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HOLY

FAMILY

(C)

“FIRST IMPRESSIONS”

Feast of the Holy Family -C-
December 29, 2024

1 Sam 1: 20-22, 24-28 or Sirach: 2-6, 12-14;
Ps 84 Colossians 3: 12-21; Luke 2: 41-52

by Jude Siciliano, OP

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THANK YOU to those who contributed to our “End of the Year” appeal. I appreciate your support as do those who receive the service and are otherwise limited in their resources.


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Thank you


WELCOME: to the latest email recipients of “First Impressions,” the sisters, associates, companions and friends of the Dominican Sisters of Blauvelt, Caldwell, Sparkill and the Religious of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, New York.


Dear Preachers:

I bet the your family’s Christmas didn’t reflect the traditional idyllic presentation of the Holy Family. There was a spat between the teenagers; an aunt who’s always patiently instructs others how to raise their children, though she has none of her own; a brother-in-law who would rather be watching the game on tv; and a recently divorced daughter and her two children still shell- shocked from the experience. If Norman Rockwell had needed models for a magazine cover of a modern holy family he certainly wouldn’t have knocked on our doors! We ache too much ...argue over silly things (and some not so silly)...aren’t speaking to one member in particular ...haven’t forgotten a slight that happened five years ago...think there’s too much salt in mom’s turkey stuffing... and wish the vegetarian daughter-in-law would have stayed at home.

We weren’t the holy family on Christmas day. Maybe we didn’t even have a family to go home to, so we gathered with a few friends and did the best we could to cook some traditional foods that only vaguely resembled the way “mom used to make it.” Were we a holy family with our rushed grace and not so holy thoughts? Yes, we were. Not because we had our religious act together, not because the day went perfectly, but because God has been born among us, into a human family with all its complications and ambiguities – the holy mess.

We still gather in families to eat a special meal, celebrate the events of this season – as best we can. And God is born again in our humanity, setting about to heal us and to help us come together to reach our true destiny, our everlasting home with God. All this, as we pass the potatoes, offer a toast to one another’s health, and tonight and the days to come, wish each other a happy new year.

A sober look at the Gospel for today will help keep us from romantizing today’s feast and the three people upon whom it focuses. Jesus’ family has come to Jerusalem for the feast of Passover. Jesus has separated himself from the company of his parents and family members. There is a note of annoyance or hurt in Mary’s question to Jesus, “Son, why have you done this to us?” And isn’t it ironic that Jesus’ first words in this Gospel should sound like reprimand to his parents, “Why were you looking for me? Did you not know...?” What an unusual statement for someone born into the extremely close knit family culture of this primitive Mediterranean world, where good family relations were of primary importance. He had decided to do something without asking his parent’s permission.

The story tells us that Jesus is twelve years old. This is the age when Jewish boys prepare for their Bar Mitzvah, when they accept their religious responsibilities and think about their life journey. He is showing signs of the independence and the compulsion for God that will characterize his adult life. But his parents have no way of knowing what form his later call will take. All they know is that he had separated himself from them. This trip to Jerusalem prefigures much. Jesus will not follow the usual path into his father’s line of work. He will not, as would have been expected, stay in his home town among his own kinsfolk. He is already showing signs of a vision that has begun to form in his imagination. He is engaged in discussion with the teachers prefiguring his own teaching role later in his life. He is in the Temple and he himself will become the sacrifice in the new Temple built by the Spirit.

This moment in Jerusalem prefigures Jesus’ later journey there with his disciples, his new family. Then he will reveal more about himself. His parents do not understand now what he is saying to them about the priority of his relationship to God, which takes precedence even over his relationship to them. Jesus’ later life will reveal that being in his family had nothing to do with blood, but with faith in him. Mary is showing the signs of a true believer as she, “kept all these things in her heart.” When the shepherds came at the birth of Jesus and told his parents what they had heard from the angels about God’s graciousness to humanity through the newborn, Mary didn’t understand. Again Luke tells us, as he does today, she kept these things in her heart. She doesn’t understand how God’s plan will be worked out in Jesus, so she does what we disciples must also do, she ponders and waits.

