December 28, 2014 - Feast of the
Holy Family
Readings
Sirach 3:2-6,12-14
Psalm 128:1-5
Colossians 3:12-21
Luke 2:41-52
Sirach 3:2-6,12-14
Psalm 128:1-5
Colossians 3:12-21
Luke 2:41-52
Why did
Jesus choose to become a baby born of a mother and father and to spend all but
His last years living in an ordinary human family? In part, to reveal God’s
plan to make all people live as one “holy family” in His Church (see 2
Corinthians 6:16-18).
In the Holy
Family of Jesus, Mary and Joseph, God reveals our true home. We’re to live as
His children, “chosen ones, holy and beloved,” as the First Reading puts it.
The family
advice we hear in today’s readings - for mothers, fathers and children - is all
solid and practical. Happy homes are the fruit of our faithfulness to the Lord,
we sing in today’s Psalm. But the Liturgy is inviting us to see more, to see
how, through our family obligations and relationships, our families become
heralds of the family of God that He wants to create on earth.
Jesus shows
us this in today’s Gospel. His obedience to His earthly parents flows directly
from His obedience to the will of His heavenly Father. Joseph and Mary aren’t
identified by name, but three times are called “his parents” and are referred
to separately as his “mother” and “father.” The emphasis is all on their
“familial” ties to Jesus. But these ties are emphasized only so that Jesus, in
the first words He speaks in Luke’s Gospel, can point us beyond that earthly
relationship to the Fatherhood of God.
In what
Jesus calls “My Father’s house,” every family finds its true meaning and
purpose (see Ephesians 3:15). The Temple we read about in the Gospel today is God’s house, His
dwelling (see Luke 19:46). But it’s also an image of the family of God, the Church (see
Ephesians 2:19-22; Hebrews 3:3-6; 10:21).
In our
families we’re to build up this household, this family, this living temple of
God. Until He reveals His new dwelling among us, and says of every person: “I
shall be his God and he will be My son” (see Revelation 21:3,7).
Scott Hahn, Ph.D.
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