There are certain words in religious speech which are used so often that their meaning is easily assumed rather than examined: God, Spirit, light, grace, glory, kingdom, eternal life. They carry great emotional weight, but they are not always used with precision.
Daniel Daddeh’s reading of the Lord’s Prayer is rhetorically clever, but spiritually false. What begins in the Gospels with “Thy” — thy name, thy kingdom, thy will — is quietly transformed into “My”: my desired state, my manifestation, my fulfilment. The result is not a recovery of Christian prayer, but a modern spirituality of acquisition dressed in biblical language.


