Rev. Fr. Augustine Vallooran V.C. |
Every family comes into being
thanks to God's decision to directly intervene and lovingly give it existence.
In the first pages of the Bible, we come to know of God designing a
paradisiacal abode for the first family of man on earth. Reading through it, beautifully
described the imagery that comes to mind is of a bird flying around making a
nest. There is a sense of urgency and love in the designing of it. For there is
a movement in the heart and the body of of the
bird, of a new life taking shape inside. When eggs are laid and babies are
born, there should be nothing lacking for their sustenance and care. The
bird goes about picking the twigs and fashioning them into a most fitting
dwelling place for the little ones. In the heart of God, there was a clear
decision to create a family of man on earth as a reflex of the Godly
family in heaven. Accordingly, the dry land of the earth gets set apart from
the deep waters of the ocean. Light becomes fixed on the horizon for the day
and the night. Rivers flow to quench thirst. Trees have grown up bearing fruit
to all tastes and palates - all designed in God's care to ensure that
these were God's own bounty to man's family.
“You Will Save Her” (Tobit 6:17)
This perception of marriage is positively reaffirmed in the charming
story that the Book of Tobit is. Tobias,
the young man under the direction of his father goes in search of a bride and
finds Sarah and falls in love with her. However, he was shocked by Raguel,
father of Sarah telling him that the girl had a demon in her that would
consume the man who would approach her and that she had already married seven
men who were all eliminated at the very first night of marriage. Fear
gripped the young man. At that very moment, revelation comes to him that Sarah was destined for him by God Himself from all eternity. “Do not be afraid, for she was set apart
for you before the world was made.” (Tobit 6:18) He received assurance that he had made no
error in his discovery of Sarah and she was no threat to his existence but
was part of God's plan which he knew was for his prosperity and good future (Jeremiah 29:11).
God's vision of family should inspire every young man and young woman
deciding to get married, to wait in prayer for his or her life partner in God's
scheme of things to be revealed. The one determining factor that should
count in this choice is the finding of a partner who would share his or her
life in prayer and in God's Presence.
Jesus had elevated marriage to the status of a sacrament in the
first miracle that He had performed at Cana. This is, as St. John tells us
how Jesus revealed God's glory (John
2:11). Where human calculations failed God intervened that the celebration
of the marriage continues. This promise Jesus gives to every married couple.
“He Has Borne Our Infirmities” (Isaiah 53:4)
God’s own Spirit is offered by Jesus to be part of every marriage
relationship. Hence St. Paul calls marriage a mystery. By mystery what is meant
is a realm of God’s intervention. St. Paul continues to say, “This is a
profound mystery – but I am talking about Christ and the Church.” (Ephesians
5:32) Marriage is incorporated into the saving relationship
between Jesus and the Church. In this context St. Paul gives a Divine character
to the love in marriage. He says, “Husbands, love your wives, just
as Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her.” (Ephesians 5:25)
Jesus loved the Church by taking upon Himself all
her burden of her sin and pain as Isaiah had prophesied (Isaiah 53:4-6). That is what
Jesus had come for. Only at one moment did He hesitate in trembling. That was
at Gethsemane. He saw the Cross looming large before His eyes and He cried out
to the Heavenly Father that He was unable to shoulder it. The gospel tells us
that the angel came to comfort Him and strengthen Him (Luke 22:43). That really means
He felt impelled by the Father’s message and experienced a Heavenly Power of Love
to enable Him carry out the mission of the Father. He surrendered, “Not my will
but let your will be done.” (Luke 22:42) From then on, He never looked back with
complaints nor did He find the Father’s Will too burdensome to accept. The
gospels say that there was no blame on His lips. That is how He saved the Bride
- the Church - to make her “radiant, unblemished, holy and blameless.” (Ephesians
5:27)
St. Paul presents this great ideal of saving love
to every husband, by saying, “Husbands, love your wives, just as Christ loved
the church.” What happens in our families is the blame game.
A game initiated under the influence of the evil power in paradise when man and
woman opted to rebel against God and submitted to the plan of the demonic
world. Their relationship was disrupted. All the love they received in the Presence
of God that strengthened them, enabling them to accept each other in the words
of Adam as “bone
of my bones and flesh of my flesh” was lost. Adam points a finger at
his wife as the cause of all the downfall. Ever since then, the blame game has
continued to disrupt family relationships. With Jesus this demonic attitude came
to a grinding halt. Jesus, the Heavenly Bridegroom accepted every failing and
distortion in His Bride the Church and personally took the responsibility, paying
the price of it all. That is the Calvary event after which the very nature of
married love has changed.
