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Feast of the Holy Family – Jesus, Mary Joseph

Sir. 3:2-6, 12-14; Ps. 128:1-5; Col. 3:12-21; Mt.2:13-15, 19-23

“Jesus, Mary, and Joseph” is in itself a prayer to the Holy Family for our family.  The Holy Family is an image of the unity of the Trinity in heaven.  Just as we pray in the name of Father, Son and Holy Spirit as one to hear our prayer we can also call upon the Holy Family to come to our families in that same spirit of love, obedience, and healing.  Do our families need healing?  The holidays often reveal how separated, broken, or in need of healing is the family.  The holidays call us to put aside the issues we have avoided, to reach out in an act of love, and to bring the spirit of peace and good will in reconciliation.  Jesus, Mary and Joseph teach us to walk in his ways. 

Let us begin with Joseph who is spoken about but never speaks himself in the scriptures.  Do we have holy dreams or are our dreams a battle that is carried over from our day into the night dream.  The angel comes to Joseph because he is the chosen one who is a righteous man, a man with fear of the Lord who lives his faith through his hard work and prayer.  Prayer opens Joseph up to receive the message of the angel and respond with obedience.  Men are taught to work hard, provide for the family, but do we know how to pray, how to lead our family in prayer?  Prayer should direct our workday to walk in the way of the Lord. 

Mary is the handmaid of the Lord called to be the Mother of God the Son.  She too is God’s chosen one, a gentle woman at heart but filled with the strength to a bear the Son of God and allow Joseph to lead her by trusting that God will lead Joseph in the right path.  Women do you trust God with leading your husbands or have you taken over that role because mother knows best.  The bond of perfect is not who is in control but whose love rises above the conflict to give witness that his chosen ones allow God to be in control. 

Jesus, the incarnation born of a woman, human and divine is the great witness to true humility in obedience to the Father.  Jesus always found time to be alone in prayer to the Father and to accept the will of the Father.  The true God was obedient to his human parents even as he was their God, what humility.  We give a lot of attention to teach our children to be proud, to believe in themselves with words like “anyone can grow up to be President”.  How much attention to we give to teach them true humility and the obedience to truth.  The source of freedom does not come from pride but from humility to place everything in right order.  There is a God and we are not “it”. 

The authority given to parents is not for control of their children but as their first teachers.  Teach them in the way they are to grow, and they will not depart from it.  If we only command their obedience, then as soon as they are free to leave, we will see them depart and send us a season’s greeting card with maybe a picture if they have time.  Jesus, Mary and Joseph were attentive to each other’s needs.  Jesus listened to his mother when they ran out of wine at the wedding feast and did a miracle for her.  When we pray to Mary and Joseph, they can also intercede for us with Jesus to answer that prayer we need in our lives. 

God calls us to be a holy family and gave us the witness of Jesus, Joseph and Mary to follow.  The family is the domestic church at home.  This means that prayer should also be a key element of our family tradition.  As Father Patrick Payten, the Irish born priest in America who lived until 1992 said, “The family that prays together stays together.”  He was also known as the “rosary priest” for his promotion of the rosary prayer.  Jesus, Mary and Joseph, pray for us. 

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The Presentation of the Lord

Malachi 3:1-4; Ps. 2:7-10; Heb. 2:14-18; Lk. 2:22-40

The Presentation of the Lord is a revelation to the world through Simeon a “righteous and devout” man who walks into the temple in the Spirit.  Are we in the Spirit ready to receive Jesus our Lord?  The manifestation of the Son of God is our calling in the Spirit.  Jesus, flesh of my flesh and blood of my blood “he had to become like his brothers and sisters in every way, that he might be a merciful and faithful high priest before God to expiate the sins of the people.” 

Jesus is brought to the temple to be consecrated to the Lord by the high priest just as we are brought to church to be consecrated to the Lord in baptism.  In baptism we now share in the one body and blood of Christ as brothers and sisters.  For the next thirty years nothing is written about him except “The child grew and became strong, filled with wisdom; and the favor of God was upon him.”  God does not remove his favor from us unless we like the parable of the prodigal father and son separates ourselves from his favor because we choose to leave. 

Now Anna has essentially spent her life in the temple after becoming a widow.  She is a prophetess meaning she too is in the Spirit finding favor with God.  Simeon makes the proclamation but it is Anna’s calling to begin the evangelization by spreading the good news of this child.  The Holy Family returns to Nazareth but Anna plants the seeds in Jerusalem for his coming, the king of glory “it is the Lord.”  Since she was a prophetess, she had gained the trust of the people to be believed filled with wisdom and the favor of God was upon her.  The favor of God is upon us from our baptism and the path of wisdom is given to us if we remain in the Spirit by returning to the temple of the Lord to receive his body and blood in the Eucharist. 

Both Simeon and Anna were presented with the test of faith, “is this the one?”  Guided by the Spirit they were ready to respond.  There is a daily test of faith we face.  It is manifested in how we respond to life before us in all the moments of life, in all our encounters with other souls before us.  If we respond in fear then our faith is in the power of the evil one but a response in love is faith in the presence of God to claim victory over all circumstances for a greater good. 

There is also the test of suffering a universal condition of the flesh in body, mind, and spirit.  The great saints speak to this darkness of the soul as wounded warriors.  This is our test of the cross when we turn to Jesus on the cross and he is most present to us to be our help.  Where one suffers, he suffers.  We don’t keep him on the cross he accepts the cross for our sins and suffering reminding us of the sacrifice that brings the resurrection and the life.  He bears our pain with us and we find the comfort of the Spirit at our side.  What must we do to receive it?

 Four guiding principles of wisdom.  One, respond in faith to the test with love.  God is love and love unites us to the power of his love and brings us healing.  Two, recall our baptismal promises.  This if the foundation of our faith and in proclaiming it we renew our faith and conviction rejecting all that is not of God.  Three, claim by word and deed the truth from the wisdom received.  Speak the word of truth in prayer and unite it to the souls of the living and the dead, to the angels and saints, to the powers and principalities, to the promises of God.  Finally, claim your victory and go forth believing in the greater good which is God is with us.

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