Pastor David Jang takes the petition “Give us today our daily bread” in the Lord’s Prayer as an axis and offers a meticulous interpretation of the kingdom of God and history, matter and spirituality, forgiveness and the Holy Spirit, and the shift from a possession-centered life to a love-centered life. Going beyond our everyday economic needs, this is a theological and practical meditation that deeply reflects on the Christian mode of existence that moves from the having mode to the loving mode through the spirituality of “three loaves of bread” that give life to the other.
Placed at the center of the Lord’s Prayer in Matthew 6, the
petition “Give us today our daily bread” is so familiar that it is easy to let
it slide by as a merely formal line. Yet within Pastor David Jang’s preaching
this verse is re-illuminated as a decisive key that penetrates the Christian’s
ontological purpose, the direction of life, and the entire form of love. He
shows with great care that this prayer is not simply a modest, practical
request of “Give me enough food to live on today,” but a profound theological
appeal offered at the point where history moving toward the kingdom of God, our
concrete economic life, and our love for the other intersect. At the conclusion
of all this interpretation stands the perspectival shift that Pastor David Jang
repeatedly emphasizes: the transition from the having mode to the loving
mode—in other words, the gospel declaration that the essence of life lies not
in “how much we possess” but in “how we love and how we exist.”
The Lord’s Prayer begins by proclaiming two fundamental
premises: “Hallowed be Your name” and “Your kingdom come.” Pastor David Jang
(founder of Olivet University) interprets these two petitions as foundational
propositions that define the purpose of human existence. When we ask why we
exist and where history is heading, Scripture answers clearly. We are to live
so that God’s name is hallowed, God’s kingdom comes, and the will of God—which
has already been perfectly fulfilled in heaven—is realized also on this earth.
Just as Hebrews testifies that “this world is a copy and shadow” of the world
to come, he understands heaven as the substance, and this world as the shadow
and projection of that substance. History, therefore, is not a random wandering
but a great journey being drawn toward the eschatological conclusion of the
kingdom of God already determined in heaven. It is deeply significant that the
next petition of the Lord’s Prayer, “Give us today our daily bread,” is
situated precisely on top of this kind of historical consciousness.
What is striking is that immediately after such a majestic,
cosmic vision is proclaimed, an extremely down-to-earth subject appears—namely,
the issue of bread, rice, and money. “Daily bread” is by no means an abstract
spiritual symbol. As the English “daily bread” renders it, it literally refers
to the bread we eat every day, our daily table, and the living expenses we need
today. Pastor David Jang calls this “a thoroughly honest prayer.” The prayer
God has taught us does not demand an unrealistic spirituality that says, “You
figure out your livelihood on your own.” Rather, it commands, “Ask for what you
need to live. Earnestly ask for the bread you need today.” At the same time,
Deuteronomy 8:3 states clearly that “man does not live on bread alone but on every
word that comes from the mouth of the LORD.” Bread—money and material goods—is
a necessary condition of life, but never a sufficient condition. Biblical
spirituality stands upon this tension: acknowledging the importance of material
things, yet never granting them absolute value. Human beings are to live by the
word, yet that word never ignores our bread-and-butter issues.
Here a unique Greek word that appears in the Lord’s Prayer
begins to reveal its meaning. The word translated “daily” is epiousios, a rare
term used only in the Lord’s Prayer in the entire New Testament. It carries
nuances such as “for today,” “necessary for that day,” and “indispensable for
sustaining existence.” In other words, this prayer is not a petition that tries
to justify greedy accumulation, but a prayer asking for “enough sufficiency to
live this one day by faith”—a measure of abundance that allows us to live in
dependence upon God. However, in Pastor David Jang’s interpretation this
“sufficiency” never ends with my private sufficiency alone. At this point Luke
11 offers a crucial insight.
Luke 11, together with the Lukan version of the Lord’s
Prayer, compresses the central themes of prayer into three: the kingdom of God,
daily bread, and forgiveness. At the front stands the kingdom of God as the
destination and goal of history; at the end stands forgiveness, which
reconstructs all human relationships. And in the very realistic middle sits
“daily bread.” Like a bridge spanning between the two great pillars of God’s
kingdom and forgiveness, the petition for daily bread is positioned in between.
In the process of living for the kingdom of God and forgiving people to restore
broken relationships, the very concrete needs of bread, rice, and money
inevitably press in. God not only allows these material needs themselves to be
subjects of prayer, but also uses these needs to teach us the life of love and
the reality of His kingdom.
