Jesus
Prays for Us and in Us and is the Object of Our Prayers
God could give no greater gift to men than to make his Word, through whom he created all things, their head and to join them to him as his members, so that the Word might be both Son of God and son of man, one God with the Father, and one man with all men. The result is that when we speak with God in prayer we do not separate the Son from him, and when the body of the Son prays it does not separate its head from itself: it is the one Savior of his body, our Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of God, who prays for us and in us and is himself the object of our prayers.
He prays for us as
our priest, he prays in us as our head, he is the object of our prayers as our
God. Let us thenrecognize both our voice in his, and his voice in ours. When
something is said, especially in prophecy, about the Lord Jesus Christ that seems
to belong to a condition of lowliness unworthy of God, we must not hesitate to
unite himself with us. Every creature is his servant, for it was through him
that every creature came to be.
We contemplate his
glory and divinity when we listen to these words: In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the
Word was God. He was in the beginning with God. All things were made through
him, and without him nothing was made. Here we gaze on the divinity of the Son
of God. Something supremely great and surpassing all the greatness of his
creatures. Yet in other parts of Scripture we hear him as one sighing, praying,
giving praise and thanks.
We hesitate to
attribute these words to him because our minds are slow to come down to his
humble level when we have just been contemplating him in his divinity. It is as
though we were doing him an injustice in acknowledging in a man the words of
one with whom we spoke when we prayed to God; we are usually at a loss and try
to change the meaning. Yet our minds find nothing in Scripture that does not go
back to him, nothing that will allow us to stray from him.
Our thoughts must
then be awakened to keep their vigil of faith. We must realize that the one
whom we were contemplating a short time before in his nature as God took to
himself the nature of a servant; he was made in the likeness of men and found
to be a man like others; he humbled himself by being obedient even to accepting
death; as he hung on the cross he made the psalmist’s words his own: My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?
We pray to him as
God, he prays for us as a servant. In the first case he is the Creator, in the
second a creature. Himself unchanged, he took to himself our created nature in
order to change it, and made us one man with himself, head and body. We pray
then to him, through him, in him, and we speak along with him and he along with
us.
Source: The Liturgy of the Hours – Office of Readings
From a Commentary on the Psalms by Saint
AugustinePhoto taken from Wikimedia Commons
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