The
New Year - 2014 (Year A)
(SOLEMNITY
OF MARY, THE HOLY MOTHER OF GOD)
First
Reading: Numbers
6:22-27 Second
Reading: Galatians
4:4-7 Gospel
Reading: Luke:16-21
"A
NEW BEGINNING FOR A NEW YEAR.”
A
story is told that at the beginning of a new year, a high school
principal decided to post his teachers' New Year's resolutions on the
bulletin board. As the teachers gathered around the bulletin board, a
great commotion started. One of the teachers was complaining. "Why
weren’t my resolutions posted?"
She was throwing such a temper tantrum that the principal hurried to
his office to see if he had overlooked her resolutions. Sure enough,
he had mislaid them on his desk. As he read her resolutions he was
astounded. This teacher's first resolution was not to let little
things upset her in the New Year.
Or,
how about this one…A son called his parents to wish them 'A
Happy New Year' and
when his Dad answered the phone, he asked his dad, “Well
Dad, what's your New Year's resolution?”
His dad replied,"To
make your mother as happy as I can all year," When
his mom got on the phone he asked her the same question and she
replied, "To
see that your dad keeps his New Year's resolution."
Well, we too often make
resolutions when the New Year comes. Sometimes we are able to keep
them, other times we may be a failure. But that should never
discourage us. We all must have “a new
beginning for a new year.”
Today is 1st January and we stand on the threshold of a “New Year” and a “New Beginning.” Here we are in a month named after the Roman god Janus, an appropriate personification of the start of the New Year. The one special thing about the god Janus is he is two-faced. He has a face looking to the past and a face looking to the future at the same time. That is why the god Janus became the symbol of New Year’s where, just as we are today, we look at the past and give thanks for that. We look to the future and gather our hopes for that.
So, today as we get rid of
an old year and look forward to a new one, we all try to be a little
like Janus. This is indeed a time to reflect and think about what the
past year that has just ended has brought and what the new year lying
right ahead of us could bring. So, the beginning of a new year
provides us with an opportunity to reflect on the special gift of
time:
We recall the events of
the previous year and express our gratitude to God for all the good
things that have happened, all the while being aware that there have
also been sad and painful experiences and perhaps sinful realities
for which we feel sorry, and also the missed opportunities for which
we regret. It is a time to reflect, to stop and analyze, to take
stock of our priorities, values, pursuits, and goals. Through soul
searching questions we find that a review of the past year naturally
leads to setting goals and resolutions for the new year.
But most of all we
joyfully celebrate the promise of a new set of months with new
opportunities and happiness, and we try to be hopeful in spite of
uncertainties and unknown threats lying ahead. Today therefore, is a
day to pray for God's blessings upon each one of us as we
proceed in the new year with fresh resolutions. Yes, it is God's
blessing we all need on this first day of the new year. In the First
Reading of today, we have an example of Levitical blessing, which
Moses instructs his brother Aron:
“The
LORD bless you 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!”
The LORD let his face shine upon
you, and be gracious to you!
The LORD look upon you kindly and
give you peace!”
This blessing has passed
the test of time. Originating with the chosen people, this blessing
has been pronounced for three millennia and we can still employ this
whenever we want to pray for God's blessing. What a beautiful thing
it is to have God's blessing to go forward with "A
NEW BEGINNING FOR A NEW YEAR!”
The Catholic Church also celebrates "World Day of Peace" on the 1st of January. On this day our Holy Father Pope Francis has asked to pray for the peace in the world and the theme he has chosen for New Year's Day - 2014 is "Fraternity, the foundation and pathway to peace." His message says that an overemphasis on 'personal
well-being' and general indifference have eroded any sense
of responsibility toward others.
It is believed that Pope
Francis' message will stress the need to combat the 'throwaway
culture' and to promote instead a 'culture
of encounter,' in order to build a more just and peaceful
world. As children of one Father, all human beings are linked to one
another in fraternity, and only efforts that are born from a sense of
fraternity can overcome the poverty, conflict, inequality, crime,
fundamentalism and other ills facing the world today.
Moreover, the culture of
personal well-being leads to a loss of the sense of responsibility
and fraternal relationship…Not uncommonly, the poor and the needy
are regarded as a ‘burden,’ a
hindrance to development. At most, they are considered as recipients
of aid or compassionate assistance. Everyone needs to be seen as a
brother or sister, who is 'called to share
the gifts of creation, the goods of progress and culture.' Fraternity
is both a gift and a responsibility each human being receives from
God the Father, who calls people to fight against 'inequality
and poverty that undermine the social fabric, to take care of every
person, especially the weakest and most defenseless, to love him or
her as oneself with the very heart of Jesus Christ.'
