Today we celebrate the feast of the Immaculate Heart of Mary. The Gospel tells the story of Mary and Joseph taking Jesus up to the temple on his 12th birthday. Jewish boys, at that time, become a bar miszvah, "literally a 'son of the commandment(s).' He can then
perform all the mitzvoth and is required to do so with full
responsibility for his religious behavior. When the boy is first 'called up' to
the Torah, symbolic of his attainment of majority, the father utters a blessing
commemorating this transition to adulthood." Following the ceremony, Jesus stays behind in the Temple. Mary and Joseph leave Jerusalem, thinking that Jesus is in the caravan with the other parent. He is not! Mary and Joseph spend three terrifying days looking for him, Mary no doubt recalling Simeon's prophesy that Jesus is destined to be the cause of the rise and fall of many in Israel and a sword [of sorrow] will pierce her heart.
We read about the terror any parent goes through when a child is abducted, kidnapped, lost. Mary and Joseph are no exception. They find Jesus after a three-day search and Mary says to Jesus: "Son, why have you done this to us? Your father and I have been looking for you with great anxiety" (Luke 2: 41-51). And Jesus responds: "Why were you looking for me?" That response must have baffled Mary and Joseph, I would think. The Scriptures tell us that "they did not understand what he said to them." He left the Temple and returned to Nazareth with His parents, and "was obedient to them; and his mother kept all these things in her heart."
We next meet Mary in the Scriptures when she and "his brothers come looking for him"(Mt. 12:46). Rumors were such that his relatives wondered whether Jesus had lost his mind--had he gone crazy, being so involved in his ministry that he did not take time to eat. And finally, the next appearance of Mary is beneath the cross, where Jesus says to her: Woman, behold your son; Son, behold your mother"--all of us are entrusted to her care and she becomes the Mother of the Church!
Mary's faith journey was anything but simple or easy. Every parent knows Mary's pain and the burden and responsibilities of parenthood--they do not disappear when a child enters adulthood.
The question we may want to ponder is: what does Mary teach us about parenthood, about being there for a child, or anyone, in trouble, about dealing with life on God's terms?
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