“You Are The Body Of Christ” (1 Corinthians 12:27)
The husband takes up the role of Jesus as the head
of the family. St. Paul continues to teach us “For the husband is the
head of the wife as Christ is the head of the church, his body, of which he
is the Saviour.” (Ephesians 5:23) This is a deep truth of love to be
contemplated in every family circle. The function of the head as regards the
body is what a husband must adopt in his relationship to the family. Medical
science tells us that it is the head that naturally takes upon itself all the
pain of the body. The head and the body are vitally connected by a wondrous nervous
system. When any part of the body is cut, the message is relayed by the nervous
system to the brain and it returns to that part of the body as an experience of
pain in order to protect it. No wonder before operating on any part of the
body, doctors would administer anesthesia which numbs the nervous system
connecting the body to the brain. From then on, whatever cut is inflicted on
the body, no pain will be felt. The nervous system does not carry the signal of
injury to the brain. The injured part of the body does not feel the pain
because the head did not first feel the pain. This analogy is used by St. Paul
with a Divine implication. “Wherever there is any burden or shock or pain in
any member of the family, it is the husband, the father, who should feel it
first and most acutely. It becomes his responsibility to deal with it to save
the family. Hence he has no right to blame the wife or the children. The blame
stops there.” He in his turn takes it to Jesus the Saviour to be strengthened to
pursue his mission.
It is in this context again that we understand
clearly what St. Paul says “Wives respect your own husbands.” (Ephesians
5:22) Respect does not mean
slavish submission. In fact St. Peter tells us that husbands and wives are
equal in grace (1
Peter 3:7). Hence when St. Paul speaks of the wife respecting the
husband, it is definitely not a matter of she being inferior to the husband. Rather,
here there is a divine logic of salvation which becomes the saving grace in
families. The wife loves the husband with the sacred awe of gratitude and
commitment for having been accepted totally by him as Jesus accepted the Church
without questioning or faultfinding. This is the attitude with which the Church
stands before the wounded Christ on the Cross. She understands how precious she
is for the husband who loves her unconditionally and takes responsibility for
her.
One wonders whether this Pauline version of married
love is practical in daily life. What is practical is not to be judged by what
happens around but by what God offers to make it possible for us. The grace of
marriage is so dear to the Heart of God that He even did a miracle to save a
marriage - promising the same miraculous intervention at every moment of human
failure. But then husbands and wives should be able to value the grace of
marriage and not take it for granted. This awesome grace is given “in earthen
vessels” as St. Paul would put it (2 Corinthians 4:7). This is a
warning to all - an earthen vessel could break and the grace could be lost. No
cost should be too forbidding to protect this treasure placed in us. Jesus says
“Where your treasure is, there your
heart will be also.” (Matthew 6:21)”
“A Chosen Race, A Royal Priesthood” (1 Peter 2:9)
A way a person should live and fulfill God’s Plan
for him is what vocation is. When I look at myself I always understand what a
precious call God has given me. From all eternity, as St. Paul says, God has
called me to be a priest (Ephesians 1:4). At every step of my life, His
Hands lead me that I may live true to my
vocation. He trained me and anointed me with the Holy Spirit. He makes me stand
before His people in His power and authority as a prophet, priest and shepherd.
Precisely because I am deeply aware of the immense value of this grace, I never
failed to praise and thank Him for His choice. I also know that I can lose this
grace. Therefore at the end of the day before I go to rest, I make sure to make
a very honest soul searching whether any thought or desire crossed my mind that
could at any time in the future be a risk to my call. If I do find anything, I
will not hesitate to root it out from my life. I will not trade the sanctity
and beauty of God’s Call for any passing pleasure or gain of this earth. I have
taken to my heart what Jesus said emphatically that the Grace of the Kingdom of
God is to be accepted as the treasure that a man finds and in order to gain it,
sells everything he has (Matthew 13:44). Unless I am ready to give
away all that is not of and from Jesus, I will not relish this Grace from God.