To explain the weight of daily bread, Luke continues with
the story of “the man who went to his friend at midnight.” In Jewish society,
knocking on someone’s door at midnight was a serious violation of common sense
and etiquette. Once the door was shut, the day was over, and to knock while the
whole family was lying down in a single room to sleep was practically to invade
the inner circle of the household. Yet a man comes at midnight, bangs on his
friend’s door, and says, “Friend, lend me three loaves of bread.” Not one, not
two, but three. Pastor David Jang assigns theological symbolism to this “three
loaves.” One loaf is enough to satisfy a single meal. Two loaves represent
enough for me to eat now and once more later, a measure of personal margin. But
three loaves signify a surplus that goes beyond myself toward the other—a
portion prepared for someone else. To ask for three loaves is not just to
satisfy “my own hunger,” but to feed “a hungry guest who has just arrived at my
house.” At this moment, the concept of “daily bread” expands dramatically.
Daily bread is not “the bare minimum for me to scrape by,” but “enough for both
me and my neighbor to live as human beings.”
The Jews are a people who carry within themselves the Old
Testament spirit of “lending to many but borrowing from none,” a culture deeply
concerned with honor and propriety and reluctant to cause unnecessary
embarrassment or difficulty to others. For such a Jew to knock on a door at
midnight and ask for three loaves of bread is an audacious decision that defies
common sense. Yet Jesus evaluates this “seemingly rude, persistent plea”—that
is, shameless persistence (gangcheong, 抗請)—in a positive light. “He will not get up and give him the bread
because he is his friend, yet because of the man’s boldness he will get up and
give him as much as he needs.” Pastor David Jang reads here the powerful
driving force of “a love that goes beyond the self toward the other.” What
drives this man onto the midnight streets, to the firmly shut door, and into
the place of unrelenting importunity is not mere material lack, but a desperate
love that wants to feed a hungry guest. That love moves the heart of the friend
who has bread, and in the end he gets up and gives “as much as he needs,”
generously and sufficiently.
At this point Pastor David Jang directly critiques the
having mode that dominates modern civilization. Our everyday language is
saturated with “I have…”—my house, my assets, my résumé, my network, as though
what we possess were identical with our identity and value. But this
possession-centered paradigm structurally presupposes lack. No matter how much
we acquire, it is never enough; we feel we must acquire more to soothe our
anxiety. In contrast, the gospel calls us to move from the having mode to the being
mode, and further to the loving mode. We are to go beyond the level of merely
asking, “How can I exist in a truly human way?” to asking, “How can I exist in
such a way that I willingly empty myself for the sake of the other?” This is
what Pastor David Jang means by the term loving mode. It is a form of life that
moves from daily bread sought just to meet my needs, to the three loaves of
bread that include my neighbor’s needs—a mode of existence that employs my
possessions as channels of love. When this transition actually takes place, we
no longer evaluate life by “how much we have accumulated” but interpret it by
“how deeply we have loved.”
Luke 11 then records the well-known words, “Ask and it will
be given to you; seek and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to
you.” Pastor David Jang does not read this as a generic encouragement to pray,
but as a promise tightly interlocked with the preceding parable of the midnight
friend. The starting point of prayer is the faith that “there truly is a
personal God who answers when we ask.” If God does not exist, human life must
finally end in tragic futility. But once we come to know God, an entirely new
horizon of possibility opens. Prayer is not vague self-suggestion; it is a
concrete act of approaching the Father God who answers. And the promise that
“everyone who asks receives; he who seeks finds; and to him who knocks, the
door will be opened” shows how trustworthy the foundation of our relationship
with God really is.
Luke further unfolds this truth through the relationship
between parents and children. No father, when his son asks for a fish, will
give him a snake instead; no father, when the son asks for an egg, will give
him a scorpion. If sinful human fathers know how to give good gifts to their
children, how much more will our heavenly Father. Then comes the climactic
sentence: “How much more will your Father in heaven give the Holy Spirit to
those who ask Him!” Pastor David Jang presents this verse as the ultimate goal
of prayer. Among the countless gifts we receive through prayer, the most
decisive and precious is the Holy Spirit. In the Old Testament era, when one
person in several centuries received the anointing of the Spirit, the entire
nation turned its attention to that figure. But now the era has dawned in which
anyone who asks may receive the Holy Spirit as a gift. As Romans 8:32 declares,
God has already not spared His own Son but given Him up for us all. If He has
given His Son, there is no reason He would withhold the Holy Spirit or anything
else that we truly need.
Here an important question arises: How are “the prayer for
daily bread” and “the gift of the Holy Spirit” connected? The Holy Spirit is
not merely the Spirit who bestows supernatural gifts; He is the One who
reshapes the very structure of our desires. He dismantles the greed and
self-absorption of the having mode and plants within us the love and
self-emptying of the loving mode. A person who has received the Holy Spirit
begins to ask for daily bread in a fundamentally different way. Instead of
seeking a secure mechanism for personal comfort, a safety net that exists only
for oneself, that person begins to ask boldly for what is needed for the
kingdom of God: to feed the hungry, clothe the naked, and raise up the
oppressed. In other words, the Holy Spirit pours into us the courage to ask for
“three loaves of bread.” He leads us to ask for a sufficiency that can give
life both to ourselves and to others, and to embrace a holy shamelessness that
will knock at the door even at midnight because of love.