Understanding the consequences of Jesus’ birth into our human family isn’t easy: wasn’t for those who lived with him then, isn’t for us now. As a family of faith, we need to ask: what are the consequences of professing that we are the followers of Jesus Christ? This story in the Temple comes at the end of Luke’s introductory two chapters. While Mary and Joseph don’t get a completely clear response from Jesus, they do hang in there, they do stay around to see the implications for their lives. And so must we, as we profess our faith these days in the newborn Savior. In subsequent weeks we will hear the stories of the adult Christ who will invite others to become a part of his family. Flawed though we be, we will want to hear and ponder his words and actions and determine the consequences for our own lives. As did his parents, we will stay around as well, and continue, like Mary, to keep all this in our hearts.

The grace in the story is that Jesus stays in there as well. He doesn’t throw up his hands and find another set of parents, ones who understand perfectly. He stays with us too, even when we don’t get it. We will be hearing more stories from Luke this liturgical year, stories of people who are constantly missing the point. And Jesus stays with them through it all. These are our stories, the story of the Church. We just don’t or can’t understand, but the grace is that we are not abandoned. We have done things in our lives based on what we thought we should do, and we found we misinterpreted the clues. The Good News is that we were not abandoned, we did not fail the ultimate test. Our God has stayed with us and is helping us, even now, learn more about what it means to accept the implications of the Incarnation in our lives.

When I was younger there was a tendency to use this feast as an occasion to show what the model family should look like. The preaching was on the “holy Christian family” resembling the family of the three holy members. No matter how good my family was, it never quite measured up to the description of the holy family from the pulpit. But look at the reading about this family. What makes them holy? The family went each year to worship at the temple for Passover. Their lives focused on God. But all wasn’t peace and tranquility. Even amid the pressures that our culture puts on family life, we too struggle to focus on God, we too struggle to make this pilgrimage each Sunday to the table of the Lord where God sees our hungers and gives plenty of good food to hold this faith family together. There will, for sure, be families present at this Eucharist with their own unique divisions and struggles. We might pray for them when we offer petitions, and be sure to include children who have run away from home, or for wherever there have been ruptures in the family fabric.

Click here for a link to this Sunday’s readings:
https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/122924.cfm

QUOTABLE:

Throughout the gospels, Jesus confronts a society rigidly divided by an intricate code that separates the clean and the unclean, the righteous and the sinner, the insider and the outsider. In everything he days and does, Jesus turns that society upside down, breaking down the codes that divide God’s family, restoring the broken and excluded to wholeness and community, inviting those outside to a place of special honor in the feast that God has prepared. This accounts for the scandal that constantly attends Jesus and his fellowship with “prostitutes”, sinners, unclean people–unclean in both the literal as well as ritual sense of the term. The “family” that Jesus gathers around him is hardly what we would call an “exclusive club,” instead, it includes every type of “wrong” person, every type of person who feels marginalized and excluded by the prevailing standards of social value. It is these people, in particular, who experience the call to join Jesus’ family as a genuine blessing.

Robert Ellsberg in, THE LIVING PULPIT, July-September, 1999, page 4.

JUSTICE BULLETIN BOARD

“See what love the Father has bestowed
on us that we may be called the children of God”

1 John 3: 1

Today is the Feast of the Holy Family, the family par excellence that we are related to by both Word and Spirit. And what an unruly lot of children we can be! Family life is messy; its members have different opinions, different likes and dislikes, different strengths and weaknesses. United together, however, a family is a loving bond to a world that doesn’t realize how we are all related. A stable family life is also a source of peace. So, it is fitting that after Christmas, when a little family of two became three, comes the World Day of Peace on January 1, 2025, to start the new year.

“Forgive us our trespasses: grant us your peace” is the theme chosen by Pope Francis for this World Day of Peace, that also ushers in our Jubilee Year. The Dicastery for Promoting Integral Human Development, in its statement on the theme, says the chosen theme corresponds to “the biblical and ecclesial understanding of the Jubilee Year” as “the concepts of hope and forgiveness are at the heart of the Jubilee, a time for conversion that calls us not to condemn, but instead to bring about reconciliation and peace.” “Only from a genuine conversion on all levels – personal, local and international – will true peace be able to flourish,” states the Dicastery. Wouldn’t it be wonderful if every family throughout the world would seek reconciliation and peace in all spheres of its influence as a hope-filled resolution for 2025?

