Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
Terrance KleinDecember 27, 2019
Photo by Benjamin Manley on Unsplash

Families are often more fused together than fashioned. We have an image of what we want our families to be, whether that is an imagined brood, yet to be, or one remembered, long since disbanded. In both cases, dreams and memories often do not measure up to what we wish families were.

We need to realize how high the stakes are in families. The more we love, the more we make ourselves vulnerable. No one can love us like family, and no one can hurt us like family. Keep this in mind when you consider your own clan. Who, save God alone, can draw the line between sinning and being sinned against? It is easy enough to see the hurt that others have caused, more difficult to see the inner pain that often impels them. And, perhaps most difficult of all, recognizing the suffering that we ourselves have inflicted.

Maps detail the distances between family members. So do wounds. Either way, Christmas is a wonderful time to reach out and to wish a family member God’s best blessings. We may need to keep our distance, but we can at least desire all good things for our family members. Fusing together a family often means overlooking a lot, being ready to forgive once again. It means constantly asking ourselves if we have really given all that we can.

Sometimes, fusing together a family means establishing dear relationships even in the absence of blood. Yes, blood runs deeper than water, but love surges from a fathomless vein. The blood of Joseph did not flow in the veins of Jesus as Mary’s did, but never think that the manhood of the Christ was not something crafted by the carpenter from Nazareth.

Yes, the sanctity of the Holy Family sets them apart from us, but the greater chasm is that of deliberate decision. Joseph chose to accept Mary and her unborn Son as his own. Mary chose to bear the Christ. And the Son of God chose to become flesh, to become a member of a family.

Yes, the sanctity of the Holy Family sets them apart from us, but the greater chasm is that of deliberate decision.

We may not yet be saints, but this does not make our families any less sacred. They are ordained to be holy. They are instruments, chosen by God. Saint Paul said that where sin abounds so too does grace. The converse is also true. Those who pursue holiness will be beset by temptations. Raising a Christian family is a great work of grace. Just like King Herod, the Evil One will exert himself to see it fail.

When sanctity is the measure, our families may be quite different from Jesus, Mary and Joseph. But when the question becomes what we chose to do, we could not be more like them.

Readings: Sirach 3: 2-6, 3-14 Colossians 3: 12-21 Mathew 2: 13-15, 19-23

Comments are automatically closed two weeks after an article's initial publication. See our comments policy for more.

The latest from america

Working for the protection of people by safeguarding against the crime abuse is an integral expression of Christian faith. The successor of Pope Francis has the task of picking up where he left off and continuing resolutely. How can that be done?
Peter BeerMay 02, 2025
Francis always encouraged me in our attempt to move forward as an ecumenical community and in welcoming young people from different churches who come to Taizé from all over the world. He was the pope, but also a father and a brother to me.
Brother AloisMay 02, 2025
Pope Francis welcomed criticism—as long as it was not made behind his back.
Sebastian GomesMay 02, 2025
The cardinals have asked Catholics to pray for them and the conclave. What exactly should we be praying for? And should we be scandalized by the intermingling of politics and spirituality?
JesuiticalMay 02, 2025