Responsorial Psalm

Psalm 122:1-5

"I rejoiced when I heard them say: let us go to the house of the Lord"

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Scripture text (World English Bible)

I was glad when they said to me, “Let’s go to Yahweh’s house!” Our feet are standing within your gates, Jerusalem; Jerusalem, that is built as a city that is compact together; where the tribes go up, even Yah’s tribes, according to an ordinance for Israel, to give thanks to Yahweh’s name. For there are set thrones for judgment, the thrones of David’s house.

Themes

  • I rejoiced when I heard them say: let us go to the house of the Lord
  • pilgrimage
  • arriving at Jerusalem
  • the city of God
  • the journey complete

Reflection

Psalm 122 is a pilgrim's song: the song the Israelites sang as they approached Jerusalem for one of the great festivals. "I rejoiced when I heard them say: 'Let us go to the house of the Lord.' And now our feet are standing within your gates, O Jerusalem." For a Catholic funeral, the psalm becomes a song of arrival. The deceased's long pilgrimage is over. They are at the gates. They have come into the city.

The Catholic tradition reads the earthly Jerusalem of the psalm as a sign of the heavenly Jerusalem: the city of God that the Book of Revelation will describe in fullness. Every Christian life is a pilgrimage toward that city. Every Mass is a small participation in its eternal liturgy. At the funeral, the Church declares that the deceased has now reached the destination toward which their whole life was a journey.

For families who think of the deceased's life as a journey (through stages, through difficulties, through different cities and seasons) this psalm gives voice to the moment of arrival. It is one of the most quietly joyful psalms in the funeral lectionary. The grief is not denied; the family is not yet at the gates with their loved one. But the journey has been completed; the pilgrim has arrived.

This is also a psalm of peace. The closing line, "Pray for the peace of Jerusalem... peace within your walls", gives the funeral a horizon: peace is what the city is, peace is what the deceased now knows, peace is what we ask the Lord to send back to those who remain.

Best for

  • ·Funerals for someone whose life was spent in active service or pilgrimage
  • ·Liturgies where the family wants to mark the completion of a long journey
  • ·Funerals near the Solemnity of All Saints
  • ·Older mourners who have lost many companions and find in the psalm a sense of arrival

In the liturgy

Less commonly chosen but musically rich. The antiphon "Let us go rejoicing to the house of the Lord" is well-known. Particularly fitting when the deceased had a strong sense of life as journey or pilgrimage.

Pairs well with

Frequently asked questions

Is this psalm too "happy" for a funeral?
It carries quiet joy rather than triumph: the joy of a long journey completed. For families who have walked with their loved one through illness or aging, the arrival imagery often lands as right rather than as forced cheerfulness.

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