FAMILY FIGHTS
INTRODUCTION
The title of my homily for this 9 Tuesday in Ordinary
Time is, “Family Fights.”
When we drive down the street - any street - in any town
- we can assume that family fights go on from time to time - behind those closed
doors.
More or less….
We pray for the less….
We pray people get over their fights, spats, irritations
and disagreements …
We pray that forgiveness is on the menu.
We pray that a couple knows whether they have a short
fuse or a long fuse - and how to difuse a lit fuse.
WEDNESDAY NIGHT
FIGHTS
When I was a kid there were more boxing matches on TV
than today.
If I remember correctly, there used to be Monday Night
Fights, Wednesday Night Fights, and Friday Night Fights.
When I was a kid - and my parents were kids - and their
parents were kids - way before TV - generation
after generation, families had fights now and then - not scheduled for Monday,
Wednesday and Friday - but I’m guessing they are over the same thing - over and
over and over again. Déjà vu fights…. About strictness, about lateness, about
chores, about not carrying one’s load - about drinking, friends the kids hang
out with, etc. etc. etc.
I remember visiting a couple once and in the opening
conversation just inside the door, the husband said when the wife went into the
kitchen, “By the way, you walked into the middle of a fight. We didn’t plan it,
when we invited you over.” I thought to
myself, “Now what do I do?” Then when he
went to the bathroom, she said, “In case you didn’t notice, we’re in the middle
of a fight right now.”
Surprise.
I wondered as I was driving home from being in that house,
if I would have noticed a fight was going on - if they didn’t tell me.
FLORA DAVIS
Flora Davis once wrote, “Almost all married people fight,
although many are ashamed to admit it.
Actually a marriage in which no quarreling at all takes place may well
be one that is dead or dying from emotional undernourishment. If you care, you
probably fight.”
I’ve also read that all couples fight. It’s the making up
that makes the marriage work - that is, if folks learn how to make up well.
Now I don’t know if this is true of fights of parents
with their kids.
And I don’t know if this is true of fights of parents
with adult kids who have married or are graduated and live elsewhere - or have
come back to the nest. It’s cheaper.
The Marriage Problem List that made sense to me down
through the years was one I noticed in the New
York Daily News when I first got out of the seminary. “The three biggest
problems in every Marriage are: money, sex and in-laws.”
But not always….
The fight between Tobit and his wife Anna in today’s
first reading is about a goat. He gets her goat - by accusing her of stealing
the goat. She shoots back with the “holier than thou” label. I wondered as I read that - how many times
that fight and that labeling took place in that marriage.
When I read that, I thought to myself also: “That’s a
good idea for a sermon.”
CONCLUSION
Fighting, nitpicking, setting up for a fight goes on in
life. We heard it in the gospel. I wonder if these fights against Jesus - were
things these Pharisees and Herodians we heard about in the gospel - showed up
their families and in their homes as well. I’ve always noticed much of life is
déjà vu - over and over again - same basic fight - different situations -
different actors. Amen.