New Year’s Day 2022
Solemnity of
Mary, the Mother of God
The life of Jesus begins with Mary at the Bethlehem
crib. Therefore, it is most appropriate
we begin the New Year with a Feast of Mary – Mary the Mother of God.
As a people
of faith, we gather on this New Year’s Day to honor Mary, the great woman of
faith. We are told, once again, how she
used time -- to treasure and reflect in her heart all that God had done for her
and how God was giving direction to her life.
Her example should speak to us for we also need to take the time to
treasure and reflect within our own hearts what God is doing and what God is
calling us to do.
As we begin
2022, we ask for the grace to use the gift of time that is given in this new
year. As we name our resolutions for the
New Year, we get sense of how we wish to use the gift and what are our
priorities for the year.
For myself,
I hope to part with a few more pounds this year, to spend more time with family
an friends, to live more fully with an attitude of gratitude, and to spend more
time with the Lord in quiet prayer.
These are
noble goals, are they not.
Our
resolutions are filled with our dreams and hopes and goals for the coming
year. But the question that the
Scriptures today invite us to reflect on is:
What are God’s plan for us this year?
Instead of focusing on our resolutions for the New Year, may we be open
to God’s resolutions for us this year.
This is such
a fundamental spiritual conversion the Scriptures call us to. How do we become more aware of God’s plan for
us in 2022? Instead of naming my
resolutions for the coming year, I seek to listen to God’s resolutions for me
this coming year.
There is no
better model for us than Mary in opening ourselves to God’s plan for our
lives. We know at the Annunciation when
the angel Gabriel announced to Mary that she was to be the mother of our Savior
and Lord, Mary worked through her fear and confusion and said YES to God’s plan
for her. With such an inspiring faith,
Mary spoke these powerful words: “I am
the handmaid of the Lord. Be it done to
me according to thy Word.”
Can we with
Mary speak these words at the beginning of 2022: “I am the servant of the Lord. Be it done to me according to your word.”
In contrast
to the usual frenzy of our celebrations on New Years’ Eve, Mary pondered in
silence and stillness in the Bethlehem crib.
“Mary kept all these things, reflecting on them in her heart.” Her heart becomes the place of discovering
Jesus, and who He truly is.
May we too
ponder in our hearts who that child now born to us really is. As Mary spent her life pondering the visible
Word of God that was and is her Son, we too must ponder that Word in scripture,
that Word in each other, that Word in the created world around us. We too are asked to incarnate Jesus in our
lives.
If we want
to celebrate Christmas Season as Mary did, we need to ponder this sign: the frail simplicity of a tiny newborn child,
the meekness with which he is placed in a manger, the tender affection with
which he is wrapped in his swaddling clothes.
This is where God is.
What Mary
pondered reveals a Gospel paradox. The
Gospel speaks of the emperor, the governor, the high and mighty of those times,
yet God does not make himself present there.
He appears not in the splendor of a royal palace, but in the poverty of
a stable; not in pomp and show, but in simplicity of life; not in power, but
astonishing smallness. In order to meet
him, we need to go where he is. We need
to bow down, to humble ourselves, to make ourselves small. The newborn Child challenges us. We need to discover in the simplicity of the
divine Child the peace, joy and the luminous meaning of life.
Jesus enters
our life to give us His life; He comes into our world to give us His love. In 2022, through the intercession of Mary,
may we be challenged and called by Jesus.
Let us draw close to God who draws close to us. Let us pause to gaze upon the crib and relive
in our imagination the birth of Jesus: light and peace, dire poverty and
rejection. With the shepherds, let us
enter into the real Christmas, bringing to Jesus all that we are, our
alienation, our unhealed wounds, our sins.
Then, in Jesus, we will enjoy the taste of the true spirit of
Christmas: the beauty of being loved by
God. With Mary and Joseph, let us pause
before the manger, before Jesus who is born as bread for my life.
May the blessing that the Lord said to Moses be the blessing
the Lord speaks to each of us:
The Lord bless and keep you.
The Lord let his face shine upon you and be gracious to you.
The Lord look upon you kindly and give you peace.
Have a
blessed day and a blessed New Year.
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