Sunday, December 27, 2015

God welcomes us into the family of love – Luke 2:41-52, 1 John 3:1-2

Holy Family, Year C; Notre Dame (University Village)

We’ve just heard tell of a perfectly loving family.  But that perfectly loving family isn’t the one our feast celebrates today: the one perfectly loving family is not Jesus, Mary and Joseph, but God.  By which I mean: God the Father, and Jesus the Son.  God is family, and by that I don’t mean that God really likes families (though he does), or God is close to us like a familial relative (though he is), I mean it as literally as we can mean anything about God: God is a family, the one perfectly loving family.  The relationship of love between God the Father and Jesus the Son is the love from which all other love is spun.  It’s a love between father and son that drove everything that Jesus did; and everything that Jesus did serves to invite us into that love and empower us to respond in love.  It’s why had to be in his father’s house, about his father’s business.  It’s why Jesus prayed so much.  It’s the love that gave Jesus the strength and the trust to be able to offer everything for us.  It’s the love that drew Jesus up to return to his father after his resurrection, to continue to show us what love looks like, and that led him to send us the Spirit that we might live in that love.


And that Jesus, Mary and Joseph didn’t form a perfect family doesn’t mean it’s not totally right to call them still the Holy Family, because holiness isn’t really about perfection.  Even with two of the three members of the family being totally without sin, they still manage to leave their 12-year-old son in Jerusalem while they walk for a day.  And when they find him, they don’t understand what he says to them.  In a way, that can be a great relief for us: that holiness isn’t about understanding everything, never making a mistake.  It’s about seeking out the lost, and keeping all these things in our hearts, but it’s not about 100% success rates and never failing at anything.

If we want perfect unfailing love, though, we have a witness to that, we have the love between Father and Son that Jesus came to show us.  To show us, and to lead us into.  John’s letter says it powerfully: “We are God’s children now.”  What Jesus had by nature, we are given by grace through baptism.  Commenting on this passage, the Venerable Bede commented that God’s love is freely bestowed on us “so that we might both know and be able to love him; to love him… not as lowly faithful hired servants love their masters, but as children love their father.”  And John tells us that God’s adoption of us as children will lead us to grow unimaginably like our God, “what we shall be has not yet been revealed,” but as we grapple with that and journey by grace towards it, we are already God’s children, we have already been granted a real and precious foretaste of that perfect love.

And we can give and receive something as humans that is a real image of God’s love.  Not something that would ever eclipse it or compete with it even, but a real and precious foretaste, that makes more tangible what we know our God to be holding out to us.  And families can be a real place of encounter with that love, both the Holy Family, and each of our families, closer to home.  The love between parent and child, between spouses, between siblings and friends, prepares us for and expresses our longing for that love that God truly is.  But, we’re not there yet, and that makes family life hard.  And in our frailty and our failing, we can rest secure on the perfection of God’s love.  It is our hope and our prayer that everyone encounters love within human families, and we ask the Holy Family to join in that prayer, but the embrace of God’s family, into which we are invited, is real, and powerful, even if the analogy with our human families sometimes limps. 



I once baptized three siblings at once: 2, 4 and 7 years old.  The 2 and 4 year-olds didn’t remember their father, but Justin did.  At age 7, he didn’t know the phrase ‘restraining order,’ but he could remember what life had been like when his father had been around, and that it was a very good thing that he wasn’t anymore.  I spent some time in the preparation process playing with them with the things we’d use for the baptism, those tangible signs of God’s love outpoured, and trying to help them understand some of what we believe happens in baptism.  Some bits of our teaching they really couldn’t latch on to, but being claimed as God’s adopted daughters and sons, getting a new Dad, that resonated especially with Julian.  As I poured the water over his head “in the name of the Father, and of the…” I saw his beaming smile as he blinked away the water.  And I learned something about love: that we want every child to learn what the Father’s love is from the care and nurture and mutual love of their parents.  That’s how we humans were made to learn love.  But God won’t let human frailty, or even wickedness, stand in the way of welcoming us into that perfect love.

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