The Covid pandemic is nearing two
years old, and with it a string of ‘suggestions’ has turned into ‘rules’,
‘regulations’, and even ‘laws’. Social
distancing, getting vaccinated, and wearing masks while indoors have made many
in our country question our freedoms.
Rules. Regulations. Our lives are full of them, and our American
sensibilities caution us that we have freedoms, that we don’t have to be guided
by so many laws and commandments.
Do I really have to spend so much of
my life with rules? All I want is to
make my life a Yes to God and everything God is asking of me. Sometimes the rules even seem to get in the
way of that.
Then I look at my life and the things
that mean the most to me. Certainly
there are laws for protecting my children.
But do I care for them because of those laws, or because I love my
daughters and grandchildren so much? And
don’t I love my wife and honor my marriage not only because I took a vow to her
but because I want to be faithful to our commitment to each other?
The New Testament readings I chose to
reflect on today are not as much about the laws of God or the laws of the
Church as they are about being faithful to God, a fidelity that’s lived out
every day. Saint John spells it out
clearly. We can really know Jesus if we
live as He did, love as He did, forgive as He did [1 John 2:3-11].
In Luke’s gospel we see Mary and
Joseph following the laws, being faithful Jews, and taking their firstborn son
to the temple [Luke 2:22-35]. They didn’t
go because they had to. They wanted to
because following the law was just another way of being faithful to God and
giving thanks for God’s faithfulness in their lives. This is how they began their lives as parents
who raised a son whose whole life was a Yes to God.
Maybe we aren’t really saying Yes to
Jesus every day if we’re harboring deep resentments and angers against others
or even against laws. Those can be
barriers to our finding God in the darkness and emptiness of the stable. Somewhere in the dimly lit corner of our
hearts, in that painful place we don’t want to go, we can turn to Jesus and ask
for the grace to forgive someone. We can
ask for patience to turn a deep suffering into a piece of the Paschal mystery
that is so much a part of the Christmas story.
In these quiet days after Christmas, I
ask for the ability to see clearly how I can best serve God, how I can be
faithful to God. I ask for the grace to
be less arrogant about what’s right and what’s wrong and more faithful to the
simple obedience God asks of me.
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