The vocation of a husband, wife, father, or mother
is not in any way less sacred or less precious than the vocation of a priest.
It is noteworthy that in the Sacrament of Marriage, it is not the celebrant
priest who ministers the grace of marriage to the couple but it is they
themselves who are the sacred ministers. The celebrant priest is only the
official witness of the Church. Hence, as sacred ministers of the grace of
matrimony, the husband and wife are to be prophets, priests and shepherds. As
prophets they pray together, receive the revelation of God’s message to share
it with each other and with the children. As priests they sanctify each other
by the holiness of their lives. As shepherds they guide each other and the
children to Jesus the Great Shepherd. Hence the teaching of the Church - that
the family is a domestic church.
The heart of the couples should always be tuned to
the treasure of their call in marriage - being ready to pay any price and
always sensitive to the dangers involved. The casualty of the first marriage
should be a warning to every family. The demonic world, as soon as it saw how
precious the first marriage was in the eyes of God, was determined to ruin it.
Man and woman fell into its evil trap. It is good for all couples to be serious-minded
and aware that the demonic world is determined to destroy the treasure God had
given them in their family life, a treasure destined, fashioned and given by
God to man. So precious the treasure that God has chosen to be part of it - to
save it when man and woman falter and fail in his and her commitment.
An earthen vessel is broken due to irresponsible
carelessness and culpable negligence. Such irresponsibility casts deep shadows on
the heart when one takes the other for granted and when hurts are allowed to
fester within. The husband and wife need to come together in prayer every day
asking pardon from each other for every bruise caused and every complaint felt.
St. Paul warns us not to allow the anger to remain after sunset (Ephesians
4:26-27). A deep appreciation for the value of the grace of marriage
in the Presence of God will dispel all such dark shadows and love will glow at
the end of the day.
He Who Touches You, Touches The Apple Of His Eye” (Zechariah 2:8)
In the Divine Retreat Centre, we have a very
special retreat called the Bible Nursery. It is a retreat for tiny tots from
the age of three to six. One would wonder how a retreat could benefit such young
minds. In fact, I have often found this retreat most grace-filled and
beneficial to the little children. I remember once passing by the side of this
retreat hall and a little girl was coming out shedding tears and sniffling. I called
her and made her sit next to me and asked her, “Little girl, what happened to
you?” In the midst of her sobs she said, “Father, I saw Jesus in the Sacred
Host of the Eucharist. Jesus told me that He loves me.” I was puzzled and asked
why it should make her sad. She replied saying, “I am sad because I wanted to
tell Him that I too love Him but before that He disappeared.” Crying
inconsolably, she continued “Everyone I want to love is escaping from my life.
I loved my dad very much but last year he went away from home with someone
else. He phones me up and he tells me that he loves me but when I ask him to
come home and see me, he says that my mother hates him and does not want him.
He says my mother has another friend. Why do my father and mother hate each
other so much and why do they not love me and stay with me in my house?” Tears were
filling up in my own eyes and in my heart I thought to myself, “Her father and
mother may have their own reasons to keep away from each other but who’s there
to wipe her tears? What in this world can justify the pain and tears caused to
this little child?” This little life that God has sent into the world is
getting scorched in the heat of hatred and anger. Indeed no reason is
sufficient for a father and mother to break the heart of the child in such a
manner. The growth of a child will be complete only in the warmth of the family
God has established. Indeed it is only then that a prosperous and peaceful
generation will emerge. The Paradise that was lost is to be regained in every
family and for this the Power of the Holy Spirit is raining down from the Heart
of the Father.
Let Us Pray
Heavenly Father, You created us as a family to reflect Your
Glorious Nature of Life-Giving Love. Let not our shortsighted selfishness ever
cast dark shadows into our relationships that Your Glory must fade away in our
homes. Your Son revealed to us that the Holy Spirit is ever present in our
family relationships to fill us with Your Love and heal every wound.
Give us the grace to turn to You at every moment of
failure and miscalculation - in the firm faith that Your Hands are not
shortened that You cannot save our family, that Your Heart is not hardened by
our sin that You cannot answer our prayer. Make us a witnessing family that is
able to live out Your vision of marriage and become a credible inspiration for
those who are struggling to accept each other from Your Hands.
May the Power of Love You lead us to live, restore
humankind to Paradise.
Amen.
No comments:
Post a Comment