 Give us this day our daily bread. Well, it's epi-oussion in the Greek, and that actually means beyond being, is kind of a translation of it. You could translate the our Father, give us this day our super substantial bread. And Jerome didn't actually know how to translate it because it's a unique Greek word. It's nowhere else in the Bible. It's nowhere else in ancient literature that epi-oussion. And so Jerome hedged his bets and he translated it daily because it's kind of like beyond substantial. So give us kind of everything that we need. He translated it super substantial in the Latin in a different Gospel, right? Because it comes up in Matthew and Luke. So he translated differently in both Gospels. And when we simply say, give us this day our daily bread, we miss the fact that that is actually a Eucharistic prayer. Give us this day our super substantial bread, that which goes beyond what we need, this kind of heavenly bread. And so that is meant to be our daily prayer, this prayer for Jesus as the bread of life.