Praying the Communion Antiphon Series
Praying the Communion Antiphon Series
A Time Set Apart – Tuesday First Week of Lent
In the Silence of the Heart
Thinking
About the Words
“When
I called…”
This
is not a theoretical prayer. It is remembered experience.
The
psalmist is not asking in abstraction. He is recalling: I have called before and
I was heard. It also reminds us that we have a loving Father and He is ready to
listen when I call.
Lent
often exposes anguish not always dramatic suffering, but interior tension,
restlessness, things we would rather not face.
“From
anguish you released me.”
The
word suggests being widened after constriction. Anguish narrows us. It traps us
within our own spirals of thought. Anguish can be at a physical, emotional and
spiritual level. Release is spaciousness again. This phrase can become our
prayer throughout the day and throughout Lent.
There
is also something important in the title “God of justice.”
Justice
here is not punishment. It is right-ordering. God restores what is disordered.
He sets things straight within us.
And
notice: this antiphon is prayed at Communion.
The
One we receive is the One who has already heard our cry.
We do not approach unheard.
We approach remembered and loved so much that He died and rose again for us so
that we could have eternal life..
Reflection
- When
have I called on God and truly experienced His answer?
- What
anguish currently narrows my heart?
- Do I
allow myself to remember past release or do I live only in present
tension?
- Do I
remember to thank God from past releases or do I accept them as gifts and
not the giver?
- What
would it mean to trust God as the One who restores right order within me?
There
is something very gentle about this Antiphon.
It is not dramatic repentance or heavy instruction. It is just honest
calling.
How
do you experience this Antiphon today?
Prayer
God
of justice, hear my prayer.
Release what is constricted within me.
Restore my heart in Your mercy.
Want
to know more:
“God
of Justice” — Old Testament Tone
In
Hebrew Scripture, justice (Hebrew mishpat) is not merely legal fairness.
It means:
- Setting
things right
- Restoring
what is disordered
- Defending
the vulnerable
- Acting
faithfully according to covenant
You
see it constantly in:
- Psalms
(e.g., Ps 7:11; 9:8; 50:6)
- Isaiah
(“The Lord is a God of justice” — Is 30:18)
- The
Prophets calling Israel back to right order
So
as a title, it feels strongly Old Testament.
Does
the Gospel speak this way?
The
Gospel in the New Testament does not usually use the phrase “God of justice.”
However,
the theme is everywhere.
The
Just Judge
In
Lent especially, we hear:
- Matthew
25 (Sheep and Goats) — Christ judging the nations.
- The
parable of the unjust judge (Luke 18) — where Jesus contrasts human
injustice with God’s true justice.
Even
when the word “justice” is not highlighted, the concept is central.
The
Father Who Sets Things Right
Think
of:
- The
Prodigal Son — justice and mercy meet.
- The
cleansing of the Temple — restoring right order.
- “Seek
first the kingdom and his righteousness” (Matt 6:33).
Righteousness
in Greek (dikaiosynÄ“) carries the same family meaning as justice — right
relationship, right order.
What
Changes in the Gospel?
In
the Old Testament, Justice often appears majestic, covenantal, kingly.
In
the Gospels Justice becomes incarnate. Jesus
does not merely speak about justice. He embodies it.
In
Lent, especially, we see Justice and mercy are not opposites. They converge at
the Cross.
Why
the Antiphon Keeps the Title
The
Communion Antiphon using “God of justice” reminds us:
The
One we receive in the Eucharist is the same covenant God of Israel.
Lent
is not keeping the rules of fasting, almsgiving and prayer out of obligation.
No, Lent is a season of Love. It is covenant renewal at a personal level.
God’s
justice is not harshness. It is restoration.
The psalm calls Him “God of justice” — a title rooted in Israel’s
prayer. In the Gospel, that justice becomes personal in Christ, who sets hearts
right rather than merely judging them.
If
you wish to understand more about Psalm 4 you may wish to read my post here. There is the second part to the series for Psalm 4.
Let
us pray again the Communion Antiphon.
Communion
Antiphon (Psalm 4:4)
When I called, the God of justice gave me answer;
from anguish you released me; have mercy, O Lord, and hear my prayer.





