O Lord, our Lord!

The littleness of humanity is transformed by God's overabundant love; fidelity to the Lord, especially in trying times, shows we 'know our place'

On Wednesday, 24 September, illness prevented the Holy Father from con­ducting the General Audience. Cardinal Angelo Sodano, Secretary of State, standing in for the Pope, informed the faithful accordingly and read the Holy Father's Catechesis to them, while the Pope watched the proceedings on televi­sion. At the conclusion, a television link-up with Castel Gandolfo enabled the Holy Father to express his disappointment over not attending the Audience in person, and to impart his final blessing to the pilgrims present. The following are translations of Cardinal Sodano's  announcement and the Holy Father's Cat­echesis on Psalm 8, both written in Italian and read by the Cardinal.

Venerable Brothers in the Episcopate,
Brothers and Sisters in the Lord,
Due to an indisposition, the Holy Fa­ther is unable to be present at this Gen­eral Audience. Let us pray for him to­gether, confident that he will make a speedy recovery.

For his part, the Pope wants you to know that he is watching us on televi­sion, and at the end of this meeting, he will be connected via a television link-up so that he can speak to us. Let us thank him straightaway.

I will now read the text, as the Pope has requested, which he had prepared for this meeting, a commentary on Psalm 8 that extols the greatness of the Lord and the dignity of the human be­ing. Here is the text of the Pope's Mes­sage:

1. In meditating on Psalm 8, a won­derful hymn of praise, we come to the end of our long journey through the Psalms and Canticles that make up the prayerful heart of the Liturgy of Lauds. In these catecheses, we have reflected on 84 biblical prayers whose spiritual in­tensity we have especially tried to em­phasize, without overlooking their poet­ic beauty.

Indeed, the Bible invites us to start our day with a hymn that not only pro­claims the marvels wrought by God and our response of faith, but celebrates them with "music" (cf. Ps 47[46]:8), that is, in a beautiful, luminous way, gentle and strong at the same time.

Psalm 8 is the most splendid example of all; in it, man, engulfed in night, feels like a grain of sand compared to infinity and the boundless space that arches above him, when the moon rises and the stars begin to twinkle in the vast ex­panse of the heavens (cf. v. 4).

God unfolds horizons of sovereignty before man

2. In fact, in the middle of Psalm 8, a twofold experience is described. On the one hand, the human person feels al­most overwhelmed by the grandeur of creation, "the work of the divine fin­gers". This curious phrase replaces the "works of the hands" of God (cf. v. 7), as if to suggest that the Creator had traced a drawing or an embroidery with the shining stars, casting them over the immensity of the firmament.

Yet on the other hand, God bends down to man and crowns him as his viceroy: "you crown him with glory and honour" (v. 6). Indeed, he entrusts the whole universe to this frail creature, so that he may draw from it knowledge and the means for his survival (cf. vv. 7-­9).

The horizon of man's dominion over the other creatures is specified, as it were, recalling the opening page of Gen­esis: flocks, herds, the beasts of the field, the birds of the air, the fish of the sea were entrusted to man so that in giving them a name (cf. Gn 2:19-20), he might discover their profound reality, respect it and transform it through work, perfecting it so that it might be­come a source of beauty and of life. The Psalm makes us aware of our greatness, but also of our responsibility for cre­ation (cf. Wis 9:3).

'Christ fulfilled completely the vocation of man'

3. Reinterpreting Psalm 8, the author of the Letter to the Hebrews discovered in it a deeper understanding of God's plan for humankind. The human voca­tion cannot be restricted to the "here and now" of the earthly world;  if the Psalmist says that God has put all things under man's feet, this means that he also wants him to subdue "the world to come" (Heb 2:5), the "kingdom that cannot be shaken" (12:28). In short, man's call is a "heavenly call" (3:1). God wants "[to bring] to glory" in heaven "many sons" (2:10). In order for this di­vine plan to take place, God had to trace out the life of "a pioneer" (cf. ibid.), in which the human vocation could find its first complete fulfilment. This pioneer is Christ.

The author of the Letter to the He­brews remarked on this subject that the Psalm's words apply in a privileged way to Christ, that is, more specifically to him than to other men. In fact, the Psalmist uses the verb "to make less", saying to God: "you made him for a lit­tle while lower than the angels, you crowned him with glory and honour" (cf. Ps 8:6; Heb 2:6). For ordinary peo­ple this verb is inappropriate: they have not been "made lower" than the angels since they were never above them. In­stead, for Christ it is the right verb, be­cause he was above the angels as the Son of God, and was made lower when he became man; then he was crowned with glory in his Resurrection. Thus, Christ fulfilled completely the vocation of man and, the author explains, he has done this "for every one" (Heb 2:9).

The glory with which God crowns us is a reward for steadfast fidelity

4. In this light, St Ambrose comments on the Psalm and applies it to us. He starts with the sentence that describes the "crowning" of man: "you crown him with glory and honour" (v. 6). He sees in that glory, however, the reward that the Lord keeps in store for us, when we shall have overcome the test of tempta­tion.

These are the words of this great Fa­ther of the Church in his Expositio Evangelii secundum Lucam [Exposition of the Gospel according to Luke]: "The Lord has also crowned his beloved with glory and magnificence. That God who desires to distribute crowns, procures temptations: thus, when you are tempt­ed, know that he is preparing a crown for you. Abolish the heroic fight of the martyrs and you will abolish their crowns; abolish their suffering and you will abolish their blessedness" (cf. IV, 41: SAEMO 12, pp. 330-333).

God weaves that "crown of righteous­ness" for us (II Tm 4:8) as the reward for our fidelity to him which we were able to preserve, even when storms bat­ter our heart and mind. But in all sea­sons he is attentive to his beloved crea­ture and wants the divine "image" to shine perpetually in him (cf.  Gn 1:26), so as to radiate a sign of harmony, light and peace in the world.

L'Osservatore Romano October 1, 2003
Reprinted with permission