Luke 2:41-52 · The Boy Jesus at the Temple
Home And Temple
Luke 2:41-52
Sermon
by James Garrett
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Columnist Erma Bombeck tells of a Supermom who is perfection itself. She did everything right: kept a perfect home; kept her husband happy. Always had a copy of Bishop Fulton Sheen’s latest book on the coffee table, and answered the door pregnant when the priest came by.

One day, I asked her how she did it, and she said, “I emulate the Blessed Virgin Mary,” and I said, “Marge, it’s a little bit late for that.”

She said, “Very well, I’ll tell you. Every evening, when the children are bathed and tucked into their clean little beds, and the lunches are lined up and labeled and packed in the refrigerator, and the little shoes are racked up, and the driveway is waxed, and I’ve heard all the prayers of the children, I fall down on my knees and say, ‘Thank you, God, for not letting me kill one of them today.’ ”

Jesus died at the age of 33. Of these 33 years he spent 30 of them in a village home in Nazareth. Jesus had his roots in Judaism; a child of a devout home; a child of the synagogue in Nazareth. His parents were conscientious about their religious obligations, and mindful of the traditions of their people.

In Luke chapter 2, verses 41 to 52, we find a childhood experience of Jesus.

Luke presents the home and temple as formative institutions in the development of Jesus. At every point the Law of Moses was kept; circumcision, Mary’s purification and Jesus’ dedication, and now the family’s annual pilgrimage to Jerusalem for Passover.

It all began, for Jesus, in the home as an infant. Ecclesiastes gives these directions: Remember your Creator in the days of your youth, before the evil days come, and the years draw nigh, when you will say, “I have no pleasure in them”; before the sun and the light and the moon and the stars are darkened and the clouds return after the rain.

Remember your Creator when you are young. When you are young, your soul has just come fresh from God. Haven’t you observed how naturally small children can talk of God and Jesus? Why? Because they just came from there. But when you have been here for awhile, mowed the grass, bought a car, mortgaged a house, got married, had a few bad experiences you forget whence you came.

Every birth is a sign -- a sign God hasn’t given up on the world. If we weren’t so blind, we might see life itself is sacramental.

To a great extent the success or failure of an individual to live up to his or her uniquely human potential depends on the family background.

Dr. Alan Loy McGinnis, a family therapist and director of Valley Counseling Center in Glendale, California, in an article wrote: “… parents, in their devotion to a child, will pull him or her up beside them -- and then encourage the child to go even higher.”

When Harry and Ada Mae Day had their first child ,they traveled 225 miles from their ranch to El Paso for the delivery. Ada Mae brought her baby, Sandra, home to a difficult life. The four-room adobe house had no running water and no electricity. There was no school within driving distance.

But the Days did not allow themselves to be limited by their surroundings. Harry had been forced by his father’s death to take over the ranch rather then enter Stanford University, but he never gave up hope that his daughter would someday study there. Sandra’s mother first taught her at home, and also saw to it that the house was stoc_esermonsked with newspapers, magazines and books. One summer the Days took their children to all the state capitals west of the Mississippi.

Sandra did go to Stanford, to law school, and became the first woman justice on the U. S. Supreme Court. On the day of her swearing in, the family was there. “She looked around, saw us and locked her eyes right into ours,” said her brother, Alan. “That’s when the tears started falling.”

What motivates a woman like Sandra Day O’Connor? Intelligence, of course, and inner drive. But much of the credit goes to a determined ranch mother sitting in her adobe house, reading to her children by the hour, and who, with her husband, scampered up the stairways of capitol domes, their children in tow.

The home has a decisive influence in the shaping of character and beliefs.

However, I feel the need to add something more… humans have the ability to overcome the destructive effects of poor upbringing, provided there has been no physiological damage. For we can learn how we should behave. We all know persons who have “made good” despite a terrible childhood, even, perhaps, because of it -- steeled and tempered by hardship, determined to prove him or herself.

Jesus’ lingering behind in the temple is a testimony to the deep faith of the family. It is the fulfillment of the act of giving the child Jesus to the Lord. Jesus now claims for himself that special relation to God which was symbolized in his dedication as an infant.

In the sacrament of infant baptism we ask: Will you endeavor to keep this child under the ministry and guidance of the Church until he/she by the power of God shall accept the gift of salvation,…?

Jesus was nurtured, from birth, in the faith. At age 12 there were in him the vague stirrings of his own uniqueness. Twelve years old -- already, the stirrings are there.

If we come to God late we miss much good that we could have enjoyed had we been more fortunate. It cannot be helped when it happens that way, but it is not all the same whether we come to him soon or late.

When St. Augustine finally gave himself to God he wished it were not so late in the day. “Too late have I loved thee, O thou beauty of ancient days yet ever new!” He wrote. He was 32 years of age.

C.S.S. Publishing Company, GOD’S GIFT, by James Garrett