Nativity
Prayer
St. Bernard of
Clairvaux (12th century)
Let Your goodness Lord appear to us, that we
made in your image, conform ourselves to it.
In our own strength
we cannot imitate Your majesty, power, and wonder
nor is it fitting for us to try.
But Your mercy reaches from the heavens
through the clouds to the earth below.
You have come to us as a small child,
but you have brought us the greatest of all gifts,
the gift of eternal love
Caress us with Your tiny hands,
embrace us with Your tiny arms
and pierce our hearts with Your soft, sweet cries.
made in your image, conform ourselves to it.
In our own strength
we cannot imitate Your majesty, power, and wonder
nor is it fitting for us to try.
But Your mercy reaches from the heavens
through the clouds to the earth below.
You have come to us as a small child,
but you have brought us the greatest of all gifts,
the gift of eternal love
Caress us with Your tiny hands,
embrace us with Your tiny arms
and pierce our hearts with Your soft, sweet cries.
The
sensual images that St. Bernard brings to his prayer are striking: the caress
of the tiny hands of a baby, the embrace of those tiny arms, and the sound of a
soft, sweet cry. While I’ve seen my
share of plastic babes in assorted mangers, I don’t often make the connection
with Jesus before his adult years. When
I think of him, it is as a man, striding through the crowds, sitting on the
hillside, storming through the temple.
Yet if Christ was the incarnation at age 30, he was also the incarnation
at the age of 6 months.
When our
infant granddaughter strokes my cheek, I feel cherished and comforted. It is this touch, this image, that reaches me
in Bernard’s prayer. Ah, little Lord
Jesus – in your infancy, in your manger,
in your helplessness, you were God, and you reached out – in fact, you continue
to reach out – to lavish your love upon us, your children. Caress, embrace, pierce – come, Lord Jesus.
Prayer Focus:
the embrace of God
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