Monday, December 30, 2019

“Filled with Wisdom” by Rev. Paul Berghout (@FatherPB)


“Filled with Wisdom” by Rev. Paul Berghout


Piety
Do not love the world or the things of the world. If anyone loves the world, the love of the Father is not in him. For all that is in the world, sensual lust, enticement for the eyes, and a pretentious life is not from the Father but is from the world. Yet the world and its enticement are passing away. But whoever does the will of God remains forever. 1 John 2:15-17

When they had fulfilled all the prescriptions of the law of the Lord, they returned to Galilee to their own town of Nazareth. The child grew and became strong, filled with wisdom; and the favor of God was upon him. Luke 2:39-40

Study
The Sunday that follows Christmas is always the celebration of the Feast of the Holy Family. After a time, the Holy Family returned and lived in Nazareth, "so that what had been spoken through the prophets might be fulfilled, he shall be called a Nazorean."

As we go through this week of Christmas, moving, even in today’s world, is not easy and I can only imagine what it must have been like for Mary and Joseph. The details of Matthew’s story are not lengthy, but trust, love, and support (relational togetherness) must have been in full swing during their move. What an excellent example for us on how to do this.

In the Bible, and among many of the Saints, family life was messy, and this was the raw material that God’s grace used to form holy people. Yet, for a holy and healthy family, there is a need to identify which of the functional principals a family needs to counter any dysfunctional tendencies, like the functional principle of Mealtime bonding with grace before meals.

Functional families also have a sense of humor with inside jokes, favorite stories, anecdotes, shared memories, all of which delight and reinforce a healthy bond. For example, a non-Catholic example of trying to incorporate grace before meals comes from a female Jewish rabbi who said that she discovered a family who every night at dinner would hold hands, close their eyes, and pray in unison, "Let there be peace on earth and let it begin with us."

Moved by this other family's nightly peace ritual, Rabbi Fuchs told her husband and children at supper that evening to "Sit down ... quietly, don't jump up right away and get the ketchup," she said, "we are now going to hold hands and pray."

The family was a little nervous about this new idea, but they did as Rabbi Fuchs instructed. Next, as she puts it, in her "most rabbinical voice," she declared that everyone was to find a place of peace inside themselves. She recited the words of the prayer for peace, and waited, as she says, "for the blessing to descend on the dining room."

And how did the family react? She writes, instead of a blessing, "all hell broke loose."

The older child took "Let there be peace on earth," and sang it out in a raucous voice. "The younger one began whining because she wanted to get up and microwave her soup." Both of them left the table, collided in the kitchen, started yelling at each other, resulting in two crying, whining, hungry children, and a husband angry at changing the dinner rules with no warning.

In turn, our mother/rabbi ended up crying too as her vision of a peace-filled world, let alone a peaceful dinner, crumbled in the hands of her own family. (Fuchs, 1996, pp. xvi-ii).

But Rabbi Fuchs says that later in the same evening, while they were sitting around reading and relaxing, they discussed what had happened at supper. She admitted to them that she had been bossy. She says that she had been trying to "prepare, serve, and feed faith" to her children, "like homemade, nutritious baby food." She goes on to say that she realized she had been bossy not only with her family but with holiness itself. The next thing that happened was a moment of grace. Her daughter pulled off an imitation of her that got them all laughing about the whole affair. The rabbi says of the laughter, "in that moment of laughter...we experienced something larger than ourselves. I had read, prayed, and even preached that 'God forgives our sins,' but I didn't know that until I began forgiving my children and they began forgiving me" (Fuchs, 1996, p. xvii).

She concluded with: “Who would have thought that out of the mess of that evening meal there could have emerged such gold.”[i]

Although not explicit in the previous example, the story ended with another principle of functional families: Apologizing as an essential practice. The family will have conflict yet remain friendly and trusting when the argument becomes history. We say and so things we regret, but we quickly apologize, ask for, and receive forgiveness.

And, courtesy teaches children that the habit of saying "please" or “thank you," “you’re welcome” or “I’m sorry” often dispenses with explanations, defensive arguments, and misunderstandings.

