Friday, January 1, 2016

Homily: Jan 1 2016 - Mary Mother of God - Mary's faith, openness to grace, motherhood

We are just a few hours into the new year 2016. What will 2016 bring? Great successes? Humiliating failures? Unexpected happiness? Sudden loss? Dramatic change? More of the same? Illness, suffering, and death? We wish everyone a “Happy New Year” but in all honesty, none of us knows what this new year will bring. And as we venture into that unknown, the Church gives us on this first day of the civil calendar, a feast in honor of Our Lady, Mary the Mother of God.  And the big question is  ”why—why connect Mary with new year’s day?” And the simple answer is because Mary shows us how to live in this new year in a way that, no matter what happens to us, it will be a truly blessed year.

So I propose three lessons Mary can teach us for 2016.

First, we see in Mary, a woman who lived in a unique way, by faith. Faith was her guide. So she is a model of faith for each one of us. While still in her teens, Mary was asked by God to do something no one else in history had ever been asked to do.  As she ventured into an unknown future, faith was her guide. Though her future would be filled with suffering, confusion, anxiety; though so much of her future would be out of her control, faith was her guide.

By faith, I do not mean optimism that everyone will simply live happily ever after.  Not everyone will win the lottery this year. Rather, as people of faith, we commit to following God’s holy will, his commandments, in good times and in bad, in sickness and in health. Even when we don’t understand WHY we are undergoing such challenging times, we cling to God, we follow his commandments.
So Mary, who hears the word of God, ponders it in her hearts, and obeys God in all things, is our model of faith this year.

Secondly: Mary shows us how to remain open to God’s grace.  Her faith was lived in a such a way that her life remained open to all strength, grace, and wisdom, God wished to give her for the journey.  The great theologian St. Thomas Aquinas said, “whatever is received is received according to the mode of the receiver.” In other words, you cannot receive a gift, if you are not open to receiving it.  Mary was full of grace because she remained fully open to God at all times.
There are so many favors, so many gifts, so much grace God wishes to give us during this new year, but we he will not force us to receive these gifts.  So we need to welcome God into all the areas of our life. Think of these areas like rooms of a house.

We need to welcome God into family rooms: the places where we gather with family and friends, welcoming God into our friendships and family relationships, talking about our faith with these people.  Mary and her cousin Elizabeth talked with each other about what God was doing in their lives. We too, must welcome God into these relationships.

We need to welcome God into our studies: opening our minds to him by studying the Scriptures, studying the catechism, studying the faith.  Mary pondered God’s word and his works, so this year commit to opening and reading those Bibles every day. God wishes to engrave His Word on your hearts through study.

We need to welcome God into our recreation rooms: ensuring that our entertainment is of a godly sort. 

We need to welcome God into our kitchens: ensuring that we do not give ourselves over to overeating drunkenness, and gluttony.

Finally, we need to welcome God into our basements and attics and storage closets, the hidden places of our hearts.  Maybe there are some good things, good habits, which need to be brought out of storage, and given away in selflessness.  Maybe there is some clutter that we need to get rid, some bad habits, that we finally need to let go of this year.

Mary teaches us that when we open our lives to God, welcoming God into every area of our life, our lives become charged and changed by God’s presence.

A third and final lesson from Mary for this new Year, is what she shows us by her motherhood. Because of her faith, because of her openness to God, she was able to be a great mother to Jesus.  The Church celebrates Mary today as Mother of Jesus. God made himself dependent on Mary’s love when he chose to be born as her Son.  He subjected himself to be born of her, to be nursed by her, fed by her, and cleaned by her, he learned to walk from her and talk from her and pray from her.  Jesus made himself dependent upon Mary’s motherhood, and that’s the great lesson for us this year.

In 2016, subject yourself, like Jesus, to her motherhood. Call your mother every day. Turn to her in prayer constantly.  Go to her with your sorrows and joys. If you do not know how to pray the rosary, learn as soon as you can this year, and pray the rosary often. 

From Rome this morning, Pope Francis said, “At the beginning of a new year, the Church invites us to contemplate Mary’s divine maternity as an icon of peace.  In her, the ancient promise finds fulfilment. She appears to us as a vessel filled to the brim with the memory of Jesus, as the Seat of Wisdom to whom we can have recourse to understand his teaching aright.  Today Mary makes it possible for us to grasp the meaning of events which affect us personally, events which also affect our families, our countries and the entire world.  Where philosophical reason and political negotiation cannot reach, there the power of faith, which brings the grace of Christ’s Gospel, can reach, opening ever new pathways.”


If we want 2016 to be brighter than last year, we need to turn to our Mother. For the Lord not only chose Mary as His mother, but gave her as Mother to all of us.  Call upon our mother frequently and with great devotion this year, and 2016 truly will be a happy, blessed year, for the glory of God and salvation of souls.

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