He remembered us in our distress
for his mercy endures forever. Psalm 136:23
The crowd was anxious and impatient, pressing up against the boarding gate, shouting at the screen. The train was late. An ice storm was coming. You could almost hear the thoughts, they were so loud. Would we be stranded in Union Station? Have mercy on us, I thought.
It was hard to be calm. I, too, wanted to be home in my PJs with a cup of hot cocoa, not huddled overnight in a cold, damp station juggling a paper cup of tea and my bag, smashed between two oversharing college students. Have mercy on us, I prayed.
On my wrist was a prayer rope, 33 knots of black wool. I pulled it off and let its litany of mercy run through my fingers, knot by knot reminding me that crowds and discomfort notwithstanding, sinners and saints alike, we were saved. “Lord Jesus Christ, Son of the Living God, have mercy on me.” Mercy, mercy, I murmured.
In the introduction to his setting of the Psalms, Jesuit Father Joseph Gelineau notes that the psalms work on our hearts not by reason, but by hammering.
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Phrases and images repeat, shaping our prayers and our souls, like a metalsmith beating at gold. Mercy, mercy.
Psalm 136, called the Great Hallel — the Great Praise — by our Jewish brothers and sisters, is traditionally sung on all the great Jewish feasts. Scripture scholars believe Jesus sang this hymn of mercy as he made his way to the garden of Gesthemane. The Psalm beats out a refrain of praise, recounting our history of salvation, each of God’s great deeds met with a cry of “for his mercy endures forever.”
Pope Francis suggests in Misericordiae Vultus (MV 7) that this continual reminder of the enduring nature of God’s mercy “break(s) through the dimensions of space and time, inserting everything into the eternal mystery of love.” It hammers at our hearts, breaking down the barriers between the holy and the profane, between the sacred and the ordinary.
We are challenged, says Pope Francis, to take up this refrain in our daily lives, to follow the example of Jesus who prayed these words on the eve of his Passion, a potent reminder of why he would undergo this ordeal. That we might know God’s mercy endures forever, whether we are his people struggling to cross the Red Sea, refugees fleeing war in Syria or have simply been caught in a tide of jittery travelers.
Do I have the courage this Lent to let the psalms hammer at my heart, the sparks of mercy flying, until I am re-formed? Yes or no, God’s mercy endures forever.
To read: Pope Benedict’s reflection on Psalm 136.
To listen: Jewish poet Alden Solovy’s reading of his prayer-poem “Sing Hallelujah.”
To pray: An excerpt from Psalm 136:1-9, 23-26
O give thanks to the Lord, for he is good,
for his mercy endures forever.
Give thanks to the God of gods,
for his mercy endures forever.
Give thanks to the Lord of Lords,
for his mercy endures forever;
Who alone has wrought marvelous works,
for his mercy endures forever;
who in wisdom made the heavens,
for his mercy endures forever;
who spread the earth on the waters,
for his mercy endures forever.
It was he who made the great lights,
for his mercy endures forever;
the sun to rule in the day,
for his mercy endures forever;
the moon and the stars in the night,
for his mercy endures forever.
He remembered us in our distress,
for his mercy endures forever.
And he snatched us away from our foes,
for his mercy endures forever.
He gives food to all living creatures,
for his mercy endures forever.
To the God of heaven give thanks,
for his mercy endures forever.
Amen.
***
Michelle Francl-Donnay is a member of Our Lady of Good Counsel Parish, Bryn Mawr.
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Thank you for this lovely reflection!