Wednesday, December 31, 2014

The Holy Family of Jesus, Mary and Joseph



December 28, 2014



On this, the feast of the Holy Family, we’re is invited to reflect, not only upon that holy threesome who have figured so importantly in our salvation history,
but also upon all the other families that comprise the universal family of humankind.
Unfortunately, and due to a variety of factors, the ties that bind us one to another within our global network of families have suffered a series of assaults over the past several decades.
This is a fact that need not be argued; the evidence of relational weakness and even decay is obvious and this weakness affects every one of us to one degree or another.
Now, I’m not just talking about the nuclear family, I’m talking about all families, traditional or otherwise, who are joined together in love.
Attacking families just because they don’t necessarily “look like” the traditional father, mother and two-point-whatever children is just another symptom of our being scared for the family unit.
Rather than lament the fact and belabor the point, our attention might be better directed and our efforts better spent in trying to effect change, conversion and growth within the family unit.
"If we can change the culture of our families" says Steven W. Vannoy [i] "surely that change will radiate out to touch those around us. "In this way, our society will be improved from the inside out, family by family.
The following fable offers a powerful example of the contagious grace of change.

The membership of a once numerous order of monks dwindled over the years, until there were only five brothers left in what had been a thriving community.
For years, people from the surrounding area had been drawn to the monastery in search of the learning and spiritual renewal they found there.
Now, no one ever visited as the spirit of the place and its inhabitants seemed to be slowly dying.
One day, however, a rabbi happened by to visit.
When he was about to leave, one of the brothers asked the rabbi if he had any advice on how to revitalize themselves and make their monastery a spiritual center once again.
After a few moments, the rabbi replied, "The only thing I can tell you is that the Messiah is one of you."
Flabbergasted, the brothers replied, "The Messiah among us? Impossible!"
As the weeks passed, the brothers puzzled over the rabbi's startling revelation.
If the Messiah were here, who would it be?
Maybe, Brother Timothy. . . he's the abbot and in his capacity as leader, he could surely be chosen to be the Messiah ....
It couldn't be Bro. Mark; He's always so argumentative, but, he's usually right
...Or maybe, it's Bro. Pius who tends the garden and the animals. He could probably nourish a troubled world if he were the Messiah.
Surely, it could be Bro. Dominic; he's studious, learned and familiar with all the great spiritual writers.
 It couldn't be Peter, could it?
Certainly, the Messiah couldn't be the one who cleaned toilets, dirty laundry and scrubbed the pots and pans each day.
Or, could it?
Since the monks were unable to determine which one of them was the Messiah, they began to treat one another as though each were the one.
Moreover, just in case he himself might be the Messiah, each monk began to treat himself with new respect and to conduct himself with greater dignity.
Within a few weeks, the monastery's occasional visitors were awed by the love, goodness and revitalized spirituality they experienced.
They returned again and again and brought new friends along.
Soon, a few young men asked to be admitted to the order and the monastery thrived again.

Imagine the possibilities for growth and renewal if each family were to take to heart the rabbi's words, "the Messiah is one of you. "
How much more might spouses love and cherish one another...
how much more might parents value their children, protect them, teach them and lovingly attend to their needs ...
how much more might children honor and appreciate their parents.
How much more might we look upon love as the only important criteria for determining what is & is not a family
If each member of every family were to reverence one another as the Messiah, i.e., as Jesus who is our Savior and brother,
how much might that strengthen and secure those familial bonds that are the infrastructure, without which our society has no future.

Today, the love shared among the Holy Family offers us both a witness and a challenge.
To love one another as they did requires that we look beyond the faults and idiosyncrasies that annoy us in order to discover the Christ who lives in each of us.
Such love requires that we replace nitpicking, nagging and criticism with wise counsel, humbly offered, and encouragement and praise, generously bestowed.
Such was the love that became incarnate among us and which we reveled in celebrating at Christmas.
Such is also the love that has brought us to the end of this year
If our children’s children’s children are to look upon the next millennium, it is this love which will make it possible.

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