by Boudreaux, Florentin, 1821-1894
Order is a law of nature. Men are not all equal in all respects, and hence it is just that some should be subject to others. If all had equal rights in all things, equal power, equal jurisdiction ; if all were masters and none were servants, all rulers and none to obey, all kings and no subjects, the whole world would stand still; nothing could be done. There would be a Babel of confused commands; a universal rebellion of children against parents, wives against husbands, scholars against masters. Men would cease to be social (beings. Society would be dissolved into individualism, and every man’s hand would be raised against his brother. Hence, obedience of man to his superior is indispensable to his own preservation as well as to the general good. But obedience in our Divine Lord to man, His creature, reverses the order. In Him, God obeys man; the Creator is subject to His own creature ; the King descends below the slave. The wise asks wisdom from the foolish; the powerful is powerless against the weak ; the Master learns from His own disciples. Infinite greatness, wisdom, power, is ruled and governed by what, in comparison with Him, is infinite littleness, ignorance and weakness. It is true that Joseph and Mary are most dear to Him, most magnificently adorned with grace and sanctity, exalted in gifts of mind and heart far above Principality and Power; yet they are infinitely inferior to Him. But Jesus obeys His parents, because in them He recognises the authority of His Eternal Father, “ of whom all paternity in heaven and earth is named.” (Eph. iii.) To them He offers the holocaust of His will, and through them to God, His Father. And such is His earnestness to teach us obedience by His example, such the importance He attaches to this virtue, that nearly the whole of His life on earth is written in three words: Erat subditus illis: He was subject to them.” (Luke ii.)