Today,
as we also celebrate “World
Peace Day,”
the proposed theme - “Fraternity,
the foundation and pathway to peace,”
echos in our minds and hearts. We are therefore called to begin the
New Year by being a peacemaker. But
we must first make peace with our past and the relationships that
have been broken through not forgiving, in order to give ourselves "A
NEW BEGINNING FOR A NEW YEAR!”
The
1st
of
January
is also the culmination of the octave of Christmas when we celebrate
the
“Solemnity
of Mary, the Holy Mother of God.”
Exactly a week back we celebrated with great joy the feast of
Christmas, commemorating the birth of our Lord Jesus Christ, who was
born of the Blessed Virgin Mary and reflected upon the mystery of the
Incarnation, i.e. God taking the form of a human being in the person
of Jesus Christ. The
life of Jesus begins with Mary.
Therefore, it is appropriate that we begin the New Year with a Feast
of Mary, the Holy Mother of God. Since Mary is the Mother of God she
is the mother of joy, joy to the world. So the traditional greeting
on this first day of the New Year is one of joy: “Happy
New Year!”
Today's
special feast affirms that the Blessed Virgin Mary is truly
the Mother of God and shows the importance of her role in the mystery
of our salvation. This Catholic Dogma
finds its origin from the passage found in the Gospel of Luke. After
the Archangel Gabriel appeared to Mary, she went to visit her cousin
Elizabeth. Upon her arrival, Elizabeth, filled with the
Holy Spirit expressed her joy at the arrival of “the
Mother of God.”
In 431 A.D, the Council
of Ephesus affirmed that Mary was truly the Mother of God because
“according to the flesh”
she gave birth to Jesus, who was truly God from the first moment of
His conception. Twenty years later the Council of Chalcedon
re-affirmed that the Motherhood of Mary was a truthful dogma and an
official doctrine of the Holy Catholic Church. Her Motherhood began
when the eternal God entered human history. The second Divine person
of the Trinity, the Word, took on a human nature in the
womb of Mary.
In the Second Reading, through his letter to Galatians, Saint Paul tells us that we have become God's adopted daughters and sons. Through Jesus' Spirit, we are made God's own children and heirs of all that God has promised. God is "Abba," like a wonderful parent who is absolutely crazy about us. In a special way, Jesus has given us Mary to be our mother, too. So, Mary is not only Jesus' mother, but she is our mother too and she cares for us and for all of God's family with the same love she had for Jesus. So, on this New Year Day, let us turn to Mary, our mother, with all our needs and hopes, confident that she will never fail us and give "A NEW BEGINNING FOR A NEW YEAR!”
To
conclude, recalling the Gospel Reading of today, it has a special
message for us as we hang up the new calendar with mixed feelings.
The fresh New Year is in some way like the infant Jesus
"wrapped in
swaddling clothes and lying in a manger."
Both the new year and the new child seem so vulnerable but the
almighty power of God is hidden in the New Year, just as it is in the
tiny infant. God is fully prepared to wrap our fragile lives and
hopes in the warm blanket of his ever present and constant love. With
such assurance, we can face the future with generous hope and with
light hearts. For we too need to realize that the angels who spoke to
the shepherds are speaking to us also when they say, "This
will be a sign for you: you will find an infant wrapped in swaddling
clothes and lying in a manger."
Let us then glorify and praise God, as the shepherds did, for his
gift of the New Year and enter into it with our new resolutions
giving "A
NEW BEGINNING FOR A NEW YEAR!” And this is the Good News of today.
Wish
you all a Very Happy New Year!
Thanks for your nice thoughts on the New Year ..i will use it for my Mass on New Year's Day!
ReplyDeleteFr. Lloyd rodrigues SDB
Nasik
This is really a good reflection Father.Good Job...Thank you.
ReplyDeleteWell done fr
ReplyDeletewonderful fr lakra
ReplyDeleteIt's a thought enriching and deeply reflected homily. Fr Lakra, I always go through your homilies a day before my Sunday masses and without your permission I many time use your reflection. Thank you For. And Wish you happy and prosperous new year.
ReplyDelete