lord's prayer with a special prayer called the Embolism and then add the extra bit which Lutherans say at the end of the Lord's prayer.
  • EnochEnoch Shipmate
    I don't recommend using the term 'embolism' in English. To most of those that have ever heard of the word at all, it means a blocked artery.


    On the more substantial question, I recognise there may be some people whose experiences mean that for them the word 'father' is a problem. Nevertheless, first, it's the word Jesus used and gave us. Second, it's a term that for a lot more people has immense positive resonances. Even for many of those whose own fathers were problematical or absent, it represents a fatherhood such as they would like to have experienced it. God as their heavenly Father speaks of what they wish they'd known.

    It would strike me as very wrong if one small, but possibly fairly vociferous, minority were allowed to demand that everybody else forgoes something that for the rest is valuable, important and hallowed by Jesus's own authority, just to fit in with their particular sensitivity.


    @Gwai 'Father' might register as fairly formal now, or where you are, but it wasn't that unusual when I was younger in some families for children to address their parents as 'Father' and 'Mother' rather than 'Dad' and 'Mum', though that was probably a bit regional. And as I don't know where you are, it's quite possible all four of those words aren't usual where you are.

  • GwaiGwai Epiphanies Host
    @Enoch I am not persuaded that implies the words were less formal as much as the people more formal, but as @Nick Tamen pointed out, it's irrelevant anyway. Jesus used the relatively formal Πάτερ/Pater in the Greek also.
  • Enoch wrote: »
    It would strike me as very wrong if one small, but possibly fairly vociferous, minority were allowed to demand that everybody else forgoes something that for the rest is valuable, important and hallowed by Jesus's own authority, just to fit in with their particular sensitivity.
    That’s a straw man, it seems to me, as I am not aware that anyone has suggested that, much less demanded it. All that I’ve seen suggested is that room be made for those who find “Father” problematic to use another word or words that are as meaningful to them as “Father” is to most of us.

    And at the risk of being a broken record, if being hallowed by Jesus’s own authority is being invoked, it seems worth pointing out once again that Jesus gave us the prayer as a model of how to pray, not as specific words that we must adhere to. He said “pray like this,” not “pray this.” One could argue that we’re closer to doing what he taught us to do when we take the pattern and put it in our own words than when we all insist on saying the same words.

  • ArethosemyfeetArethosemyfeet Shipmate, Heaven Host
    Forthview wrote: »
    =

    Catholics follow the Lord's prayer with a special prayer called the Embolism

    Is that the "deliver us, Lord, from every evil, and grant us peace in our day..."?
  • finelinefineline Shipmate, Host Emeritus
    Enoch wrote: »
    I don't recommend using the term 'embolism' in English. To most of those that have ever heard of the word at all, it means a blocked artery.

    Catholics have been using this term in English for centuries. I don't think they are going to stop at your recommendation. Plenty of words with specific religious meanings have other meanings.

  • Gramps49Gramps49 Shipmate
    When I was studying the sociology of families way back when the dinosaurs were still roaming the earth, I remember the professor pointing out richer families often use Father or Mother, but middle-class families used Dad or Mom, lower class families would use old man, or old lady. This was in America, and I can't remember if he was joking or not.
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