“I handed on to you as of first importance what I also received.” // 1 Corinthians 15:3
Walls of snow lined the sides of the newly plowed streets as our car crept carefully toward the Cathedral that morning. My daughter sat excitedly in the back seat with her hair freshly curled and her new dress smoothed over her lap. This was the moment for which I had been preparing her, very intensively for a semester of a school year, but really since the moment I knew of her existence in my womb. She was about to be confirmed and receive her final Sacrament of initiation into the Church.
I prayed that she would continue her journey of faith as she discovers the depths of the riches of what the Holy Spirit can do in her life.
Yet what she does with her faith is not in my control. I have learned over the years of being a parent that all I can do for my children and their faith is to hand on, as Saint Paul puts it, what I have received.
And that which I have received, those who came before me also received in a beautiful and connected handing down. I like to envision the teachings of the Church through Tradition as a long spiritual lineage of me learning from my parents, teachers, and priests, and them learning from theirs and them learning from theirs and so on. It goes all the way back and back to the Apostles, perhaps even Saint Paul who handed on what he also received.
When I think of it this way, I relate to Isaiah who proclaimed his lips unclean before they were purified with a burning coal (Isaiah 6:5) and to Saint Peter who fell at the Lord’s feet calling himself a sinful man (Luke 5:8). I see that all that I have to give is only what I have received.
Sister, the Lord wants us to hand on the truth that we have received from others, to share our faith. We do not know how He will use it in their lives. Let us be like Saint Paul, and while we are all unworthy, trust in God’s grace as we pass it on in faith.
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Susanna Spencer holds a master's in Theology from the Franciscan University of Steubenville and is the Devotions Editor for Blessed is She. She is a freelance writer and editor and a teacher. She lives with her philosopher husband, three teen daughters, one pre-teen son, and a miracle baby girl in Saint Paul, Minnesota. She loves reading theology and novels, attending beautiful liturgies, cooking delicious food, and casually following baseball. She is the author of the Gospel Studies including Seek His Kingdom: A Meditation on Matthew , Listen to Him: A Meditation on Mark, Preach in His Name: A Meditation on Luke, and Abide in His Love: A Meditation on John. She was the contributing author and editor for our children’s devotional prayer book, Rise Up. She was the Theological Editor of the Blessed Conversations Studies. Find out more about her here.
