Subscribe
to CF
Be
first to know
Read our AAA review
from Catholic Culture
Our Mission
To
bring Jesus Christ; the Way, the Truth and the Life; to all who will follow,
according to scripture and tradition, per the Magisterium
of the Roman Catholic Church.
While you visit!
Listen
to
Radio
For the Sacred
Heart of Jesus and the Immaculate Heart of Mary. |
ST. HILARY
HOMILIES ON THE PSALMS
PSALM CXXX (CXXXI)
O Lord, my heart is not exalted, neither have mine eyes been lifted up.
1. This Psalm, a short one, which demands an analytical rather than a homiletical
treatment, teaches us the lesson of humility and meekness. Now, as we have
in a great number of other places spoken about humility, there is no need to
repeat the same things here. Of course we are bound to bear in mind in how
great need our faith stands of humility when we hear the Prophet thus speaking
of it as equivalent to the performance of the highest works: O Lord, my heart
is not exalted. For a troubled heart is the noblest sacrifice in the eyes of
God. The heart, therefore, must not be lifted up by prosperity, but humbly
kept within the bounds of meekness through the fear of God.
2. Neither
have Mine eyes been lifted up. The strict sense of the Greek here conveys
a different meaning; <greek>oude</greek> <greek>emetewrisqhsan</greek> <greek>oi</greek> <greek>orqalmoimou</greek> that
is, have not been lifted up from one object to look on another. Yet the eyes
must be lifted up in obedience to the Prophet's words: Lift up your eyes and
see who hath displayed all these things(7). And the Lord says in the gospel:
Lift up your eyes, and look on the fields, that they are white unto harvest(8).
The eyes, then, are to be lifted up: not, however, to transfer their gaze elsewhere,
but to remain fixed once for all upon that to which they have been raised.
3. Then follows: Neither have I walked amid great things, nor amid wonderful
things that are above me. It is most dangerous to walk amid mean things, and
not to linger amid wonderful things. God's utterances are great; He Himself
is wonderful in the highest: how then can the psalmist pride himself as on
a good work for not walking amid great and wonderful things? It is the addition
of the words, which are above me, that shews that the walking is not amid those
things which men commonly regard as great and wonderful, For David, prophet
and king as he was, once was humble and despised and unworthy to sit at his
father's table; but he found favour with God, he was anointed to be king, he
was inspired to prophesy. His kingdom did not make him haughty, he was not
moved by hatreds: he loved those that persecuted him, he paid honour to his
dead enemies, he spared his incestuous and murderous children. In his capacity
of sovereign he was despised, in that of father he was wounded, in that of
prophet he was afflicted; yet he did not call for vengeance as a prophet might,
nor exact punishment as a father, nor requite insults as a sovereign. And so
he did not walk amid things great and wonderful which were above him.
4. Let us see what comes next: If I was not humble-minded but have lifted
up my soul. What inconsistency on the Prophet's part! He does not lift up his
heart: he does lift up his soul. He does not walk amid things great and wonderful
that are above him; yet his thoughts are not mean. He is exalted in mind and
cast down in heart. He is humble in his own affairs: but he is not humble in
his thought. For his thought reaches to heaven his soul is lifted up on high.
But his heart, out of which proceed, according to the Gospel, evil thoughts,
murders, adulteries, fornications, thefts, false witness, railings(9), is humble,
pressed down beneath the gentle yoke of meekness. We must strike a middle course,
then, between humility and exaltation, so that we may be humble in heart but
lifted up in soul and thought.
5. Then he goes on: Like a weaned child upon his mother's breast, so will
thou reward my saul. We are told that when Isaac was weaned Abraham made a
feast because now that he was weaned he was on the verge of boyhood and was
passing beyond milk food. The Apostle feeds all that are imperfect in the faith
and still babes in the things of God with the milk of knowledge. Thus to cease
to need milk marks the greatest possible advance. Abraham proclaimed by a joyful
feast that his son had come to stronger meat, and the Apostle refuses bread
to the carnal-minded and those that are babes in Christ. And so the Prophet
prays that God, because he has not lifted up his heart, nor walked amid things
great and wonderful that are above him, because he has not been humble-minded
but did lift up his soul, may reward his soul, lying like a weaned child upon
his mother: that is to say that he may be deemed worthy of the reward of the
perfect, heavenly and living bread, on the ground that by reason of his works
already recorded he has now passed beyond the stage of milk.
6. But he does not demand this living bread from heaven for himself alone,
he encourages all mankind to hope for it by saying: Let Israel hope in the
Lord from henceforth and for evermore. He sets no temporal limit to our hope,
he bids our faithful expectation stretch out into infinity. We are to hope
for ever and ever, winning the hope of future life through the hope of our
present life which we have in Christ Jesus our Lord, Who is blessed for ever
and ever. Amen.
Return to Volume 32 Index