
Matthew 1:1-16,18-23Introductory Prayer:
Lord I thank you for the gift of faith. I believe only
because so many others believed before me – and often at what great price! As I begin this prayer I
review my genealogy of faith remembering all those who have passed on the faith to me. I strive to
be a link in the faith chain for many other souls.Petition: Dear Jesus, help me to be humble like
the Blessed Virgin Mary.1. God Is With Us:
Today’s Gospel narrates for us the great mystery of the Incarnation. Why would God choose
to become one of us? In his lineage appear the good and the bad, the faithful and the weak, the
useful and useless. Why does God choose to take what is faulty, inferior, and make it his own? Why
does he purify, restore, elevate, and cure what we are and what we offer him? Why? Why does he take
upon himself my lineage, my personal history –– both the good and the bad –– and shape it into
salvation history, for myself and for others? Why does he continue to do this? When will it be
enough? God has said and will always be able to say, “What more could I have done for my
people?”
2. Blessed Are You, and
Blessed Is the Fruit of Your Womb: Joachim and Anna, the parents of Mary, were in a
marriage apparently “going nowhere”: It was sterile. Tradition has it that Joachim was scorned by a
bystander when presenting his offerings, because God had left him without offspring. Feeling deeply
offended and downhearted, he followed his flocks of sheep into the wilderness and didn’t return to
his wife for a long time. In the desert, he supposedly was informed by a supernatural appearance
that a child would be born to him. When Joachim returned to his wife in Bethesda, inspired with new
hope, she became pregnant and gave birth to Mary, who was born without sin. God takes what is
useless and creates his masterpiece, the Immaculate Conception. Indeed, he raises up the lowly. What
plans does he have for my life? Where do I fit into salvation history?
3. Let It Be Done According to Your Word: Having been told by
her parents of the special circumstances of her birth, Mary grew of age “treasuring these things in
her heart” (Cf. Luke 2:51). It is understandable that the pious girl Mary wanted to devote herself
entirely to God, and perhaps, in her early years, took a vow of continence. Her simple and total
dedication to God indeed made her his “highly favored daughter.” But God had other plans for her: He
would ask her to bear his Son. Once again, God takes what is freely offered him and molds it into
what he desires. He takes what is good and beautiful and makes it exceedingly so for the salvation
of many. God humbly inserts himself into my boring and defective human lineage.
Conversation with Christ:
Lord, help me to remember today all the
good things you
have given me and my family.
Let me see your work and your providence.
I know that you
come to my aid in hundreds
of different ways. Help me to become more like Mary,
and to
ponder over all these things in my heart.Resolution: I will look at
my vocation with faith and new hope, confident that God is comfortable in inserting himself in the
most common of circumstances. I will try to see his hand in at least one event of my day
today.
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