excerpt
from The Joshua Priest:
For each child born to a family, the experience of
that family is different, simply because the very structure of the
family, itself, is changed by the arrival of each new child. Parents
are changed too, being older and, perhaps, more burdened as subsequent
children arrive. The external world into which each child is born
is also changing constantly, and the demands of that world make a
difference in the lives of both the parents and the children. Then,
the circumstances of each child’s birth are distinctive, and
parents, quite automatically, respond differently to those distinctions.
The firstborn child, particularly, is set apart by
his place in the family, traditionally holding a special, unchallenged
position of respect and honor. Along with that special position, the
firstborn child is often expected to set an example for the siblings
that follow and to carry on the family’s heritage.
Once the rest of the children begin arriving, most
of the parents’ attention is, by necessity, diverted to meet
the needs of their growing brood. This shift in attention always represents
a loss to the firstborn child; and even when carefully explained,
this loss of the parents’ once absolute and undivided attention
always proves baffling and painful for that child. Very often, the
firstborn experiences this loss as a betrayal by his parents and begins
to retreat into the less-confusing world of his own imagination. While
in that world, the child may conclude that his loss is the result
of something he has done wrong or, worse, the result of something
that is intrinsically wrong with him. The younger the firstborn child
at the time that the others begin arriving, the more confusing and
irrevocable this sense of loss and betrayal will be. Very often that
sense of loss and betrayal results in a loss of trust in all figures
of authority, both parents and God.
After enjoying such extraordinary amounts of undivided
attention and affection from his adoring parents, the sensitive young
Joseph, not yet two years old, certainly would have felt a shift in
his parents’ focus when his siblings began arriving. Although
still too young to express his feelings, the young Joseph had a foundation
of faith and love so strong that any hurt he may have felt was converted
into deeper empathy. Any imagined conclusions he may have come to
that he had done something wrong were converted into a desire to please
and to try to be more acceptable, more perfect. By nature, trusting
and obedient, Joseph continued to grow into a child with a compassionate
and caring temperament.
More important, unlike most children whose trust in
God can often be confused with trust in their parents, Joseph did
not suffer any such confusion; for Joseph had established a very separate
and personal relationship with God before he was born. In her prayers
and in her quiet times, Margaret had created a bond between her unborn
infant and a loving God. Margaret and Peter continued building that
bond after their son was born. They spoke of Jesus, as one speaks
of an especially caring and cherished member of the family. They prayed
together to a loving Jesus, and they prayed with unquestioning trust
that their prayers were being received. The relationship they fostered
between their son and Jesus was a living, vital friendship, a friendship
he could always rely on.
Margaret and Peter also shared with Joseph their deep
devotion to Mary. Through their acts of reverence, they taught him
of Mary’s obedience and faithfulness and, especially, of her
unconditional fiat, her willingness to trust God and her conscious
consent to receive God’s will for her. And they taught him that
he could always rely on the Holy Mother’s protection.
From the day of Joseph’s baptism, Margaret and
Peter were equally painstaking in introducing their son to the Church,
its laws, its rituals, and its sacred function in the life of every
Christian. And they set an example for him by their own conscientious
involvement with their local parish.
As year by year the Girzone family grew, Joseph listened
and watched as his parents repeated their messages of faith for each
of his siblings; and every time Joseph heard those messages repeated,
it reinforced his own faith and strengthened his deepening attraction
to Jesus and His Church.
Throughout
his childhood, and especially in the lonely times – and there
were so many lonely times in his home, filled with all his exuberant
siblings, each heading full tilt in a different direction –
young Joseph always enjoyed the gentle companionship with Jesus that
his parents had established for him. He was able to find comfort in
his innate and growing faith in God’s love; and it was to Jesus
and His Mother that Joseph always turned with his deepest hurts and
fears, his most cherished hopes and dreams.
On an
intuitive level, not yet fully defined in his young mind, Joseph was
coming to understand the distinction between the limited reach of
human love and the infinite reaches of God’s love.