NEW YEAR RESOLUTION: WALK WITH CHRIST THRU YOUR LIFE EVENTS

RESOLVE TO WALK WITH CHRIST THROUGH THE EVENTS OF YOUR LIFE

As calendar years go, it is time to make New Year Resolutions, but for us Christians, our year, the Liturgical Year, began on the First Sunday of Advent. So, may I suggest that a good New Year Resolution for us may be to resolve to walk with Christ through the events of our lives in the light of a weekly reflection on the readings of this year’s Liturgical Calendar? I say this because such a weekly reflection on those Bible readings, done in an awareness of the ever-with-us Christ, will bind your heart  to Christ’s heart.  As St. Augustine discovered, “Our hearts are restless until they rest in Thee.”

This becomes even more real to us when we follow our weekly reflections with the communal celebration of the Mass where we, the St. Michael Parish Community, united with the hosts of heavenly and earthly believers, gather at Mass and thank God for all of God’s gifts.  What weekly action could be more fruitful than this in guiding us and our families through the ups and downs of the coming year?

OUR HEAD START:  ADVENT AND CHRISTMAS

We began our Liturgical Year reflecting on the magnanimous gift of God to us:  God became one of us and lived a life that makes clear to us that “God wants to share the communion of his Trinitarian life with us.”1  This tenet of our faith, repeated many times in the twentieth century documents of the Second Vatican Council, resounds in the writings of the early fathers of the Church.  For instance, St. Irenaeus, (130-206) said, “He became what we are so that we might become what He is.”2 and St. Athanasius (296-373) wrote, “The Son of God became man so that we might become God.”3  A more recent wording:

“Mary and Joseph,
the angels and archangels,
the shepherds
and now, my brothers and sisters in Christ, all of us —
what they and we behold with nearly breathless wonder
is the birth of the one who,
taking on our humanity,
will lay down his life for us in the Sacrifice of the Cross
so that we can become sharers in his divinity.”4

If you have reflected on the Liturgical readings of Advent and Christmas, what insights from this come with you into 2021? (For an example of a meditation on a Gospel story, listen to four minutes of Max Lucado’s reflection on the birth of Jesus.)

STEPPING INTO THE REALM ON COMMUNION WITH GOD – Try it; you’ll like it!

The Church, in her wisdom, has created the Liturgical Year of weekly celebrations to step us into the realm of the “communion of God’s divine life along humanly accessible pathways suffused with his grace: words, gestures, objects, sacraments—tangible, visible, audible, persons and things, full of human and divine significance.”5  These weekly celebrations are opportunities for us to gather ourselves into God’s realm, experience the peace and joy that only comes from being in God’s world and then to take that joy with us as we walk down the church steps and back into the streets of Cranford and into the homes and businesses where we spend our week.

Resolve prayerfully to step weekly into your individual and our communal Christ-oriented journey.  Doing so is integral to coming to the fullness of who you and we are meant to be according to the gifts God has in store for us.  In these weekly encounters with God and Jesus, God’s Son and our brother – human, like us – allow yourself to be drawn into the “communion of his divine life along. . . pathways suffused with his grace: words, gestures, objects, sacraments—tangible, visible, audible, persons and things, full of human and divine significance.”  Reflect on the events of your past and future weeks from this Gospel-oriented, joy-filled perspective:  Rejoice, the Lord is near.

Sister Loretta

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St. Michael Church Resources

To assist us in pondering the weekly liturgical events and readings, we have placed links to the coming Sunday’s liturgical readings in our parish’s weekly bulletin and email The Mary Garden.  Many resources are available to you.  Much is available on the internet.  Search for what works best for you.  Some Catholic resources are listed below.  Here is a St. Michael website post, The Liturgical Year: Spiraling Adventure of the Spiritual Life. The Black, Blue and White seasonal Little books, when available in the church vestibule, are a good resource.

Internet Resources:

Jesuit Prayer Ministry Daily Gospel and Reflections  

Catholic Daily Reflections

Catholic Mom Daily Gospel Reflections

Bishop Robert Barron Daily Gospel Reflections


  1. Di Noia O.P., J. Augustine. Grace in Season: The Riches of the Gospel in Seventy Sermons, Cluny Media, 2019.
  2. St. Irenaeus, Adv. haeres
  3. St. Athanasius, De inc
  4. Di Noia O.P. Grace in Season: The Riches of the Gospel in Seventy Sermons.
  5. Ibid.
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