December 30th, 2018: Holy Family, Year C. 1 John 3:1-2, 21-24; Luke 2:41-52.
AIM: To present
the story of the boy Jesus in the Temple , and
his return to Nazareth ,
as a model for our lives.
How much do we know about Jesus= childhood and youth? Apart from the
story we have just heard in the gospel, nothing. He drops completely from view
from the age of twelve until his baptism by his cousin, John, when B according to Luke=s gospel B Jesus was Aabout thirty years old@ (Luke 3:23). Three things in today=s gospel deserve consideration: Jesus= words to his parents; his return to Nazareth ; and his mother=s reaction.
1. ADid you not know that I must be in my
Father=s house?@ Jesus asks his annguished parents,
worn out from a frantic three-day search for their twelve-year-old son. The
question is Jesus= first recorded utterance in Luke=s gospel. He speaks the words in the
building which, for all believing Jews of that day, including Jesus himself,
was the earthly dwelling place of God. The Temple
at Jerusalem
was the most sacred shrine of the people God had chosen to be especially his
own.
With Jesus= coming, however, God was creating a new
dwelling place on earth: not a building of wood and stone, but the living flesh
of the twelve-year-old boy who stood in that building and spoke of his need to
be Ain my Father=s house.@
Later, at the beginning of his public ministry, Jesus would stand in the
Temple again to
prophesy its destruction and its raising up again Ain three days.@
(John 2:18) That prophecy was a scandal to Jesus= devout countrymen. Even his friends
did not understand what Jesus was talking about until after his resurrection. Then,
John tells us, they recalled the Master=s words and realized that he had been
talking about Athe temple of his body@ (John 2:19-22).
Because Jesus is himself God=s temple, the dwelling place of God
on earth, only one thing mattered for him: doing his Father=s will. How did Jesus come to
recognize his unique status as God=s Son and earthly dwelling place? We
do not know. Today=s gospel indicates, however, that he came to this recognition
gradually. It says that he asked questions of the teachers in the Temple . Clearly he did not
come into the world knowing all the answers. Like every other human child,
Jesus had to learn. His humanity was no mere disguise. It was real. Like every
one of us, Jesus learned things as he grew and developed. The wording of Jesus= question to his parents in our
gospel indicates, however, that even at age twelve, he had at least an inkling
that his relationship to God was unique. He does not speak, as he would later
teach his followers to do in his model prayer, of AOur Father.@ He says instead, AI must be in my Father=s house.@ Here is what Pope Benedict says in
his book on the infancy narratives about this exchange between mother and son:
Jesus’ reply to his mother’s question
is astounding: How so? You were looking for me? Did you not know where a child
must be? That he must be in his father’s house, literally ‘in the things of the
Father,’ Jesus tells his parents: I am in the very place where I belong – with
the Father, in his house. There are two principal elements to note in this
reply. Mary had said: ‘Your father and I have been looking for you anxiously.’
Jesus corrects her: I am with my father.
My father is not Joseph, but another – God himself. It is to him that I belong,
and here I am with him. Could Jesus’ divine sonship be presented any more
clearly? (p. 123f)
2. This flash of
youthful insight (if that is what it was) is immediately followed, however, by what
looks like an anticlimax. Instead of remaining in his Father=s house at Jerusalem ,
Jesus returns to Nazareth
with Mary and Joseph, to resume the normal life of a Jewish boy of his day. The
great moment passes. Jesus surprises us.
He would continue to surprise people throughout his earthly life. He
remains the master of surprise today.
Even to his closest friends Jesus was
always something of a mystery. The gospels speak repeatedly of their failure to
understand him. Jesus= friends began really to comprehend who he was, and what his
life meant, only after the greatest of all his surprises: the empty tomb of
Easter morning.
3. One of those
surprised by Jesus, and unable to understand him, was his own mother. Today=s gospel tells us that she and Joseph
Adid not understand@ their son=s words about having to be Ain my Father=s house.@ Starting with the message from the
angel Gabriel, that she was to be the mother of God=s Son, Mary received many messages
about him: from the shepherds, recounting what the angels had told them;
from those mysterious Awise men from the East@; from the prophecies of Simeon and
Anna about her infant Son in this same Jerusalem Temple; from her husband=s dream, warning of danger to their
child and the need to flee to Egypt.
Despite all these messages, however,
Mary would never fully understand her Son. Even for the woman who was closer to
Jesus than anyone else on earth, Jesus remained shrouded in mystery. Like every
human being before and since, Mary had to walk by faith, not by sight.
We must do the same. On this Sunday
after Christmas, the last in 2018, the old year is almost gone. In a few hours
we shall cross the threshold of a new year.
What will it bring? We cannot know. Conceivably the year of grace 2019
could bring us some great experience B deeper insight, perhaps, into life=s meaning, or into God=s special purpose for the one life he
has given us B something comparable to the insight
given to the twelve-year-old Jesus in the Jerusalem Temple about the meaning
and purpose of his life. If so, the experience will pass: for us, as it
did for Jesus.
Jesus= brief moment of bright vision in the
Temple was followed by the years of hidden labor
in the carpenter=s shop at Nazareth .
And it was there, in accepting the burdens, duties, and frustrations of a very
ordinary and outwardly uninteresting life, that Jesus Aadvanced in wisdom and age and favor
before God and man,@ as Luke tells us at the end of today=s gospel.
Do you want to advance, as Jesus did?
Which of us does not? We advance in age whether we wish it or not. Advancing in
wisdom and favor before God and others, however, is not automatic. To do that
we must do what Jesus did. We must be willing to let go of life=s great experiences, no matter how
beautiful they may be. We must accept
the challenges, the duties, and the burdens which each day brings us. Never
look back. Christmas is past. Look forward. The late Archbishop Fulton
Sheen used to say: AThere are no plains in the spiritual life; either we are
going up, or we are going down.@ He was right.
Advancing in wisdom and favor before
God and others means, above all, taking to heart the words of St. John in our second reading: AGod=s commandment is this: we should
believe in the name of his Son, Jesus Christ, and love one another just as he
commanded us. Those who keep his commandments remain in him, and he in them. And
the way we know that he remains in us is from the Spirit he gave us.@
No comments:
Post a Comment