Feast of the Holy Family
And while all of this rings true for the earthly birth of a child, it is also true for the spiritual rebirth of a person, of whatever age. A baptized person is the fruit of the love of God. A baptized person means there is one more disciple, one more follower of Christ. A baptized person is called to develop the traits of God the Father. A baptized person means an increase of love from the Most Holy Trinity, but also becomes a vessel of love to return to the Trinity the love he or she first received, but also to share that same love of God with others.
Right now our society and even our members of the Church at times struggle with welcoming earthly children and with passing on the faith to the next generation. While it is no longer a constitutionally protected activity in the US Constitution, the citizens of Michigan voted to make abortion a protected activity within our State Constitution. Our governor has touted how much easier it is now to get an abortion, and has tried to convince others to move here so that they can have abortions whenever they want to. Apparently the math is lost on her that, when we encourage the killing of the next generation, it doesn’t help the population grow; you can’t add people by subtracting people.
While I will also never fully appreciate the challenges in raising a child, and a couple’s discernment through prayer and reflection of how many children to conceive using Natural Family Planning, as well as with compassion for those who want children but who cannot receive them, those who prayerfully choose to have more than two children are often, whether jokingly or not, ridiculed or their intelligence questioned. “Don’t you know what causes that?” they are sometimes asked. I once heard a person say, in response, “Yeah, and I like doing it!”
Spiritually, too, some families struggle to pass on the faith. In some extreme cases, they advocate delaying baptism until the child can choose for him or herself. If we were to extend this analogically to the other important aspects of life, the foolishness of this position becomes quite apparent: I’m not going to feed my child until she can decide what she wants to eat; I’m going to let my child choose what clothes to wear, or whether to wear any at all; I’m not going to love my child until he asks for it. Loving parents force all sorts of things of their kids that they need: food, clothing; and love, to name a few.
Kids are smart, too. They can tell what parents prioritize. So when sports always or often comes before Mass; when families don’t pray together in the home; when the name of Jesus is more often used as a curse word than to invoke God’s blessings; kids figure out if faith is something that happens when convenient, or if it is a regular part of family life. People wonder why there are fewer attendees at Mass. Frankly, it’s because attending Mass, learning about the faith, and prayer are not prioritized in many families. Kids don’t learn how to follow Christ, or that it makes any real difference, so they stop going to church and growing in their relationship with God as soon as they can.
God promised Abraham descendants as numerous as the stars. And while Abraham struggled with seeing how this could happen, God fulfilled His word when Abraham and Sarah conceived Isaac, whose descendants quickly multiplied in Egypt, and who became a nation, a group of people in their own right. But it went beyond Abraham’s physical descendants. The Gentiles, the non-Jews, who were joined to Christ through baptism, also becomes descendants of Abraham, because Christ is a son of Abraham. God fulfilled His promise through physical and spiritual means.
But for this to happen, Abraham had to have faith in God, and offer to God the sacrifice of his family. This happened in a very dramatic way through the almost-sacrifice of Isaac on Mount Moriah, as the Letter to the Hebrews reminded us. For us, this means offering our family to God, not through death, but through their lives. Is Mass a priority for you as a family, or is it something you get to if it’s not too inconvenient? Do you pray at home each day as a family? Do you pray before meals? Do you share the stories about Jesus, and, as the children grow, the teachings of the Church? Another great tradition that has been lost is for a parent to sign their children with the sign of the cross on their foreheads before they leave for school or just to hang out with friends. This simply gesture, which is proper to parents, reminds the children that they belong to Christ through baptism, and asks Christ, along with their guardian angels, to watch over them wherever they go. The faith becomes as natural a part of life as eating, getting dressed, and going to school or work.
Children are a great blessing. They are, not only the future, but the present. If we wish our society and our church to grow, we should support life, including helping mothers who have little to bring their children to birth. We should make sure that, in our families, the faith life is not optional, but is part of how we live every day. And if you can’t have children for whatever reason, find ways to help other parents and other families. Because families who center themselves on God and not on the lesser goods of the world help make our society and our church better places to be, filled with more of the grace of God.