Sunday Gospel
Reflections
December 28, 2025 Cycle A
Matthew 2:13-15, 19-23
You’re The Adult
Fr.
Richard A.
Miserendino
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Faced with perhaps a
first big
emergency as adults, most of us have had this thought process:
“Trouble! Call
the adults!” Then an unsettling realization: “Oh no. I’m the
grown-up here.”
Suddenly, responsibility
weighs very heavily
on us. No bucks can be passed. No other authorities like parents
or teachers
called. Often, we feel (and perhaps are) wholly unqualified for
the task at
hand. And yet, the decisive moment lies entirely within our
control. God is, of
course, with us. But the actions and choices we make are
essential.
This truth of regular
life goes double
for family life, and goes triple for the spiritual and moral
life.
As we celebrate the
Feast of the Holy
Family today, we read in Matthew’s Gospel how the Lord prompted
and guided
Joseph to lead his Holy Family through danger after danger to
safety. We might
wonder: Did Joseph feel up to the task? Might those same
panicked thoughts have
also run through his head? After all, there was a great deal
going on.
Consider: First angels appeared, heralding an unexpected
pregnancy and an even
more unexpected delivery. Then shepherds and wise men and more
angels turned up
with praise and gifts. Now suddenly a king is out for your
blood. More angels
appear in dreams giving travel instructions but surprisingly no
other
resources. Joseph seems left to his own devices to protect Jesus
and Mary.
It’s not so far-fetched
to think that
Joseph would have thought: Who am I to do this? I’m not
qualified for any of
it. Mary and even the infant Jesus might seem more competent
choices, at least
by grace. And yet, Joseph was exactly who God had chosen for
that moment. God’s
strength is made perfect in weakness. His grace is sufficient.
Our life, both in family
and faith,
often seem like a chaotic microcosm of what St. Joseph
experienced, albeit with
differently flavored highs and lows. It can be tempting amidst
it all to hear
the call to be a saint and respond: “I’m not cut out for this!”
or “I need
special training or equipment.” Then we often look to pass the
buck. Someone
else is called to be holy in this moment. Granted, sometimes it
is true that
specialization is needed. Yet for most of daily life, we are the
competent
adults. We are the ones to whom responsibility is entrusted and
through whom
God’s grace works. The buck stops with us. If we don’t do it, no
one else is
waiting in the wings to swoop in and save the day.
Make no mistake: Had
Joseph not acted
and followed the angel’s warning; the Holy Family really would
have been in
peril. It is quite possible that Jesus would have died a much
younger death.
It’s surprising how
vulnerable God has
made himself. And yet, at every moment God’s providence and
grace were
sovereign, guiding and working through Joseph’s free choices.
God defended his
only beloved son, through Joseph. God’s grace matters, but so do
Joseph’s free
acts. The entire episode is a beautiful meditation of how God
works in our
lives. It touches on predestination and free will, and even on
how God uses
ordinary things to bestow extraordinary graces, like in the
sacraments.
Salvation depends on seemingly normal things and choices, by
God’s providence
and will.
For our part, what are
we to do when
similar situations arise in family life? Ite ad Joseph. (Latin
for: Go to
Joseph.) We should ask his intercession daily, as it is truly
powerful. But we
should also imitate his life in this passage: remaining open and
docile to the
Lord through a habit of prayer; being prompt to believe and
follow God’s
commands to the letter; using the resources allotted to us
creatively; trusting
in the guidance of providence to bestow grace and help where
needed; and
surprisingly: Make sure to get enough sleep. In short, it’s the
old two-step
dance: Pray, and do the next reasonable thing. That’s how God
makes saints from
daily and family life.
Most people today don’t
believe they’re
meant to be saints. Fewer still believe that God wants to make
us saints with
extraordinary graces hidden in ordinary life situations. If
someone were to say
to them: “You’re the responsible adult, and God is going to work
through you
and your daily actions, making you a means of grace to save your
family and
friends,” they’d likely respond: “In your dreams.” To which St.
Joseph might
just break his biblical silence to respond: “Yes! And in your
waking reality,
too.”