Married Mary

A Mary Moment Monday post

Today’s the feast of the espousal of Mary, which means we celebrate the fact that she was married. (More about the espousal of Mary here.)

It’s easy to forget that Mary was a married woman. It’s also easy to imagine that marriage, for Mary and Joseph, was something easy.

Mary and Joseph’s marriage didn’t exactly get off to an easy start.  They were engaged and Joseph had promised not to “defile” Mary, because she was a consecrated virgin.  He was really marrying her because, in that day and age, there was no security in being a single woman.

And then she turned up pregnant.  This was the girl who was supposed to have promised to remain pure.

It was a dilemma for Joseph.  It’s a dilemma for us.

Mary didn’t struggle with NFP, because she was a virgin and she remained a virgin.  She didn’t worry about whether it was the right time to have a baby or whether she would be able to handle the next swaddled blessing.

That makes Mary’s marriage a little…different than mine.  It makes me wonder just what I can learn from her when it comes to marriage.

But maybe it also points us to some of the truths of marriage and to some lessons that we sometimes forget.

Mary gave birth to the Savior, and then she raised him.  She did it with the help and support of a man, a man chosen by God.  Joseph was the head of the family, and that’s no small thing.  Angels appeared to him, and he was the earthly male role model — the man Jesus knew as Daddy in the flesh.  How do I support my husband in his role as head of our family?  How do I encourage him — with a hot meal, a smile in the evening, my undivided attention?

Life in Nazareth wasn’t easy, but it was as normal as it could get.  Mary didn’t have a slew of servants at her disposal.  She and Joseph had to work — really, truly work — in their life together.  There were laundry piles and dirty dishes and meals to prepare.

It’s there, in the boring, ordinary, common life…it’s there that I see Mary and Joseph.  They’re holding hands and smiling at some shared joke.  Maybe it’s a toddler mispronunciation they’re remembering together.  Could they be thinking of Jesus’ first steps, of the journey to Egypt, of the trip to Jerusalem searching for Jesus?

Marriage is a commitment of the highest order, and Mary stands before us, not as an inaccessible perfect wife (though she undoubtedly was), but as an achievable sister-in-arms.  She taps us on the shoulder and urges us to put the computer away, to bake a pan of brownies, to write a little unexpected love note.  She shows us Who should be at the center of our marriage, reminds us where it is we’re trying to reach, prompts us to reach, together, for the many graces wrapped up in the sacrament of marriage.

She knows how hard it is in this day and age — it was hard then, too, though the standard was to stay married.  She sees the obstacles in front of us and she leads us, once again, back to her Son.

Originally published in a modified form at Faith & Family Live.

image credit 

A Double Celebration

Eight years ago, we planned a big party.

Eight years ago, he waited for me at the end of an aisle.

Eight years ago, we knelt beneath the Cross and sealed our happiness with a Sacrament.

Eight years ago, we exchanged rings.

Eight years ago, we sealed it with a kiss.

 Eight years ago, we shared the first of many knives, the first of many cakes, the first of many great desserts.

Eight years ago, he looked at me, I laughed, and we began a lifetime together.

Eight years ago, we danced a moonlight serenade and I started practicing letting him lead.

Eight years ago, I took his hand, for better or for worse.

And one year ago, we celebrated our anniversary with the best gift we could imagine.

November 29th is one of my favorite days of the year.

Our Lady of Beauraing, pray for us.

Marriage: Small Steps, Big Rewards

I’ve been a fan of Dr. Ray Guarendi for quite a while, and finishing his most recent book, Marriage: Small Steps, Big Rewards, only made me love Dr. Ray more.

Here’s a book that I can give to any of the married couples I know. I have no doubt if, put into action, it will improve their marriage in tangible ways.

Marriage is one of those topics I hesitate to ever give advice on, but which I feel very strongly about. Not only is it the core of family life, but the experience of my own marriage has impacted me in ways I couldn’t have ever foreseen.

In Marriage: Small Steps, Big Rewards, Dr. Ray uses his humor and his experience to guide readers down a path that is, in theory at least, simple. You don’t have to carve out hours or send the kids to a sitter or even set aside lots of time to read.

