For the holiness of families
On
the Sunday between Christmas and the Solemnity of Mary, the Mother of God, the
Church celebrates the Feast of the Holy Family.
During this time when many if not most of us take time to spend with our
families, it is right that we should venerate the Holy Family: Jesus, his
mother Mary and his foster-father Joseph.
In fact, the Holy Family has been celebrated in this way since the 17th
century. One of the first promoters of
this Feast was Blessed François de Laval, the first Bishop of Quebec, then
known as New France.
Every
year, when this day arrives, we think of the members of our own families. We give thanks for the joys we have shared
with them over the past year, and we pray for God’s protection for them in the
coming year. The society in which we
live these days recognizes the fact that family units come in all shapes and
sizes: there are nuclear families, made up of fathers, mothers and their
children; there are families composed of step-parents and children; there are
family units which include multi-generations, and there are family units made
up of single parents who share custody of their dependent children. The modern-day Canadian culture also makes
room for other units which it refers to as ‘families’, including common law
partners and more recently, same-sex couples.
One thing is true: the definition of the family unit has become more and
more complicated in recent decades, and as a result it is that much more important
that we need guidance in order to understand the wisdom of today’s feast.
Like
all the Saints, the family of Jesus, Mary and Joseph provide an example for
us. There is wisdom to be gained from
their words and actions, but the question remains: what precise lessons can we
learn from the Holy Family, and how can we apply them to our own families?
Family
life is never perfect. While there are
many instances where we find comfort, solace, guidance and strength in our
families, there can also be moments of worry and suffering. We worry about the ones we love the most, we
suffer because of this love, and we often learn some valuable lessons about
life and about ourselves from the way we interact with the members of our
families.
The
Holy Family can teach us how to be holy. Mary and Joseph must truly have been special
people. On one hand, they had been asked
to guide and to teach Jesus the lessons that would make him the man he would
become, but on the other hand, his humanity was only a part of his
entirety. Tradition also teaches that
Jesus was fully divine, so there must have been moments when his parents were
acutely aware that they were teachers but also students in the presence of the
Master. When Mary and Joseph discovered
that Jesus was not in the caravan that had left Jerusalem, they worried about
him, they went back to Jerusalem in search of him, but they didn’t appear to
blame one another. Instead, perhaps they
understood this as one of those moments when they themselves became the
pupils. Maybe this is the reason why
when they eventually found him, they didn’t scold him; rather they took this
opportunity to explain their worry, and to clarify the expectations that they
had of him.
As
for the young Jesus, staying behind to talk with the elders and teachers made
sense to him. At age 12, a Jewish boy
celebrates his Bar Mitzvah and
assumes responsibility for his faith.
Catholics too, in many cases celebrate the Sacrament of Confirmation
around this age, and we believe that those who participate in this sacrament
are henceforth responsible for their own faith development. Like many young people his age, Jesus was
excited about this new responsibility, so excited in fact that he forgot to
communicate with his parents, to tell them that he was staying behind. Even though he may have been keen to exercise
this new-found freedom, he was not yet fully equipped for adult life, so having
recognized his parents’ concern, and because he knew that he was well loved, he
returned home with them. Through the
rest of his adolescent years, he continued to grow in wisdom.
I
wonder what other lessons Mary and Joseph learned. Some but not all of them are described in the
scriptures. I wonder what other wisdom
Jesus may have learned from his parents.
I wonder whether they were all that different from the lessons that all
teenagers learn from loving parents and from caring adults who teach them by
word and example how to be responsible, faith-filled human beings.
May
Joseph and Mary intercede for us today, and may the Holy Family always provide
for us an example of the holiness that is possible in all our families as we
strive to be the best of teachers for our children. May we also never be afraid to learn from our
children, for wisdom is born from the realization that no matter what age we
are, we are always learning.
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