Thursday, January 1, 2026

Resolution (2026-01-01, Mary Mother of God)

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 [v_02]  January 1, 2026 – Solemnity of Mary, the Holy Mother of God

New Year’s Day: Resolution, Not Just Change

Solemnity of Mary, Mother of God

Many years ago, while planning a parish event with our beloved pastor, Monsignor Joe Petrillo, a group of us were trying to figure out which Fridays he might be available. We were focused on Fridays. So we asked him to look at his calendar and tell us which ones worked.

He looked up and said, with a smile,
“Well, I’m free on my birthday.”

Now, his birthday was a Friday that year—but that wasn’t really our question. Still, his answer made perfect sense. Because birthdays stand on their own. If someone asks you your birthday, you don’t tell them the day of the week you were born. You tell them the date. The date matters.

So do days like Christmas Day.
And New Year’s Day.

These days don’t need explanation. They invite us—almost insist—that we pause, look back, and look ahead.

And whenever we do that, we inevitably start thinking about change.

But not all change is the same.

This morning, I want to reflect on 3 ways we talk about change:
evolution, revolution, and resolution
and why resolution, especially, describes the Christian life.

1. Evolution: Change Over Time

In science and biology, evolution describes gradual change over generations. The Church has never rejected this insight. She teaches that creation is dynamic—unfolding under God’s providence and guidance. And even as we speak about development, we are clear: the human soul is a direct gift from God.

Still, evolution is slow.
It happens whether we choose it or not.

Spiritually, many of us change this way. We age. We accumulate experience. We learn lessons—sometimes the hard way. Over time, some habits soften; others harden.

But time passing by itself does not make us disciples.
Evolution alone does not make us holy.

2. Revolution: Change Through Crisis

Then there is revolution—sudden, disruptive change, often born of crisis, injustice, or suffering.

The Church takes suffering seriously and always calls for justice. At the same time, she is cautious about revolutions, because one injustice can easily replace another. Even in society, resistance is justified only in extreme circumstances, and violence is never celebrated spiritually.

In our own lives, revolutions happen when trouble forces us to change: illness, loss, failure, fear.

Sometimes these moments wake us up.
Sometimes they leave us shaken—amazed, confused, even frozen.

In today’s Gospel, the shepherds experience something like this. They go in haste to Bethlehem. They see something extraordinary. And we are told that they are amazed.

But amazement alone does not last.

3. Mary and Resolution: Cooperation with God

Mary shows us something deeper.

While others are amazed, we are told that Mary treasures these things and ponders them in her heart.

Her amazement is not shallow or frightened.
It is patient.
It is receptive.
It cooperates with God’s action rather than trying to control it.

And this brings us to the third—and deepest—kind of change: resolution.

Resolution is not simply a New Year’s resolution that fades by February. In the spiritual life, resolution means a firm decision, sustained by grace, lived through cooperation with God’s will.

Saint Alphonsus Liguori reminds us that holiness does not come from mastering every circumstance, but from accepting God’s will—especially what God permits to happen.

So the real questions are these:
Do I resolve to accept what I cannot control?
My own frailty?
My limits?
The things in life that do not go according to plan?

Mary did not control the mystery entrusted to her.
She cooperated with it.

Resolution Lived: A Human Analogy

Every relationship teaches us something about this.

Relationships evolve over time.
They sometimes experience revolutionary moments.
But most of all, relationships are sustained by resolution.

Marriage is a good example.

Before a wedding, a relationship evolves. The wedding day itself can feel revolutionary—everything changes at once. But a marriage is not sustained by a single dramatic day. A marriage is sustained by resolution: a commitment renewed daily.

I remember being involved in my sister’s wedding. At the rehearsal, I was directing things the way I always did—“the bride stands here, the groom stands there.” And my sister gently corrected me and said, “Why can’t you just call us by our names?”

It was a small moment, but an important one. Marriage isn’t about an event. It’s about a relationship lived day after day.

That’s what Christian discipleship looks like too.
Every day can be a new beginning.
Every day can be a kind of New Year’s Day.

A Prayer for a Resolved Heart

Recently, at a funeral Mass here, I heard a prayer from the Franciscan tradition that beautifully captures what a Christian resolution really looks like.

It goes like this:

May God bless us with discomfort
at easy answers, half-truths, and superficial relationships, so that we may live deep within our hearts.

May God bless us with anger at injustice, oppression, and exploitation of people,
so that we may work for justice, freedom, and peace.

May God bless us with tearsto shed for those who suffer from pain, rejection, hunger, and war,
so that we may reach out our hands to comfort them and turn their pain into joy.

And may God bless us with enough foolishness
to believe that we can make a difference in this world, so that we can do what others claim cannot be done, to bring justice and kindness to all our children and the poor.

This is not a prayer asking for an easy year.
It is a prayer asking for a resolved heart.

Discomfort—not to make us bitter, but to wake us up.
Anger—not to make us violent, but to move us toward justice.
Tears—not to paralyze us, but to soften our hearts.
And foolishness—not recklessness, but Gospel courage.


Beginning the New Year with Mary

On this first day of the year, we are not simply turning a page on the calendar. We are placing ourselves again under the care of Mary, the Mother of God.

She teaches us:
how to be amazed without being superficial,
how to change without becoming destructive,
how to resolve without relying on ourselves alone.

And so we begin this year with the ancient blessing from the Book of Numbers—words Monsignor Petrillo loved to use whenever someone asked him for a blessing, also the text of our 1st reading today:

The Lord bless you and keep you.
The Lord let his face shine upon you, and be gracious to you.
The Lord look upon you kindly and give you peace.

Mary, Mother of God,
pray for us.
Teach us to ponder.
Teach us to trust.
Teach us to resolve.

And may this new year find us not merely changed by time or crisis,
but transformed by cooperation with God’s will.

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