Vatican City, Dec 9, 2003 / 22:00 pm
Commenting on a hymn from Revelation 19, Pope John Paul said during the general audience on Wednesday that God is not indifferent to human needs.
Continuing his catechesis on the psalms and canticles which are part of the prayer of vespers, the Pontiff spoke about the hymn from the book of Revelation mainly composed of alleluias and acclamations.
The Holy Father noted that in the text various personalities from the heavenly liturgy speak: “An ‘immense crowd,’ made up of the assembly of the angels and the saints. The voice of the ‘twenty four elders’ stands out as well as that of the ‘four living beings,’ symbolic figures that seem to be the priests of this heavenly liturgy of praise and thanksgiving. At the end, a single voice rises up which involves the ‘immense crowd’ in the hymn.”
“At the heart of this joyful invocation is the representation of the decisive intervention of God in history: the Lord is not indifferent to human events, like an isolated and authoritarian ruler…On the contrary, His gaze is the source of action because He intervenes and destroys arrogant and oppressive rulers, He rebukes the proud who challenge Him, and judges all those who commit evil.”