A Prayer to the Great Little One
O very amiable Jesus, known as the Great Little One, grant me the grace to understand all the great truths expressed by this title and to realize its lessons. You are little by Your human nature, little by the state of childhood into which Your love has reduced You and by the rank You wanted to take among mankind, in order to enlighten and save us. You are a holy Child.
But at the same time You are great, beyond any greatness. You are great by Your divine nature, with the Father and the Holy Spirit, absolutely infinite. You are great by Your Person, the Person of the Word, in all equal to the Divine Persons of the blessed Trinity. You are great by the splendor of mercy and the source of all our grace and holiness. This is why, Holy Child, You inspire us so much. To secure my salvation and to become worthy of it, I, too, must be little and great.
I am little by the imperfection of my nature, by the lamentable state in which original sin has left us, by the consequences of my own sins. But, in order to imitate Your littleness and humility, I must become aware of this state of mine; I must have a permanent conviction thereof, which will inspire my prayers and all my hopes in heaven, my attitude towards all my neighbors. I have to be little in order to resemble You.
I must also be great. This I am by the eternal destiny You provided for me and all the possibilities of potential perfection You have created in me. I must become great by the reality of the virtues and of the grace, by the richness of supernatural gifts, the aim of which is to make me similar to You, to take part in Your eternal inheritance, the heavenly beatitude.
Grant me, O Jesus, the grace to reproduce in myself the resemblance of Your littleness and greatness. Be, O Divine Great Little One, the Model and the Source of my salvation and my holiness. Amen.
from a compilation of prayers and devotions to the Divine Infant of Prague, by Mgsr. Ludvik Nemec. Bolded lines are my favorites.
A little Child is born for us today; little and yet called the Mighty God, alleluia! Párvulus fílius hódie natus est nobis, et vocábitur Deus fortis, allelúia.
third antiphon for Morning Prayer during the Octave of Christmas, according to the Roman Rite














