A private spiritual reflection on the inward altar of the soul, the beauty of silence, worship as joy and gratitude, and the ancient psalmic recognition that existence — God — was before us. The piece links personal inward awareness with Psalm 19, Psalm 8, and the humility of knowing that we are not first, but secondary.
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.
Prayer is often understood as asking for things, but in the Gospels it appears as something quite different. It is not a means of control, but a moment of release — a stepping back from the self and a return to what is real. In prayer, one lets go, sees more clearly, and, however briefly, is set in the right direction.



