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Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Daily Reflections - December 18,2012


The silent, yet eloquent St. Joseph
 
During this season Matthew wants us to focus on Joseph. Not a single word of Joseph is recorded. He dreams, listens and acts. He passes through the Gospel like a shadow. He appears to have been a man without a message. He was so ordinary that little could be said of him to those who would come after. And yet, he was chosen by God for the most important task one can think of: to be the husband of the Virgin Mary and so protect her, and the foster father of Jesus, the Son of God, and bring Him up and teach Him to  be a mature person.
Matthew calls him a just man. Imagine: His fiancée Mary had been away to help her cousin Elizabeth. Returning after three months he discovers that she was pregnant, but not by him. Imagine the shame and hurt that he must have experienced. It must have been a heavy blow for him. And this time it was not a bad dream – it was real. His honesty would not allow him to marry an adulteress and pretend the child was his. Neither would he expose the woman he loved to shame and punishment but divorce her quietly. Obviously, he loved Mary and though the evidence pointed to the opposite, he still believed in the goodness of his fiancée. Without words St. Joseph makes us aware of two points.
Our world today has become very noisy. There is no silence anymore. It seems that many of us are afraid of silence because in silence we have to confront ourselves. And confronting ourselves we might discover something that we don’t like and would have to change. But to change ourselves is painful and so we avoid it and become more and more superficial. Here, St. Joseph impresses on us the importance of silence.
A second lesson that St. Joseph teaches us today is not to judge and condemn a person immediately but to see first what is good in a person. St. Joseph – a wise man! We would do well to accept his lessons so that in this noisy, stressful season we find some peace and prepare for the real Christmas. Fr. Rudy Horst, SVD
 
REFLECTION QUESTIONS: Do you avoid quiet times and silence? Do you easily judge a person without knowing all the details?
 
Lord, I thank You for presenting us today St. Joseph. Yes, Lord, it is in silence and quietness that I can encounter You. Make me love silence more.

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