When he was at table with them, he took the bread. He blessed the bread, and broke it, and gave it to them. And their eyes were opened and they recognized him!(Luke 24:13-35)

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Let the heavens be glad and the earth rejoice!

It’s that time of year again! As 2009 ends and we usher in 2010 our thoughts turn to how we might grow physically, emotionally, and spiritually. We think of things such as what we might avoid—like weight issues, smoking, alcohol use; and what we might add to our daily routines—prayer, caring for the poor, sacrifice for our loved ones.

The Holy Family is depicted here in St. Luke’s Gospel as fulfilling a normal religious obligation in bringing Jesus to Jerusalem for the Jewish ceremony of purification (“Every firstborn male is to be consecrated to God”). There they meet Simeon and Anna, faithful and wise persons who had awaited the coming of the Messiah remaining steady and strong in their faith.

Completing the prescribed purification, Joseph, Mary and the baby Jesus return to Galilee, their hometown, and Luke tells us succinctly, “the child grew and became strong, filled with wisdom and the favor of God was upon him.” There is so much personal history of Jesus and the Holy Family contained in these phrases but they really don’t shed much direct light on Jesus as He lived the great majority of His life in Nazareth.

We refer to that “growing” and “becoming strong”, being filled with “wisdom” and receiving the “favor of God” as the hidden life of Jesus. We remember that the public life of Jesus, the part that we are so familiar with because of the Gospels, covered a relatively small part of His whole life. So we are intrigued: what went on during those nearly 30 years Jesus spent with Joseph and Mary? We can only imagine the incidents of that life as Jesus grew among His immediate family, the townspeople He knew, the skills that were developed in Him as He learned Joseph’s trade, if He caught colds or skinned His knees, and the many other tasks of growing up into His identity as a human person.

What we do know about those “hidden” years is what St. Luke tells us in the gospel passage. What do those words or reality actually mean for us in our own circumstances today? If we are to “imitate” Jesus in our lives we are invited to the same kind of growth that He experienced, and that, like Him, we are invited to focus on the source of that growth because indeed the “favor of God” is for us as much as it was for Jesus.

The often-repeated phrase that we speak—“God loves you”—is a reality; a promise from God. We must realize that promise in our own life with its many and varied circumstances. Each of us is called to grow and become strong and be filled with wisdom because the favor of God rests upon us as it rested on Jesus.

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