Holiday Family Gathering Coming Up? Let the Beatitudes Quell Your Attitudes
- John Shore
: Writer, Editor, Author

Many people relish the Holiday Family Gathering. Ideally we would all
relish it---but, alas, for many attending a HFG is like going to the
dentist: unavoidable, uncomfortable, painful, disturbingly intrusive,
and way too much about what you do and don't eat.
Mostly, of course, both visits are all about enduring it while your open nerves get poked at and jabbed.
Does thinking about an upcoming family gathering make you want to hide beneath a lead blanket and start spitting? Good ---because times of emotional stress are the times to heed Jesus.
Bearing that truth in mind, let us turn to the Beatitudes from
Jesus' Sermon on the Mount, that perfect distillation of his overall
message to the world. At the beginning of each beatitude, Jesus teaches
us one aspect of who we should strive to become in order to more fully
manifest him. So let's consider what role each beatitude might play in
our attitude, in order to preclude our getting stewed, blued, in a feud
(or booed!) when for the holidays we meet with our brood.
Don't seclude; be renewed!
Annoy your readers, so they'll attend St. Peter's!
Please forgive me; I have some sort of ... organic rhyming dysfunction.
Here's what Jesus teaches us at Matthew 5:3-12, and how we can use
it to this year be a blessing to ourselves and our families when we
meet with them over the holidays.
Blessed are the poor in spirit. We tend to go into family
gatherings pretty keyed up. We feel intense, alert, super-sensitive to
everything everybody says and does; when we hear, "You're here!" our
spidey senses kick fully on. But that's exactly the opposite of being
"poor in spirit"; that's being too rich in spirit. At its core
that's all about ego. Before stepping into your family gathering, take
a minute, take a breath, and fill yourself with the Holy Spirit---which
eradicates your grubby, score-keeping ego spirit, and brings in its
place the spirit of Jesus. And if there's one thing Jesus showed us,
it's that it's all about wanting and keeping nothing for yourself.
Blessed are those who mourn. Again, this is about the Holy
Spirit filling you with the understanding that everything of this
world---including your family---is temporary. Centering yourself within
that truth gives you the clarity to appreciate that everyone in your
family is just like everyone else in the world: in need of constant,
absolute, and perfect love. That's a hunger that can't get met on
earth. And that fact does inform the human experience with a
very great sadness. Know that. Be with that. Let the truth of that flow
through you, so that you treat the members of your family not as people
with whom you have your own specific, tangled history, but as
co-travelers through what is, after all, this veil of tears we call
life.
Blessed are the meek. Don't fight. Don't provoke. Don't
defend. Don't insist that your thoughts and opinions are given their
full weight. Let every last bit of that go. Allow others to go before
you. Let others have the floor. Let others be right and strong and firm
and clear in whatever way it's important for them to be so. Support
them in an unqualified way. Instead of saying the words your ego-self
is first inclined to, say what you know would most please the other
person. Why not? If Jesus can sacrifice his life in order for you to be
reconciled with God, you can surely sacrifice a bit of yourself in
order to promote harmony within your family.
Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness.
Always look to, point at, emphasize, and celebrate the good. Forget
everything else; for the time that you are with your family, allow all
negativity to mean to you nothing whatsoever. Be the person who clearly
aligns themselves with what's right and true and just. Listen to the
Holy Spirit, who will always carry you to where God is most fully
manifested. Maybe that will be in the way your mother works so hard.
Maybe it will be in the physical grace with which your father or
brother moves. Whatever and wherever it is, find it. There's God! Be
with Him, and then be with them.