Convinced that we no longer have immediate access to the sense of Jesusâ words but must account for the history of its âeffects,â David Clark seeks to trace the meaning of the Lordâs Prayer through the early centuries of the faith. Clark begins by arguing that the prayerâs origin in Jesusâ oral teaching, then traces its transmission and representation in the Gospels of Matthew and Luke and the Didache, then examines the first full commentary on the prayer, that of Tertullian in the third century CE.
Convinced that we no longer have immediate access to the sense of Jesusâ words but must account for the history of its âeffects,â David Clark seeks to trace the meaning of the Lordâs Prayer through the early centuries of the faith. Clark begins by arguing that the prayerâs origin in Jesusâ oral teaching, then traces its transmission and representation in the Gospels of Matthew and Luke and the Didache, then examines the first full commentary on the prayer, that of Tertullian in the third century CE.