At the General Audience the Pope speaks about Psalm 3
God who responds
to the cry of man
Dear Brothers and Sisters,
We return today to our series of catecheses on prayer with a consideration of
Psalm Three, in which the psalmist cries out
to
God to rescue him from the enemies who surround him. Traditionally the psalm is
attributed to King David as he flees from the armies of his rebellious son
Absalom. Assailed on every side by foes who seek his life, the psalmist calls
on the name of the Lord, filled with faith in the presence and the power of God
who alone can save him from the evils that threaten him. We are reminded of the
plight of the just man in the Book of Wisdom, condemned to a shameful death by
the wicked, who taunt him by arguing that God will surely come to his rescue.
Our thoughts move on to Calvary, where the passers-by mocked Jesus, saying that
God would deliver him from death if he were really who he claimed to be. And
yet, we know that God truly hears the prayers of those who call upon him in
faith. He answers from his holy mountain. The unseen God responds with great
power, and he becomes our shield and our glory. Even though Jesus appears to be
abandoned by the Father as he dies on Calvary, yet for the eyes of faith this is
the crowning moment of salvation, the triumph of the Cross, the hour of our
Saviour’s glorification.