A Catholic example of family prayer apart from grace before meals comes from Tom Hoopes, who noted, like many of us know, that the rosary stops a busy family in its tracks, quiets the world’s noise, gathers us together, and focuses us on God and not ourselves. The practice of praying the rosary together does wonders for a family psychologically and emotionally.

A final example comes from the Old Testament book of Judges that presents Samson's relationship with Delilah and the disastrous results. Among other things, one functional principal not practiced in this story is accountability, whereby each family member tells the others of their intended destinations, expected activities, time of return, and how to reach them, which fosters trust and helps eliminate worry.

By the way, family disintegration is a theme in the book of Judges. The book depicts the progressive fragmentation of households to teach certain lessons as only Bible stories can.

Many of us already know what happened:

After going to a Philistine city and seeing a Philistine woman, Samson returned to his parents and told them to "get her for me as a wife" (14:1-2). His parents objected, asking whether there was not someone among their people he could pick rather than "a wife from the uncircumcised Philistines" (v. 3). They knew that intermarriage was not permitted in Israel (Deut. 7:1-3), and they are to be faulted for not standing firm.

Nor do they say, the LORD has called you to a special Nazarite status within Israel. The LORD'S agenda is for you to deliver us from the Philistine oppression, not to marry them (13:5). All this remains unsaid. To Samson's parents, his proposition to marry Delilah is simply a cultural and ethnic issue. Nothing more.

They sinned by following through with Samson’s demand and by reminding him of his calling. Deuteronomy 7:3-4 instructs parents not to give their children in marriage to the nations in the land, and Manoah and his wife failed by going ahead to begin the work with the arrangements for the wedding of Samson and Delilah even though Samson and Delilah are not married yet but having sinful relations.

This story also teaches a lesson on just some of the bad consequences of premarital sex or fornication.

Today, psychology tells us that on a biological level, sex contributes to hormonal changes at a biochemical level similar to the bonding between a mother and a baby. However, one of the negative consequences of premarital sex is that this kind of mortal sin can increase insecurity and make worse any insecure attachment in the family of origin to the point where the person has great difficulty in discerning and thinking clearly about whether the person, he or she is involved with, would make a suitable marriage partner. Like Sampson, the cloud of fornication often lands a future relationship and marriage in disaster.

The story of Samson and Delilah ended in betrayal and tragedy for Samson, even though the Scriptures say the Lord used the event to confront the Philistines who in the end, were vanquished.

The account of Samson and Delilah also exemplifies the concept of divine discipline as an impetus for introspection by God’s people by dissociating themselves from the dysfunction of sin by repentance.

Action
The smallest embodiment of the church is not the parish community or any other community or village, but the family as the domestic church (Vatican II, LG. 11). The very origin of the family is of divine decree. As Pope Pius XI declared: "the sacred partnership of true marriage is constituted both by the will of God and the will of man" (Casti Connubii).

One part about the Holy Family that I especially love is the continued hardships that Jesus, Mary, and Joseph had to endure. Sometimes it seems that the stress of parenting and family life can be overwhelming. Mary and Joseph had more than their share of parental stress. However, I also imagine that they were continually open to receiving strength from the Holy Spirit. This part of the story helps me understand that parenting isn’t easy for anyone and that a pivotal piece to good parenting is allowing ourselves to be open and available to receive the Holy Spirit.

One of the most persuasive messages coming from Matthew’s Sunday gospel for the Christmas season is the importance of family whether in Nazareth or Arlington, Virginia. Regardless of what the family structure looks like, the characteristics of trust, love, and support are necessary for any family – and this is what the holy family demonstrated in Sunday’s gospel.

It’s not too late to incorporate some functional principals to make marriage and family life wholly family [with a “W”] and a holy family [with an “H”]. 

Amen.

[i] Source: Entangled in Mystery: History and Hopes for The Center for Congregations and Family Ministries by J. BRADLEY WIGGER


1 comment:

Wahluke Eagles said...

Fantastic