The Church celebrates the
birth of Jesus Christ, the Son of God, not as an excuse for the saccharin-sweet
pictures of babies and family much loved by advertising executives, and secular
descriptions of Christmas and the family in general. We celebrate the Holy Family
of Jesus, Mary and Joseph as the paradigm of human life and love. The union of
husband, wife, and child is the basis of human life, human society, and the
church. It brings both rights and responsibilities – it shows us how to live
and how to flourish. It is rooted in love – it is costly, it requires sacrifice.
As parents and children we know this all too well. The loving care and nurture
we see embodied in the Holy Family reminds us of our duty to live out the same
in our lives, so that we may truly flourish as human beings made in the image
of God through walking in His ways.
This
morning’s Old Testament Reading reminds us of the need to respect and care for
our parents, to do for them what they did for us. Such gentleness and care is
at the heart of our faith insofar as it allows us to live out in our lives
something of the love and care shown to us by God in Christ, the love and care
shown to Him by his own mother and father – the care for Him, His safety and
well-being which define the relationship of love. As opposed to the fear of
Herod who can only see the coming of the Christ-child as a threat to his own
earthy power, in Joseph we see a father who is protective, who puts his family’s
needs before his own. This generous self-giving love lies at the heart of our
faith: it is shown in every part of Our Lord’s life: from the Annunciation, in
his Birth, His life, His proclamation of the Good News of the Kingdom, in His
healing of the sick, His forgiveness of sins, in His Passion, His Death and
Resurrection. It is central to S. Paul’s
understanding of how Christians should live together: in love – letting everything
we say or think or do be rooted in that genuine, costly, self-giving love which
comes from God.
This love lies
at the heart of our faith, of our understanding of the human family, and how we
seek to live out our faith in our lives, fashioning human society as one rooted
in generous love. It makes us as the Church, a family, all equal, loved and redeemed
by God, a family which we enter through our baptism, where we are clothed with
Christ, where God enters a new covenant with humanity, a new covenant in the
body and blood of His Son, which is given to us in Communion, so that we feast
in the Banquet of the Kingdom, where humanity is given a foretaste of heaven,
where we come to share in the divine life of love shown to the world in Christ Jesus
Our Lord and Saviour. So let us live out this love in Our lives, may all that
we think, or say, or do, proclaim the love shown to us in Christ and the Holy
Family, for our good, and that of the world, that it may see and believe and sing
the praise of God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit, to whom be
ascribed as is most right and just all might, majesty, glory, dominion, and
power, now and forever.
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