The
true Solomon is our Lord Jesus Christ
Because Solomon had built a temple to the Lord – a prototype and an image of the future Church, the Lord’s body, which is why the Gospel says Destroy this temple and in three days I will raise it up – because the Solomon of history had built that temple, our Lord Jesus Christ, the true Solomon, built a temple for himself. The name ‘Solomon’ means ‘Bringer of Peace’, and our Lord, the true Solomon, is the true bringer of peace, which is why the Apostle says He is our peace, who has made both into one. He is the true bringer of peace, who has taken two walls coming from different directions and joined them through himself, becoming the cornerstone that unites them: the believers who come from the people of the circumcision and the believers who come from the uncircumcised. He has made one Church from the two peoples, he has become their cornerstone and their peacemaker.
So because the historical Solomon, son of
David and Bathsheba, king of Israel, was prefiguring this peacemaker when he
built the Temple, Scripture takes care that you should not think that he
himself was the peacemaker. Scripture shows you another Solomon, by beginning a
psalm with the words, Unless
the Lord builds the house, those who build it labour in vain. So the Lord builds the house, the Lord
Jesus Christ builds a house for himself. Many labour to build it, but if he is
not the architect, in vain
have its builders laboured.
Who are they who work at building it? They
are everyone in the Church who preaches the word of God or administers the
sacraments of God. We all rush around, we all labour, we all build; and before
us, others rushed, laboured, built; but unless
the Lord builds the house, those who build it labour in vain. For this reason, when they saw some of
the people fall, the Apostles, and Paul himself, said: You and your special days and
months and seasons and years! You make me feel I have wasted my time with you. Because he knew that he had been built
up by the Lord from within, he wept over these others because he had worked
among them to no avail.
We
speak in public, but he builds inside. How well do you listen? We can tell.
What do you think of it? He alone knows, who sees your thoughts. It is he who
builds, he who gives advice, he who instils fear, he who opens the
understanding, he who directs your perceptions and leads you to faith; and yet
we too work, as labourers in the harvest.
Source: The Liturgy of the Hours – Office of Readings
From a Discourse on the Psalms by Saint
AugustineImage Credit Waiting for the Word
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