The Lord had said in the Gospels: “Do not labor for the food that perishes, but for that which endures unto life everlasting, which the Son of Man will give you. For upon him the Father, God Himself, has set His seal. They said therefore to Him, ‘What are we to do in order that we may perform the works of God?’ In answer Jesus said to them, ‘This is the work of God, that you believe in Him whom He has sent.’” When the Lord explained the mystery of His Incarnation and divinity, He also spoke of the doctrine of our faith and our hope, so that we should labor not for the food that perishes, but for that which remains forever, that we should bear in mind that this eternal food was given to us by the Son of God, that we should know that God the Father had set His seal upon the Son of Man, and that we should recognize this as the work of God: to believe in Him whom He has sent. And who is He whom the Father has sent? It is He upon whom the Father has set His seal. And who is it upon whom the Father has set His seal? It is, of course, the Son of Man, that is, He who offers the food of eternal life. And finally, who are they to whom He offers it? It is they who will labor for the food that does not perish. Thus, the labor for this food is at the same time the work of God, namely, to believe in Him whom He has sent.
Hilary of Poitiers, On the Trinity 8.42
But how finely the Divine wisdom has arranged the order of the prayer, in making room, after heavenly things—that is, after the name of God, the will of God and the Kingdom of God—for a petition for earthly needs also! For the Lord had also given the command: “Seek first the Kingdom, and then these things also will be added unto you.” And yet we ought rather to understand Give us our daily bread this day in a spiritual sense. For “our bread” is Christ, because Christ is life and the bread of life: “I am,” He says, “the bread of life,” and a little earlier: “bread is the word of the living God, that descends from heaven”; and further, because His body is also deemed to be in the bread: “This is My body.” Therefore in asking daily bread we ask to live perpetually in Christ and undivided from His body.
Tertullian, On Prayer 6
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