This is a straightforward approach to the most important relationship you’ll have with another person. Dr. Ray uses common sense but doesn’t make you feel stupid about it. He suggests, for example, making a habit of using manners with your spouse. Saying “Please” and “Thank You” can make such an important difference in home life, and yet it’s something so many of us neglect to do (or forget, in the chaos of everyday life).

My favorite small step is one that I have always struggled with: “Dump the D Word.” This was the first chapter I read in the book, in fact, because I wondered just what in the world the D word was. It turns out it’s divorce. Why dump it? Well, I can’t spoil the book for you, but his reasoning is not only right on in my experience as the child of two divorces, but it dives into some underlying reasoning that I have never heard articulated.

There are ten small steps, and the total book is less than 150 pages. This is something you can do. It will be an investment that will yield returns for you far beyond the effort you expend. If you have a great marriage, pick up a copy of this book to read and then share with someone else.

Finding Christ in the Wedding Details

A guest post by Melanie Cameron

Prince Charles & Duchess Catherine’s wedding is still fresh in my mind. Did y’all read the homily by the Bishop of London!?

“Be who God meant you to be and you will set the world on fire.” said St Catherine of Siena whose festival day it is today. Marriage is intended to be a way in which man and woman help each other to become what God meant each one to be, their deepest and truest selves.

See image credit at bottom of post.

I’m awestruck by how simply the whole pomp and circumstance of the royal wedding boiled down to this: marriage – a man and a woman seeking and helping one another to heaven. The bishop then characterized every wedding as royal – we certainly are sons and daughters of Christ the King!

As we all know, the Queen attended, as would suit any Queen or King at the wedding of a royal son or daughter. My question is, did Queen Elizabeth actually get an invitation? Such a question may sound silly, yet it’s exceedingly important. Who sent her or delivered to her the invitation? Her son or grandson? Her soon-to-be granddaughter-in-law?

My husband and I, throughout our wedding planning, personally and intentionally invited our King – Christ the King to our wedding.

Soon after marriage, we found a quote from the Pontifical Council for the Family encyclical Preparation for the Sacrament of Marriage, “The tendency is growing towards greater commitment and awareness of the importance and dignity of the engagement period.

Considering Christ’s will for our wedding planning details over anyone else’s preferences turned into a journal for me. It was also a long line of unifying conversations between my husband and me during engagement. Two years later, that journal became a book, Christ on Your Guest List.

There’s a lot of noise out there in the wedding industry…words like “perfect” and “dream.” I had to laugh when I saw a recent ad for wedding rings, “Remember you only get married for the first time once.” Um… first time?

Our book, we humbly pray, offers an alternate message amid the wedding marketing din – a message that promotes the dignity of the engaged couple.

Toss aside the bookstore bridal planners and grab your fiancé! Christ on Your Guest List is a wedding planning guide with a Catholic twist. Taking the focus and the pressure from the bride, this comprehensive, uniting workbook calls engaged couples to seize the opportunity to plan all the details together.

A complement to Pre-Cana, NFP, and ceremony materials, Christ on Your Guest List approaches gift registries, etiquette, superstitions, reception music, and even bachelor party planning with five Christ-centered goals in mind: grow in unity, make decisions together, manage a budget, communicate preferences, and develop a prayer life.

Melanie R. Cameron is a royal daughter of Christ the King. She and her husband Mark married on April 21, 2007, and they intend to remain newlyweds for at least 40 years. They have two children, Esther and Johnpaul. Praying, wife-ing, mothering and playing in Fairfax, VA, Melanie is an independent writer, Renee de Burgh, is the President of a nonprofit serving brides on a budget of $3,000 or less, St. Anthony’s Bridal, and is a member on the Board of the Arlington Diocesan Council of Catholic Women.

image credit

 

 

 

 

 

 

Mary and Her Boys

A Mary Moment Monday post

Having a son has made me look differently at my husband. It’s also made me consider St. Joseph in a new light, too. Granted, my little guy’s a Joseph himself. And my husband has long been a model to me of the hard-working ethos and love-through-providing that St. Joseph must have embodied.

But there’s something–even this early into it–about having a son. Already my husband has a little smile when he thinks of construction toys (and he and his older brother, the one with the real-life construction equipment, are already plotting). He will hold the baby and watch basketball and I hear a little commentary.

Strangely, this commentary doesn’t involve purple ponies or hair bows. It is, in fact, very alien commentary in my house of girls, girls who own their father (and know it) and who convince him to play talking horses (though he insists to me that when you play with toys they do NOT have to TALK).