Consider, also, some additional resolutions proposed by Evy McDonald in Simpler Living, Compassionate Life, (Morehouse,1999): “I pledge to discover how much is enough for me to be truly fulfilled, neither rich nor poor, and to consume only that. I pledge to be part of the discovery of how much would be enough for everyone—not only to survive but to thrive—and to find ways for them to have access to that. Through this commitment to restraint and justice, I am living the teachings of Jesus, healing my life and am part of the healing of the world (66).”

Happy New Year, family!

Barbara Molinari Quinby, MPS, Director

Office of Human Life, Dignity, and Justice Ministries

Holy Name of Jesus Cathedral, Raleigh, NC

FAITH BOOK


Mini-reflections on the Sunday scripture readings designed for persons on the run. “Faith Book” is also brief enough to be posted in the Sunday parish bulletins people take home.


From today’s Gospel reading:

He went down with them and came to Nazareth,
and was obedient to them;
and his mother kept all these things in her heart.

Reflection:

We will accompany Mary as she periodically appears in the gospel of Luke. With her we will look and listen at the unfolding events and join her as we keep “all these things” in our heart.

So, we ask ourselves:

  • Do I have a regular practice of reflecting on the significance of the day’s events?
  • Do I accompany those reflections with regular meditation on God’s Word in the scriptures?

POSTCARDS TO DEATH ROW INMATES

“One has to strongly affirm that condemnation to the death penalty is an inhuman measure that humiliates personal dignity, in whatever form it is carried out."
---Pope Francis

Inmates on death row are the most forgotten people in the prison system. Each week I am posting in this space several inmates’ names and locations. I invite you to write a postcard to one or more of them to let them know that: we have not forgotten them; are praying for them and their families; or, whatever personal encouragement you might like to give them. If the inmate responds, you might consider becoming pen pals.

Please write to:

  • James E. Thomas #0404386 (On death row since 2/24/95)
  • Tony M. Sidden #0368820 (3/15/95)
  • Charles P. Bond #0036850 (3/24/95)

----Central Prison, P.O. 247, Phoenix, MD 21131

Please note: Central Prison is in Raleigh, NC., but for security purposes, mail to inmates is processed through a clearing house at the above address in Maryland.

For more information on the Catholic position on the death penalty go to the Catholic Mobilizing Network: http://catholicsmobilizing.org/resources/cacp/

On this page you can sign “The National Catholic Pledge to End the Death Penalty.” Also, check the interfaith page for People of Faith Against the Death Penalty: http://www.pfadp.org/

DONATIONS

“First Impressions” is a service to preachers and those wishing to prepare for Sunday worship. It is sponsored by the Dominican Friars. If you would like “First Impressions” sent weekly to a friend, send a note to Fr. John Boll, OP at jboll@opsouth.org.

If you would like to support this ministry, please send tax deductible contributions to Fr. Jude Siciliano, O.P.:

St. Albert Priory, 3150 Vince Hagan Drive, Irving, Texas 75062-4736

Make checks payable to: Dominican Friars.

Or, go to our webpage to make an online donation: https://www.PreacherExchange.com/donations.htm

RESOURCES

ORDERING OUR CDs:

We have compiled Four CDs for sale:

  • Individual CDs for each Liturgical Year, A, B or C.
  • One combined CD for “Liturgical Years A, B and C.

If you are a preacher, lead a Lectionary-based scripture group, or are a member of a liturgical team, these CDs will be helpful in your preparation process. Individual worshipers report they also use these reflections as they prepare for Sunday liturgy.

You can order the CDs by going to our webpage:  https://www.PreacherExchange.com and clicking on the “First Impressions” CD link on the left.

OTHER PUBLICATIONS BY EMAIL:

1. "HOMILÍAS DOMINICALES" ---These Spanish reflections on the Sunday and daily scriptures are written by Dominican sisters and friars. If you or a friend would like to receive these reflections drop a note to "Fr. John J. Boll, O.P." <preacherexchange@att.net>
2. "VOLUME 2" is an opportunity for you to hear from the readers of First Impressions. To subscribe or Send your own reflections: Send them to "Fr. John J. Boll, O.P." <preacherexchange@att.net > Your contributions to Volume 2 are welcome.

OUR WEBSITE: http://www.preacherexchange.com - Where you will find Preachers Exchange, which includes "First Impressions," "Homilías Dominicales," and "Volume 2" as well as articles, book reviews, daily homilies and other material pertinent to preaching and Scripture reflection.

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