Have mercy on
me, O God, according to your steadfast love;
according to
your abundant mercy blot out my transgressions.
Wash me
thoroughly from my iniquity, and cleanse me from my sin.
For I know my
transgressions, and my sin is ever before me.
Against you, you
alone, have I sinned, and done what is evil in your sight,
so that you are
justified in your sentence and blameless when you pass judgment.
Indeed, I was
born guilty, a sinner when my mother conceived me.
You desire truth
in the inward being; therefore teach me wisdom in my secret heart.
Purge me with
hyssop, and I shall be clean; wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow.
Let me hear joy
and gladness; let the bones that you have crushed rejoice.
Hide your face
from my sins, and blot out all my iniquities.
Create in me a
clean heart, O God, and put a new and right spirit within me.
Do not cast me
away from your presence, and do not take your holy spirit from me.
Restore to me
the joy of your salvation, and sustain in me a willing spirit.
Then I will teach
transgressors your ways, and sinners will return to you.
Deliver me from
bloodshed, O God, O God of my salvation,
and my tongue
will sing aloud of your deliverance.
O Lord, open my
lips, and my mouth will declare your praise.
For you have no
delight in sacrifice;
if I were to
give a burnt offering, you would not be pleased.
The sacrifice
acceptable to God is a broken spirit;
a broken and
contrite heart, O God, you will not despise.
Do good to Zion
in your good pleasure; rebuild the walls of Jerusalem,
then you will
delight in right sacrifices, in burnt offerings and whole burnt offerings;
then bulls will
be offered on your altar.
Psalm 51
Reflection – So now we come to one of the ‘great’
psalms in our Monday Psalter, one which in its own way has been as influential
in the Christian tradition as Psalm 23—Psalm 51, the Miserere. This is the great pattern of repentance in our lives –
really, a whole theology of repentance can be derived from a careful
examination of its text, verse by verse.
Well,
we need to talk about repentance these days a little bit more, I think. The
Year of Mercy, inaugurated by the Pope of Mercy, is just a couple months away.
I was just joking with someone yesterday that I am now officially on the ‘mercy
circuit’, going around to various groups in the diocese here especially and
talking up the year of mercy and what it might mean in our lives. Mercy is the
subject of the day.
But
let it be clear, at least to ourselves primarily. Mercy will do us no good in
the end without repentance. God is tender, compassionate, kind, gentle, a
loving Father. All of this is true to a degree that we honestly are incapable
of comprehending. We simply have no idea how much God loves us—we really don’t.
But
His love is coming to us, not to creatures who are so awfully good and maybe a
little wounded but really have no harm in us, and we’re all quite nice chaps
once you get to know us. Uh… it’s not quite like that, is it?
We
are rebels. We all have a store of natural goodness and graced virtue in us to
some degree, but we have, well, other things too. Malice, impurity of mind and
body, dishonesty, pride, vanity, anger, greed. I just wrote a whole book
about all that we have churning around in our minds and hearts, and I have yet
to have someone read it and say that they did not recognize themselves
somewhere in it.
And
so this tender, loving, gentle, compassionate God is continually before
us—always, always, always. His mercy is unchangeable, unalterable. His entire
immutable stance towards us is always that of the father in the parable of the
prodigal son—always running out, always waiting to embrace, always clothing us
with the robes of our shattered dignity and lost identity.
But…
we have to accept that embrace, receive those robes. And that means we have to
repent. In the talk about mercy in the Church these days, this sometimes
becomes obscured, and we are left thinking that mercy means we never bother
about sin and morality ever again. This is a horrible mistake, since our sins
are what will drag us down to Hell forever if we do not abandon them. It is
hardly an act of mercy to deny that fact, either to ourselves or to other
people.
Yes,
the presentation of the moral law, the call to repentance always has to be done
with such a care for wounded souls—we are not to break the bruised reed or
quench the flickering flame. But let’s be clear—mercy without repentance will
do us no good. We have to change—all of us have to change, and the whole mercy
of God is lavished upon us precisely to bring us to that deep conversion of
heart, that profound metanoia of our
whole person, to true and lasting repentance so as to enter our Father’s house
and feast there forever.
For
the rest of what I would say… well, just pray Psalm 51. It’s all in there.
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