Jesus was a teenager, too

December 12, 2022 at 7:46 p.m.
Jesus was a teenager, too
Jesus was a teenager, too

By Laura Kelly Fanucci, Catholic News Service

If I asked you to imagine Jesus' childhood, you'd likely picture him as a baby in the manger. But have you ever considered that Christ was once a teenager, too?

In this season that sings of "the little Lord Jesus, no crying he makes," we can forget that the incarnation means Jesus became a teen, too. With hormones and growth spurts, with a changing body and a deepening voice, with all the questions and appetite and energy that young people bring.

Teens often get a terrible rap, but the roller coaster of adolescence is essential to our growth – and young people bring enormous gifts to the human family. Their enthusiasm, prophetic voices and optimism are sources of deep hope and renewal.

Still, rare is the adult who would repeat middle or high school. So what does it matter for us – young or old – that Jesus was once 13, 15 or 18 years old?

Jesus' adolescence affirms the overlooked and underappreciated chapters in our own lives. The one story we have from Jesus' childhood beyond his birth narratives – the time he was lost and found in the Temple – speaks to our growing callings, our desire for independence and our need for strong role models in faith.

Jesus knew what it was to see the world as a child and then grow taller, stronger and older: to change physically, emotionally and spiritually. He experienced the transformations that teens live daily: the same struggles that adults can be quick to forget when we're frustrated or flummoxed by the young people in our lives.

What a gift that Jesus blessed our most trying, tumultuous years by living them himself.

There is good news in this truth for all of us, even those with adolescence far-off in the rearview mirror.

In Jesus' time, life expectancy was typically 30-35 years – a shockingly short life span by our modern standards. But this fact means he lived through what his time would have considered to be young adulthood and even mature adulthood.

While he did not get to grow to be an elderly man, he lived through huge swaths of the human experience during the decades he walked among us.

As a son and cousin, Jesus understood the joys and conflicts of families. He journeyed through friendship with women and men from different walks of life. He labored for decades as a carpenter and then spent three years in public ministry as a teacher, preacher and healer, which means he understood work in many forms.

He knew physical, mental and spiritual suffering – all the ordinary and extraordinary emotions and experiences of human life.

Jesus' adolescence reminds us that most of the Messiah's life was not dramatic moments recorded for posterity, but everyday encounters much like our own: hidden or forgotten, but still meaningful.

Ultimately the details of age matter less than the deeper truth that God become one of us, among us, for us. Advent, Christmas and Epiphany celebrate Christ as Emmanuel: with us in each stage of life.

If you look closely in this sacred season, you might just catch a glimpse of Christ in a child's eyes – or a teen's smile. Whether you meet a new baby in your family, sit near a cranky toddler at Church or try to make small talk with a tween at your holiday table, remember that Jesus was once their age, too.

Jesus, who knew what it was to be young, taught us to welcome the least. May his wisdom soften our hearts to heed his words and hear his echo in every baby's cry, every child's shout and every teenager's voice.

Fanucci is a writer, speaker and author of several books, including "Everyday Sacrament: The Messy Grace of Parenting." Her work can be found at laurakellyfanucci.com.


Related Stories

If I asked you to imagine Jesus' childhood, you'd likely picture him as a baby in the manger. But have you ever considered that Christ was once a teenager, too?

In this season that sings of "the little Lord Jesus, no crying he makes," we can forget that the incarnation means Jesus became a teen, too. With hormones and growth spurts, with a changing body and a deepening voice, with all the questions and appetite and energy that young people bring.

Teens often get a terrible rap, but the roller coaster of adolescence is essential to our growth – and young people bring enormous gifts to the human family. Their enthusiasm, prophetic voices and optimism are sources of deep hope and renewal.

Still, rare is the adult who would repeat middle or high school. So what does it matter for us – young or old – that Jesus was once 13, 15 or 18 years old?

Jesus' adolescence affirms the overlooked and underappreciated chapters in our own lives. The one story we have from Jesus' childhood beyond his birth narratives – the time he was lost and found in the Temple – speaks to our growing callings, our desire for independence and our need for strong role models in faith.

Jesus knew what it was to see the world as a child and then grow taller, stronger and older: to change physically, emotionally and spiritually. He experienced the transformations that teens live daily: the same struggles that adults can be quick to forget when we're frustrated or flummoxed by the young people in our lives.

What a gift that Jesus blessed our most trying, tumultuous years by living them himself.

There is good news in this truth for all of us, even those with adolescence far-off in the rearview mirror.

In Jesus' time, life expectancy was typically 30-35 years – a shockingly short life span by our modern standards. But this fact means he lived through what his time would have considered to be young adulthood and even mature adulthood.

While he did not get to grow to be an elderly man, he lived through huge swaths of the human experience during the decades he walked among us.

As a son and cousin, Jesus understood the joys and conflicts of families. He journeyed through friendship with women and men from different walks of life. He labored for decades as a carpenter and then spent three years in public ministry as a teacher, preacher and healer, which means he understood work in many forms.

He knew physical, mental and spiritual suffering – all the ordinary and extraordinary emotions and experiences of human life.

Jesus' adolescence reminds us that most of the Messiah's life was not dramatic moments recorded for posterity, but everyday encounters much like our own: hidden or forgotten, but still meaningful.

Ultimately the details of age matter less than the deeper truth that God become one of us, among us, for us. Advent, Christmas and Epiphany celebrate Christ as Emmanuel: with us in each stage of life.

If you look closely in this sacred season, you might just catch a glimpse of Christ in a child's eyes – or a teen's smile. Whether you meet a new baby in your family, sit near a cranky toddler at Church or try to make small talk with a tween at your holiday table, remember that Jesus was once their age, too.

Jesus, who knew what it was to be young, taught us to welcome the least. May his wisdom soften our hearts to heed his words and hear his echo in every baby's cry, every child's shout and every teenager's voice.

Fanucci is a writer, speaker and author of several books, including "Everyday Sacrament: The Messy Grace of Parenting." Her work can be found at laurakellyfanucci.com.

Have a news tip? Email [email protected] or Call/Text 360-922-3092

e-Edition


e-edition

Sign up


for our email newsletters

Weekly Top Stories

Sign up to get our top stories delivered to your inbox every Sunday

Daily Updates & Breaking News Alerts

Sign up to get our daily updates and breaking news alerts delivered to your inbox daily

Latest Stories


Pope to open Holy Year with full schedule of Christmas liturgies
With the opening of the Holy Year 2025, Pope Francis'....

Pope condemns 'arrogance of invaders' in Ukraine and Palestine
The "arrogance" of the invaders attacking Ukraine and Palestine....

Final synod document is magisterial, must be accepted, Pope says
Doubling down on the centrality of synodality in the Catholic Church...

Pope declares Spanish mystic 'blessed,' advances other sainthood causes
Using what the Vatican called an "equipollent" or equivalent beatification...

Ratzinger Prize winner draws from late Pope's engagement with modernity
"We don't have another theologian, it seems to me, that has been as engaged...


The Evangelist, 40 North Main Ave., Albany, NY, 12203-1422 | PHONE: 518-453-6688| FAX: 518-453-8448
© 2024 Trenton Monitor, All Rights Reserved.