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Fr. Kasel

The Blessings of Family


Merry Christmas! Please remember this month of December is dedicated to the Immaculate Conception and the Infancy of Jesus: let us give thanks to our Heavenly Father for the gift of Jesus through Mary! This Sunday we celebrate the Feast of the Holy Family of Jesus, Mary and Joseph. I share with you a reflection on the Holy Family. I encourage you to reflect over this message a few times this week:

Feast of the Holy Family - “The Holy Family of Nazareth: Jesus wanted to launch the Redemption of the world from the heart of a family. And when they had performed everything according to the law of the Lord, they returned into Galilee, to their own city, Nazareth. And the Child grew and became strong, filled with wisdom; and the favor of God was upon Him. (Luke 2:39-40)

The Messiah wanted to start His redemptive task in the bosom of a simple, ordinary family. The first thing that Jesus sanctified with His presence was a home. Nothing extraordinary happened during those years in Nazareth where Jesus spent the greater part of His life.

Joseph was the head of the family. He was a father according to the law and it was he who supported Jesus and Mary with his work. It is he who received the message as to what name he must give the Child: And you shall call His name Jesus, and heard the words of those who wanted to protect the Child: Rise, take the Child and His Mother and flee to Egypt (Matt. 2:13). Rise, take the Child and His Mother and go to the land of Israel. Do not go to Bethlehem, but to Nazareth (cf. Matt. 2:20-23). It was from Joseph that Jesus learned His trade, which was to be His means of earning a living. Jesus must often have shown His admiration and affection for him.

From Mary, Jesus learned certain turns of phrase, popular expressions full of wisdom which He was later to use in His preaching. He saw how she kept back a little dough from one day to the next, so that it could act as leaven; she added water and mixed it with the new dough, leaving it to rise, well covered with a clean cloth. When His mother mended their clothes, the Child used to watch her. If a garment was torn she would look for a piece of cloth to match. Jesus, with a child’s curiosity, would ask her why she did not use a new piece of cloth. Our Lady explained to Him that when new patches are washed they pull on the old cloth and tear it; that was why she had to make a patch out of used cloth… The best clothes, the ones they wore on feast days, were kept in a chest. Mary also took great care to place certain aromatic plants between them so as to prevent moths from damaging them. Years later these occurrences will appear in Jesus’ preaching. We never forget this teaching which is fundamental to ordinary life. Mary spent nearly every day of her life like millions of other women who look after their families, bring up their children and take care of the house. Mary sanctifies the ordinary everyday things - what some people wrongly regard as unimportant and insig-nificant: everyday work, looking after those closest to you, visits to friends and relatives. What a blessed ordinariness, that can be so full of love of God! (J. Escriva, Christ Is Passing By, 148)

Between Joseph and Mary there existed a holy affection, a spirit of service, and a mutual desire for each other’s happiness. This is Jesus’ family: sacred, holy, exemplary, a model of human virtues, ready to

carry out God’s Will exactly. A Christian home must be an imitation of the house of Nazareth: a place where there is plenty of room for God so that He can be right at the center of the love that members of the family have for one another.

Is our home like this? Do we dedicate to it the time and attention that it deserves? Is Jesus its center? Do we live only for the others? These are some questions which we could ask in our prayer today, whilst we contemplate Jesus, Mary and Joseph on the feast that the Church dedicates to them.

The mission of parents. The example of Mary and Joseph: In the family, the parents by word and example are the first heralds of the Faith with regard to their children. (Second Vatican Council, Lumen Gentium, 11) In the case of the Holy Family this was achieved in a most singular manner. Jesus learned the meaning of the things around Him from His parents.

The Holy Family would have devoutly recited the traditional prayers which were said in every Jewish home. In that house, however, everything that referred particularly to God had a new meaning and con-tent. How keenly and fervently, and with what a spirit of recollection, would Jesus have repeated the verses of Sacred Scripture which all Hebrew children had

to learn. (cf. Ps. 55:18; Dan. 6:11; Ps. 119) He would often recite these

prayers learned from His parents’ lips.

When they contemplate these scenes, parents should frequently consider

the words of Pope St. Paul VI, recalled for us by Pope St. John Paul

II, Do you teach your children the Christian prayers? Do you prepare

them, in conjunction with the priests, for the sacraments that they receive

when they are young - Confession, Communion and Confirmation?

Do you encourage them, when they are sick, to think of Christ

suffering, to invoke the aid of the Blessed Virgin and the saints? Do you

say the family Rosary together…? Do you pray with your children, with

the whole domestic community, at least sometimes? Your example of

honesty in thought and action, joined to some common prayer, is a lesson

for life and an act of worship of singular value. In this way you

bring peace to your homes: Pax huic domui. Remember, it is thus that

you build up the Church. (St. John Paul II, Apostolic Exhortation, Familiaris

Consortio¸60)

If Christian homes imitate that home formed by the Holy Family of

Nazareth, they will be bright and cheerful homes (cf. J. Escriva, Christ

Is Passing By, 22) because each member of the family will struggle first

of all to get to know God and, with a spirit of sacrifice, will endeavor to

make life more pleasant for those around him.

The family is a school of virtues and the ordinary place for us to find

God. Husbands and wives will achieve this aim by exercising the virtues

of Faith and Hope, facing serenely all the great and small problems

which confront any family, and will be persevering in the love and

enthusiasm with which they fulfill their duties. They will learn to smile

and forget about themselves in order to pay attention to others. Husband

and wife will listen to each other and to their children, showing

them that they are really loved and understood. They will forget about the unimportant little frictions that selfishness can magnify out of all

proportion. They do lovingly all the small acts of service that make up

their daily life together.

The aim is this: to sanctify family life, while creating at the same time

a true family atmosphere. Many Christian virtues are necessary in

order to sanctify each day of one’s life. First, the theological virtues

and then all the others: prudence, loyalty, sincerity, humility, industriousness,

cheerfulness… (ibid., 23)

These virtues will strengthen the unity that the Church teaches us to

pray for: You, Who by being born into a family, strengthen family

bonds, let there be an increase in unity within the family. (Divine Office,

Payers II, Vespers of 1 January)

May the Virgin Mary, who is the Mother of the Church, also be the

Mother of the ‘Church of the home.’ Thanks to her motherly aid, may

each Christian family really become a ‘little church’ in which the mystery

of the Church of Christ is mirrored and given new life. May she,

the Handmaid of the Lord, be an example of humble and generous

acceptance of the Will of God. May she, the Sorrowful Mother at the

foot of the Cross, comfort the sufferings and dry the tears of those in

distress because of the difficulties of their family life. May Christ the

Lord, the Universal King, the King of Families, be present in every

Christian home as He was at Cana, bestowing light, joy, serenity and

strength. (St. John Paul II, op. cit., 86)

Today we pray to the Holy Family in a very special way for each

member of our families and in particular for the one in most

need.” (From: In Conversation with God, by Francis Fernandez)

Through the intercession of the Holy Family, St. Michael, St. Paul,

and all the Holy Angels, may God grant us the grace to be joyful in

union with the Hearts of Jesus, Mary and Joseph!

In Christ through Mary,

Fr. Kasel

Church of St. Paul

749 South Main Street

Zumbrota, MN 55992

Parish Office: (507) 732-5324

Fax: (507) 732-5347

Email: stpauls@hcinet.net

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