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The Ultimate New Year’s Resolution

THComm Blog Photos - 2022-01-04T121702.079

Dear Friend,

To hear this letter read by Ever, listen here:

This past weekend, we returned home after a great post-Christmas week in the Midwest with family and friends. Soon after, the kids began rearranging their rooms—hanging up new clothes they’d received, shelving new books, and making room for toys and other gifts. Our family’s designated “donate” box also began to fill up.  

One of our kids went so far as to pull up her mattress and box spring and do a deep clean under her bed. The sound of the vacuum cleaner was like a beautiful symphony! Instead of layering new things on top of old, they were grasping intuitively that this is an opportune time to reprioritize and reorder, to declutter, donate, and make room for the new.  

It struck us that all this New Year’s reordering in our household—our little “society of daily life”—can happen in our interior life as well. As C.S. Lewis summarized, “St. Augustine defines virtue as ordo amoris [ordering of love], the ordinate condition of the affections in which every object is accorded that degree of love which is appropriate to it.” To put it simply, first things first.

You could say that building a virtuous and Christ-centered Trinity House in 2022 will be based on putting our loves in the right order, aligning our family life with God’s plan—the plan unveiled in scripture and the teachings and traditions of the Church. This alignment may mean re-prioritizing some practices that have become rusty and giving up or deprioritizing others.   

To take a few examples: There’s nothing wrong with the love of good food, but if it occupies more attention than our love of serving our neighbors, then we are looking at a “disordered love.” The occasional family movie night is great, but if love of consuming media outranks our family’s love of having dinner together, or family prayer-time, or listening to one another, then something is amiss. The love of fitness or sports is great, but we all understand that it should be “lower” than the love and service of our spouse and parents.

How fitting that as we resolve to order our loves well in 2022, the Church gives us the feast of the Most Holy Name of Jesus (Jan. 3rd). Describing the Holy Name, the 14th-century hermit and mystic Richard Rolle wrote, “This name Jesus, loyally held in mind, drags up vices by the roots, plants virtues, sows charity, pours in the savor of heavenly things, drains away discord, reforms peace, gives everlasting rest, and fills his lovers with spiritual joy.”

Applying this wisdom as we attempt to order our family life according to God’s ways:

  • Do we hold and savor the name of Jesus in our family life?
  • Do we invoke His Holy Name in prayer together, at meals, in daily conversation?
  • When we face inevitable challenges throughout the day, do we call upon His Holy Name with a simple prayer like, “Jesus, I surrender” or “Jesus, help me”?
  • When we experience temptations, do we invoke the Holy Name, saying, for example, “In the name of Jesus, I renounce a spirit of [specific temptation]?” 

Our kids inspired us with the physical re-ordering of their rooms. And as the return to school approaches, the donate box is brimming to overflow. Now, let’s see if we can reorder the more important things, putting our love for the Holy Name of Jesus, the Eucharist, the Word of God, the Sacrament of Reconciliation, the Sabbath, the Commandments, loving our neighbor and serving the poor above lesser things.

May 2022 be marked by the Ordo Amoris—the ordering of our loves—such that we might sing, “O Lord, our Lord, how majestic is your name through all the earth!” (Ps. 8:2)

> At the Name of Jesus, Every Knee Shall Bow” by Kathy Schiffer (National Catholic Register) provides a helpful, brief overview of the Holy Name. 
 
> Living the New Year as a New Creation” by Susanna Spencer (National Catholic Register) suggests that these early days of January are the right time to solidify your “spiritual game plan” for the year ahead. 

Bishop Barron: The 10 Commandments and Our Pathetic Attention Span” (Aleteia) offers a challenging reflection on how we might resolve in this new year to be more attentive, focused, and “use much less social media.”  …More Faith Life Tools…. 

Thanks to the many supporters who stepped forward at year-end with one-time and monthly gifts to support the ministry of Trinity House Community, we reached our goal! The generosity of this appeal will enable us to work toward achieving our five key ministry goals for 2022Thank you! We are calling to mind this verse: “My God will fully supply whatever you need, in accord with his glorious riches in Christ Jesus” (Phil. 4:19).

> For those in northern Virginia, mark your calendars for Sat. Jan. 22nd, when we’ll host Cooking with the Saints author Sandy Greeley for our next Heaven in Your Home Gathering at 6:30 p.m., St. John the Apostle (Parish Center), Leesburg. Sandy will speak on “Food at the Heart of Family Culture.” Learn more here.

> Would you like us to join your parish, school, or small group to provide a talk, workshop, Lenten mission, or retreat? We’d love to share a vision for the family and finding heaven in your home. To explore this possibility, check out our booking page here

“As a platform for evangelization literally located at the corner of Church and Market Streets, Trinity House Cafe + Market embodies the call to be a Church not in ‘maintenance mode’ but rather in a permanent state of mission.”
– George Weigel
Distinguished Senior Fellow, Ethics and Public Policy Center 

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