In addition, Pastor David Jang offers a symbolic
interpretation of the scene in which Jesus and Peter pay the temple tax. When
Jesus tells Peter, “Go to the lake and throw out your line. Take the first fish
you catch; open its mouth and you will find a four-drachma coin. Take it and
give it to them for my tax and yours,” at the literal level it is a story of
miraculous provision. But he also reads this scene as a spiritual parable: “Go
and gain one person with whom you can solve the problem together.” As the
kingdom of God expands, new needs arise; yet at the same time new co-workers,
new resources, and new relationships follow. When a soul turns to the Lord, it
is not only the salvation of that one person, but also the gaining of a friend
who will dedicate himself together for the kingdom. In this sense, the prayer
for daily bread is also a prayer for people. Not only are financial and
material resources supplied, but companions are added with whom we break bread
and live for the kingdom of God.
In modern capitalist society, Christians stand constantly
on a testing ground. The pressure to own more, the anxiety marketing that says
we are safe only if we have more, and the performance-driven demand to grow
faster have seeped deep into the church as well. Faith itself can easily
degenerate into a functional tool—“How can I use God to design my survival and
success a bit more safely?” It is at precisely this point that Pastor David
Jang’s cry, “Turn from the having mode to the loving mode,” becomes a radical
and challenging declaration. We are to ask for daily bread, but not merely for
ourselves—we are to ask for the kingdom of God and for others. If we have two
coats, one exists for us to wear and the other exists to be given away to
someone else. The three loaves of bread are not for us to gorge ourselves but
to feed the hungry friend who comes at midnight. From this perspective, the
very definition of abundance is fundamentally reconfigured. The truly rich
person is not the one who possesses much, but the one who gives much. As 2
Corinthians 8:9 states, our Lord, though He was rich, became poor for our sake
so that we through His poverty might become truly rich. Those who follow Him
necessarily walk the same trajectory.
Such theological insight only gains real power when it is
embodied in concrete forms of life. When we pray, “Give us today our daily
bread,” we can confess like this: “God, please supply what I need to live
today, and also grant a surplus with which I may feed, clothe, and care for
someone else. Let my rice jar, my wallet, my time, and my talents be not
storage bins for myself alone, but channels for Your kingdom.” At the same
time, we must ask ourselves: “God, am I perhaps clutching to myself some portion
of the daily bread You originally gave me to pass on to someone else?” When the
Holy Spirit shines His light on our conscience and thoughts at this question,
we begin to redesign our everyday patterns of spending, budgeting,
relationships, and time allocation. This redesign is precisely the process of
conversion that moves us from the having mode into the loving mode.
Furthermore, the prayer for daily bread must always lead
into the prayer of forgiveness. By arranging the structure of kingdom of
God–daily bread–forgiveness, Luke shows that a true life of the kingdom cannot
stand unless it deals with both material reality and relational reality
together. To live for the kingdom of God requires the restoration of
relationships, and true restoration is impossible without forgiveness.
Forgiveness is always the choice of the one who is willing to bear loss; it is
the loving decision to extend one’s hand first. In some cases forgiveness may
be an “even more difficult daily bread” than giving away material goods. If
there is someone to whom I need to supply, day after day, a measure of
patience, forbearance, and renewed love, then that too is a crucial need I must
ask of God. “Lord, today as well, please grant me enough of the inner bread of
the heart to love this person again.” Thus daily bread becomes a rich concept
that embraces not only bread, rice, and money but also the invisible resources
of love, forgiveness, and patience.
In the end, the world into which Pastor David Jang’s
preaching invites us is simple, yet at the same time demands a radical
transformation. History flows toward the kingdom of God that has already been
perfectly accomplished in heaven, and we exist as those sent into this world
for that kingdom in the midst of that historical flow. Along the way we must
ask daily for our daily bread. We must ask for what we will eat today, the
money we will use today, and what we need today to fulfill our callings and relationships.
But this prayer must not remain “a prayer for my own survival.” It must become
a petition to be a channel of love that feeds, clothes, and cares for the
hungry, the poor, the marginalized, and the weak, thereby bringing the kingdom
of God nearer. At the summit of all these prayers stands the petition for the
Holy Spirit, who alone makes such a life of love possible within us.
“Give us today our daily bread.” Within this short line are
compressed the kingdom of God and history, economics and spirituality,
forgiveness and the Holy Spirit, the having mode and the loving mode. It is
time to move beyond merely reciting this prayer with our lips and to begin
living it with our whole existence. Looking today at our table and wallet, our
schedule and talents, and the hidden margins of our hearts, we may pray like
this: “God, may the daily bread I ask for always include three loaves of bread
with which to give life to someone else, and may You fill me with the Holy
Spirit so that I can truly give that bread away to the end.” This confession is
the very heart of the Lord’s Prayer as Pastor David Jang testifies to it, and
it is the depth of the gospel contained in the prayer for daily bread.


















