From Catholic Charities USA <[email protected]>
Subject CCUSA Advent Reflection - December 17
Date December 17, 2020 10:00 AM
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Thursday of the Third Week of Advent

Readings of the Day 
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Before learning about Jesus' genealogy detailed in today's
Gospel, my eyes used to gloss over when encountering this
Scripture.  Now I see it much like the genograms I create during
intake sessions with my counseling clients.  You can learn a lot
about a person, their influences and their perspectives from their
family tree and history.  

Matthew's genealogy confirms the "pedigree" lineage
of Jesus as a descendant of David through Joseph's side of the
family. Yet that "pedigree" includes sinful characters,
both male and female.  Their back-stories recount the
circumstances in which good and bad decisions were made -
migration, deportation, slavery, wars, betrayals, prostitution,
adultery, contraception, idolatry, child sacrifice, power struggles,
unholy alliances, and the breaking of covenantal promises with God.

From these stories, we also learn that these same flawed people had
faith, exhibited amazing courage, and loved sacrificially. 
Through them, and in spite of them, with the intervention of the Holy
Spirit, God the Father's promise was fulfilled.  Jesus
became one of us and invited us to become one in Him.

Our hope is echoed in today's Alleluia - "O Wisdom of our
God Most High, guiding creation with power and love:  come to
teach us the path of knowledge." 

As Catholic Charities workers trying to help people with histories and
challenges as messy as those listed in today's Gospel, we know
we can ask for the Holy Spirit's guidance. Let's ask,
trusting that knowledge of the "path" will be given
"with power and love," not only to us, but to the people
we serve.

Gwen Hall is a licensed clinical social worker in the Prestonsburg
office located 125 miles from the headquarters of Catholic Charities
of the Diocese of Lexington, KY.  Covid-19 prompted her to
research, train, and acquire the equipment and a HIPAA-protected
platform that enables the agency now to offer tele-health counseling
services to anyone living in the 50-county diocese.

 




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