Why the feast of the Holy Family is celebrated after Christmas

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After the celebrations on Christmas Day, the Church gently asks us to pause and have a closer look at the story we have just celebrated. Thus on the first Sunday after Christmas, we celebrate the Feast of the Holy Family—Jesus, Mary and Joseph.

 

This timing is not co-incidental. At Christmas, we rejoice that God chose to enter the world as a baby. We picture the manger, the shepherds, and the angels. But once we step beyond that moment of wonder, an important question remains. What happened next? How did God live among us? The answer is simple and deeply human. The scripture says Jesus went home with His family.

 

By celebrating the Holy Family right after Christmas, the Church reminds us that Jesus did not come into the world as a distant figure. But he grew up in a real home, with a mother who loved Him and a father who protected Him. He learned to walk, to speak, to pray and to work within the quiet, ordinary rhythm of family life. God chose to save the world not from a palace or a throne, but from within a family.

 

This feast helps us move from the joy of Christ’s birth to the everyday reality of His life. Mary and Joseph had to deal with uncertainty, hard work, travel, and scary occasions. Nevertheless, they remained devoted to each other and trusted God. Although their home was not ideal or simple, it was full of love, obedience, and faith. Jesus discovered what it means to love, serve, and belong in that house.

 

This feast’s proximity to Christmas also conveys an interesting message to our own families. As the celebrations fade and normal life returns, the Church reminds us that holiness is lived at home in patience, forgiveness, sacrifice and caring for one another. The Feast of the Holy Family tells us that God is present not only in churches and celebrations, but also at kitchen tables, in daily work, and in moments of quiet struggle.

 

For many, this feast arrives at a reflective time that is just before the New Year. It invites us to look at our own families and ask how we can grow closer, kinder and more rooted in faith. It gives us comfort in knowing that, despite their flaws, families can become homes where God resides.

 

The Nativity tale is concluded on the Feast of the Holy Family. It demonstrates that the Child born in Bethlehem came to thoroughly inhabit our lives—not only on a single holy night, but on every day that followed. And in doing so, it reminds us of a comforting truth which is family life, with all its joys and challenges, is sacred ground.

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