May 21, 2012
How often are we tempted to render judgment on whether someone we know is a “good” Catholic, based on how that person’s outward deeds appear to us? How often do we look at our own lives and wonder how God sees us, not only according to our deeds, but according to our inner dispositions? The command of Jesus to “judge not lest you be judged” (Matthew 7:1) should guide us in addressing these questions. After all, Christian charity demands that we “remove the beam from your eye first” before tending to the “splinter” in another’s eye (Matthew 7:5).
As I raise these issues, I have a particular set of circumstances in mind.
In many young families, both spouses work during the week. The reasons for doing so vary. For better and for worse, such reasons touch deep – perhaps even raw – nerves, both between the spouses and in relation to those in the older generation. Yet both older and younger generations still see the importance of working hard during week to provide for the temporal needs of their loved ones and to guarantee that weekends are as free as possible to spend time as a family. The stamina required for the women involved to achieve such a standard should stagger the male mind, and cause us to honor and respect the efforts of a working mom. Our society demands that females succeed as efficient, productive workers. Our faith calls the women we love to fulfill their vocation as a faithful wife and loving mother.
Today it is a blessing for all when a young wife and mother who needs to work finds the rare opportunity to drop her children off at school. She gets to hold small hands that still want to be held, give kisses to cheeks that still seek them, and receive smiles from tiny faces that look forward to learning new things. For generations mothers monopolized this blessing. Now, thankfully, more fathers get to experience it, too.