Praying The Communion Antiphon
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| Praying the Communion Antiphon |
Good
morning 🌿
Let’s continue with Tuesday of the Third Week of Lent.
The
Communion Antiphon in the Roman Missal (Australia) is from Psalm
15:1–2 (sometimes numbered Psalm 14):
Lord,
who may abide in your tent?
Who may dwell on your holy mountain?
Whoever walks without fault and does what is just.
Let’s
shape it in your series format.
A
Time Set Apart – Tuesday, Third Week of Lent
Who
May Dwell?
Communion Antiphon (Psalm 15:1–2)
Lord, who may abide in your tent?
Who may dwell on your holy mountain?
Whoever walks without fault and does what is just.
Thinking
About the Words
“Lord,
who may abide in your tent?”
This
question comes from the language of pilgrimage. The “tent” refers to God’s
dwelling place — the sanctuary where His presence was encountered.
The
psalmist is asking: Who may live in closeness with God?
“Who
may dwell on your holy mountain?”
The
holy mountain points toward the place of encounter with God — first the Temple
in Jerusalem, and more deeply the desire to live continually in God’s presence.
“Whoever
walks without fault and does what is just.”
Notice
again the language of walking. Faith is not simply belief or occasional
prayer; it is a way of living. To walk without fault suggests integrity — a
life that seeks to align actions with what is right.
Justice
here does not mean harsh judgment. It means living truthfully and uprightly
before God and others.
And
this is prayed at Communion.
As
we approach the Eucharist, the question of the psalm quietly echoes: who may
dwell with the Lord? The answer is not perfection but a heart that desires to
walk in God’s ways.
Lent
invites us to examine the path we are walking and to allow God’s grace to guide
our steps more faithfully.
Reflection
- Do I
desire to live consciously in God’s presence?
- Where do
my actions align well with God’s ways, and where do they need correction?
- What
does “walking with integrity” look like in my daily life?
- How
might the grace of the Eucharist strengthen me to walk more faithfully?
This antiphon fits beautifully with the
theme noticed earlier about the path.
The psalm asks who may dwell with God, and the answer again points to how we
walk.
Lent keeps returning us to this simple
but profound image:
our life with God is a journey, one step at a time.
Prayer
Lord,
guide my steps in Your ways.
Help me to walk with integrity
and dwell in Your presence.
LET
US GO FURTHER
The
Psalm and the Gospel really do meet in a beautiful way.
Peter
asks Jesus: “Lord, how often must I forgive my brother if he sins against me?
As many as seven times?” Jesus replies: “Not seven times, but seventy-seven
times.”
(or seventy times seven)
Then
Jesus tells the parable of the unforgiving servant.
1.
The Psalm asks a Question
Psalm
14(15) asks:
Lord,
who may dwell in your tent?
Who may live on your holy mountain?
In
other words:
Who
can live close to God?
Who can remain in His presence?
The
Psalm answers with integrity and justice — someone whose life reflects God’s
ways.
2.
The Gospel Shows What That Looks Like
Jesus
reveals that one of the clearest signs of living close to God is forgiveness.
Why?
Because forgiveness mirrors God’s own mercy.
In
the parable, the king forgives a massive debt. However, the servant refuses to
forgive a small one. The problem is not simply cruelty.
It
is that the servant has not allowed the mercy he received to shape his heart.
3.
The “Tent” of Encounter
Is
the tent of encounter the place where reconciliation occurs?
In
the Old Testament, the tent of meeting was the place where God and His
people encountered one another.
However,
after encountering God, a person’s life was meant to reflect that encounter.
So
if we truly dwell in God’s presence, something changes in us.
We
begin to resemble Him.
And
what is God most known for in Scripture?
Mercy.
4.
The Eucharistic Dimension
Now
think of the Communion Antiphon. As we approach the Eucharist, the Psalm
quietly asks:
Who
may dwell with the Lord?
And
the Gospel answers:
The
one who learns to forgive.
Not
perfectly. But generously.
Because
forgiveness is the echo of God’s mercy in the human heart.
5.
The Lenten Invitation
Lent
often brings us to the point where we must face this question:
Is
there someone I still hold in debt?
Because
the deeper we enter the “tent” of God’s presence, the harder it becomes to hold
tightly to resentment.
Reconciliation
becomes the natural fruit of encounter.
The
Psalm asks who may dwell in God’s presence. In the Gospel Jesus shows that one
of the clearest signs of living close to God is the ability to forgive. Those
who truly encounter God’s mercy gradually learn to extend that mercy to others.




