Gospel Reflections by Father Gerry Pierse, C.Ss.R.
Gospel: Luke 2:41-52
While devotion to the Sto. Niño has done much to sustain the faith of the people
there are those who argue that it has not helped them to mature. It is an image
that has Jesus as an infant and yet dressed as an adult. It seems to indicate
by-passing the difficult and necessary formative stage of adolescence. Sometimes
this stage is also more or less by-passed, or not handled with sensitivity, in
our culture.
Source: Sundays into Silence - A Pathway to Life. Copyright © 1998 by Claretian
Publications
The only story we have of the childhood of Jesus is in Luke 2:41-50. It is the
story of his being lost in the Temple and of his peculiar response to Mary and
Joseph when they eventually found him. It shows us that Jesus was a very normal
teenager and shows us how Mary handled the situation. It tells us that the
youth, Jesus, left the group, returning from visiting the temple in Jerusalem,
without asking permission. When they found him after three days he talked back
to his parents. When he did this his parents did not understand. From this it
would seem that it is perfectly normal for a young persons as they grow up to
resist parental control, to talk back to parents and it is also normal that
parents should sometimes be totally confused by their children's behavior. If it
happened in the holy family itself it is likely to happen in ordinary families.
The difference will be in the handling.
We are told in the Gospel that Mary held all of these things contemplatively in
her heart. The parents of Jesus did not burst into a rage or did not try to make
Jesus ashamed by their punishing words. They seemed rather to follow the example
that Jesus himself had set when he was lost in the temple. In the temple,
instead of being frightened at being lost, Jesus sat amongst the doctors
listening to them and asking them questions. It is quite amazing that these old
men listened to the child. They did so because he listened to them first. What
happened then, and still happens to us, is very clear. When we are afraid we do
not listen. The opposite is also true. When we listen we cease to be afraid.
Very often we do not have listening in a family because there is fear. There may
be fear of appearing weak, of losing face or authority, or of being refused or
punished. This fear leads one to want to control by threat or violence so that
the other person then becomes afraid. If, on the other hand, there is honest
listening there will be a realization that there is a fearful human being at the
other side. It is very hard, but necessary, for parents to admit their own fears
and weakness sometimes to their children. They begin this process by listening
to what is going on in their own hearts in prayer. Having listened to the fears
within they can begin to listen to the fears of others and that is the beginning
of love.
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