Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
James Martin, S.J.July 29, 2009

Isn't your guardian angel supposed to "guard" you? You remember the old prayer?  "Angel of God, my guardian dear, to whom God's love commits me here, ever this day, be at my side, to light and guard, rule and guide." 

"Light and guard"?  Well, maybe not.  Or at least maybe not always, according to Pope Benedict, who surmised wryly that perhaps his guardian angel was not negligent in preventing the pontiff's broken wrist, but actually "following superior orders," in order to teach the pope humility.  That's according to this story on AP.   "Pope Benedict XVI said Wednesday that his guardian angel was clearly acting 'on superior orders' when he let the pontiff fall and break his wrist this month. The 82-year-old pope said in a lighthearted tone that: 'Perhaps the Lord wanted to teach me more patience and humility, give me more time for prayer and meditation,' the pope added.  The pope thanked law enforcement officials for being 'like angels,' as he prepared to depart Les Combes, the Alpine resort where he tripped and hurt his right wrist about 10 days ago while on vacation.  'Unfortunately, my own guardian angel did not prevent my injury, certainly following superior orders,' Benedict said."

It's wonderful to see the pope speaking lightheartedly, and, moreover, in such a self-deprecatory way.  (When was the last time a public figure--who wasn't caught in a scandal or under indictment--say that he needed a lesson in humility?)  The vagaries of life are a great teacher of humility.  St. John Berchmans, a Jesuit who died quite young, said, "Vita communis est mea maxima penitentia." Or life in common--that is the common, daily life of every man and woman--is my greatest penance.  (Some Jesuit wags believe that via communis is better translated as Jesuit community life, but we'll leave that for another blog post.)  And when the Trappist monk Thomas Merton was asked if he "mortified" himself (that is, subjected himself to extreme physical penances) he said, in essence, life is mortifying enough.  So Benedict's broken wrist is an example of how life's struggles can teach us.  Sometimes.

All the same, I prefer my guardian angels to guard, thanks very much.   And I'll take some light, while they're at it.

James Martin, SJ  

Comments are automatically closed two weeks after an article's initial publication. See our comments policy for more.
15 years 9 months ago
No angel can keep you from falling when you look one way and walk another. (I know this from painful experience falling on an elbow and tearing the ligaments - ouch).   BXVI needs to take care of himself or get one of those nice sedan chairs Pope's used to be carried around in.

The latest from america

Our team was in St. Peter’s Square for the historic election, and we’re here with first reactions and some important details about the life and ministry of Pope Leo XIV.
JesuiticalMay 08, 2025
The “urbi et orbi” blessing given by Pope Leo XIV, the first American pope, after his election May 8, 2025.
OSV NewsMay 08, 2025
Cardinal Robert F. Prevost has selected the name Pope Leo XIV—so who was Pope Leo XIII?
“For us, as Hispanics who are suffering in the United States, it gives us great hope to believe that this next pope will be like Francis and stand with immigrants.”
J.D. Long GarcíaMay 08, 2025