Your Kingdom come
“Your kingdom come, Your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven” (Matthew 6:10).
Unpack the Lord’s Prayer and you will find references to:
- God’s nature and character
- Caring for daily physical necessities
- Sin and forgiveness
- Grace-filled living and social justice
- Temptation and deliverance
- Adoration and worship
- And, yes, even world evangelism
Pray the Lord’s Prayer in a meaningful way, and two phrases at the beginning -- “your kingdom come, your will be done on earth” -- unequivocally address the need for world evangelization.
For 2,000 years Christians have memorized and recited the Lord’s Prayer. Too often though, we have repeated those marvelous words in sing-song fashion with little thought to their deep meaning. As a result, the words of Matthew 6:10 rarely bring global missionary outreach to people’s minds. That’s too bad, since asking for God’s Kingdom to be realized and for His will to be done all over the earth implies at the very least Gospel proclamation to all unreached people groups.
In terms of God’s will, sermons on the Lord’s Prayer generally use Matthew 6:10 to talk about righteous living and perhaps even social justice. Those things are in God’s will, but doesn’t His will include even more? Doesn’t God ask His people to make Christlike disciples in the nations? Telling the story of Jesus at the “ends of the earth” is, after all, an unambiguous scriptural command. Matthew 6:10 also feeds naturally into Matthew 9:38, which is powerfully rendered by The Messageas, “What a huge harvest! . . . On your knees and pray for harvest hands!”
As long as there are people on earth who know nothing of the true God, God’s will is not being fully done. As long as people serve other gods -- whether those be “worthless idols” (Jonah 2:8) or gods of wealth, power or pleasure -- God’s kingdom will not be fully come. Thus, praying Matthew 6:10 without world evangelism in mind misses a key thought of that verse.
The Great Commission of Matthew 28:19-20 -- “Go, make disciples of all nations” -- does not appear out of the blue. In teaching His followers to pray, Jesus used some phrases that could sensitize them to the Father’s wish that the whole world be evangelized. Thus, it can be said that Jesus used even the words of the model prayer He taught His followers to prepare the ground for the Great Commission.
We are often reminded that prayer should consist of more than handing our wish lists to God. Prayer is essentially about letting Him shape us. As we repeat the words of Matthew 6:10 -- “Your kingdom come; your will be done on earth” -- we must allow the Holy Spirit to truly turn them into the desire of our hearts. Every time we pray the Lord’s Prayer, we must allow its majestic words to increase our passion for world evangelism.