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Bringing a new life into the world is an astonishing responsibility.
How many new parents have looked down at their baby in the crib, then looked up at each other and wondered, “What have we done?”
This is why, through most of history, hardly any culture has left child rearing up to two hapless newborn parents alone. Grandparents, aunts, uncles, and friends join together in traditional societies to help provide support, structure, a common set of values, and many pairs of watchful eyes.
When confronted with the tiny new life of infinite potential, our religious sensibilities kick in as well; and naturally enough, we turn to God, not only in gratitude but in prayer for help and blessing.
Marking the beginnings of new life and new families is something all cultures and religions do in some way. As Luke takes pains to show us, Mary and her family plunged right…
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I like the idea of the Mass as a meeting place for us and the Lord. Yes, we can meet him at home in prayer as well. But the Mass is one more place, a place of communal meeting, a place where we can also receive His presence in the Eucharist which cannot be done at home alone.