Mary knows; she understands. She had a son and a husband. She must have watched Joseph teaching Jesus how to use the tools and bear with gentle frustration the getting-into and “borrowing” that I imagine must have occurred.

Did Jesus take things apart and examine them? Did he build, even as he was toddling around the house?

Mary was also right in the middle of the disciples, which I picture as a bunch of rough-looking, gentle giants. She was surrounded by men, even as she was holding hands with a host of women. Those men were looking to her, the Mother, and listening to her after her son had ascended.

I grew up with brothers, and I have always felt an affinity for males. I have nothing against women, mind you. It’s just that there’s something about boys.

I have laughed that I have two daughters. I shoulda had boys, I think to myself. And then I see the beauty of my girls and their daddy, and I get a glimpse–just a tiny look–at what makes God smile. Every man deserves a daughter.

As I hold my little man, whose gaze at me seems so different than his sisters’ did, and as I watch my husband go all boy on me, I have to just pause and thank God.

The feast of St. Joseph is March 19, which is Saturday. I think I may think of something special for my husband, in honor of a patron who has done so much for our family.

I love that this feast falls during Lent, and it ties in nicely with an initiative Heidi Hess Saxton (whose writing has inspired raving on my part before) called The 40 Day Challenge. She introduces it here, and she has updates going to the 40 Day Challenge Facebook page.

St. Joseph has long been someone I turn to for my marriage, and using the 40 days of Lent to work on my marriage is a challenge I am going to embrace.

If your marriage is perfect, all the more reason to improve it to super-perfect. But if there’s even one tiny annoyance you have, why not use this season and give it to God? No matter what your faith background, Heidi’s reflections and prompts will give you food for thought and meat for your marriage. Start where you are, at whatever day you begin (though if you’re motivated, you could go back and start at the beginning…for me, though, that’s the kind of obsessive thing that makes something like this impossible!).

If we are to improve the world, we must start in our own homes. For those of us who are married, there is no vocation more important than that of our marriage. If you aren’t married, maybe you can use this as an opportunity to pray for the marriage of someone you know, especially if you see them struggling.

Here are links to the first couple of posts in Heidi’s series, though you can click through to the Facebook page or her blog and find them all:

The Story of Meeting Prince Charming

I’m not really joking when I call my husband Prince Charming. It’s really and truly how I think of him.

If you want to know more–like how we met and the story of our courtship–it’s being featured today at Plot, Line, and Sinker. It’s being included in the upcoming book Come My Beloved: Inspiring Stories of Catholic Courtship.

You’ll find other courtship stories being featured there as well. Talk about some great inspiration for the rest of us! A big thanks to Ellen Gable Hrkach for her work on this project.

Written by a New Mother

Originally published in this space on January 1, 2007, and written when I was brand-new to this whole parenting adventure. It’s something I like to revisit from time to time.

On the day your first child is born, you will find out something that you didn’t realize up until then: the person you married is a good person. In fact, the person you married is such a good person that you wanted to have children with them (and you did, in fact, have a child together). You find out, with the birth of your first child, that you are capable of together changing the world, and the change you bring about is another human being.

On the day your first child is born, you will look at your spouse and you see a new person, one who has never before existed: a parent. In this new person, there is a stamina that cannot be matched, a stamina that will allow them to get up all night long to feed and soothe a crying baby and still go to work the next day. This stamina will give them the grace to lug approximately fifty pounds of stuff in one trip, dance through puzzling car seat straps that would have a beginner in tears, and appreciate another person’s smile more than was previously possible.

On the day your first child is born, you will hold in your arms someone who never was, who never will be again, and who would not be if not for you. You will look at your spouse, and you will realize that the two of you hold a future in your control. Your child, small and helpless, is the most important adventure you will travel together, and it is the most lasting impact you will make in the world.

On the day your first child is born, you will realize that love is not a feeling, is not a decision, is not a one-word fill-in-the-blank kind of thing at all. You will know love in a way you could not have imagined, and you will almost burst when you see your spouse gazing down at this new little person. You will know heartbreak in that instant when you know love, because the love must break your heart, for it is too big to be held there.

On the day your first child is born, my love, you will know how we looked at you, and how we still look at each other.

Image source

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...