Tuesday, January 26, 2016

Generation Skipping



Who are our brothers and sisters?
Precision in blood relationships can be technical and complex.
People who are descended from a common ancestor are cousins.
We count the number of generations we skip over from that ancestor to ourselves.
And that tells us what degree of cousin kinship we have.
If our common ancestor is a grandparent, we’re first cousins.
If our common ancestor is a great-grandparent, we’re second cousins.

Two cousins can be from different generations.
In that case, we also note how many generations separate them.
My first cousin’s children are first cousins once removed to me.
My children and my first cousin’s children are second cousins to each other.

If the common ancestor is a parent, we have a special relationship.
We don’t call ourselves zeroth cousins.
We call ourselves brothers and sisters.

In everyday life, we don’t always use precise language for our relationships.
In today’s first reading Paul calls Timothy my dear child.
Though he wasn’t his child.
We often refer to brothers and sisters who technically are not.

We’ve read that Elizabeth was Mary’s cousin.
Even though Mary was a young woman and Elizabeth was an old, barren woman.
Maybe Elizabeth was really her first cousin once removed.
Or second cousin once removed.
Taking the Bible literally,
We’re all cousins through Adam and Eve and Noah and – Mrs. Noah.

A young friend of mine had a new job teaching 3rd Grade.
One day her class read a story about a family.
And she decided to follow it up with a little writing exercise.
So she told them to each list their family members.
And to write down something they enjoyed doing with their family.

The kids started writing and thinking.
But in just a few minutes a few of them were raising their hands.
Miss Jackson, is Sarah part of my family.
She’s really just my mother’s boyfriend’s daughter.
But we share a bedroom at my house.
Does that make her one of my family?
Another asked:
Miss Jackson, when my parents got divorced my brother moved away to North Carolina.
To live with my Grandma.
He doesn’t live with me, so should I still count him as one of my family?

Miss Jackson got a half-dozen different questions like that.
About half-sisters and step-brothers.
Adopted brothers and foster parents.

Jesus avoids all the complication.
He makes being a member of his family simple.
He says, Whoever does the will of God is my brother and sister and mother.

And God’s will doesn’t set the bar unreachably high.
He wills that we do something that he has given all of us the ability to do
Something that isn’t always easy, but is always within our ability.
He wills that we love each other.
That we try our best to fit into His family.
Like the best of brothers and sisters, sons and daughters.

Jesus doesn’t want to regard us by our earthly blood relationship.
His cousins hundreds of times removed.
He calls us by our spiritual relationship to him.
Children of the same Father.
Brothers and Sisters.

3rd Tuesday Ordinary Time

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