Sunday, February 2, 2020

Christ offers himself for our embrace – Luke 2:22-40

Feast of the Presentation; Holy Infant parish.


A recent Taylor Swift song opens with the defiant statement: “We could leave the Christmas lights up ‘til January // This is our place; we make the rules.” Only, I’m not really sure quite what she thinks she’s defying. Of course you can, Taylor, it’s still Christmas in early January. While Christmas Day being on December 25th has been pretty consistent throughout Christian history, quite when the Christmas season ends has varied a little. Currently, in the Roman Catholic Calendar, as reformed in 1970, the Christmas Season ends with the feast of the Baptism of the Lord, which is normally the early side of mid-January. We celebrated that on the twelfth this year. For a long time before that, about four hundred years prior to 1970, the Christmas season ended on Epiphany which was always twelve days after Christmas. I went to a great twelfth night party just under a month ago, where we had a King Cake and a rosca de reyes, which are really variants of each other, but both great ways to celebrate Epiphany. Anyway, before the reforms that followed the council of Trent that standardized Epiphany as the last day of the Christmas season, in some places, including parts of England, the last day of the Christmas Season was today, or rather, tomorrow, February 2nd, the Feast of the Presentation, or Candlemas as it’s also known. So, if somebody could let Taylor know… if she becomes a super-old-fashioned pre-Tridentine Catholic, she can leave the Christmas lights up ‘til February!


Think about how joyous the good news is that God has taken on human flesh in Christ, has become a babe in a manger to feed a hungry people. Isn’t that joyous enough to be worth forty days of feasting, shortly before we begin our forty days of penitence and fasting for Lent? The Feast we’re celebrating today, tomorrow’s feast, is always February 2nd, because that’s forty days after Christmas, and that’s precisely the timing according to the Law to which Mary was obedient, that you go for your purification forty days after the birth of a boy. This is the last feast of the Church year which derives its date from last Christmas. You actually don’t have to wait that long for the first feast which takes its date from next Christmas. On March 25th, the day before Opening Day this year, we celebrate the Annunciation, Jesus’ conception, nine months before next Christmas.

But, enough of calendars. What happens when the Holy Family actually come to the Temple for this observance? They meet Simeon, who recognizes Jesus for who he is. He takes him in his arms and sings out, “Lord, I’m ready to die now, because I’ve held the Messiah in my arms!” He recognizes that Jesus is the light of the world, and that’s why this is a traditional day to bless candles. Most importantly, he recognizes that, while he is truly the glory of his people Israel, he is light not to them alone, but to the whole world. Luke doesn’t talk about the magi coming, Gentiles coming to worship Jesus. What Matthew shows in that story, Luke tells in this prophetic song that Simeon sings, that was doubtless amplified in the thanksgiving that Anna the prophet offered right afterwards, that unfortunately we don’t get a text for.

Friends, we hold the Messiah too. All of us at Mass receive Jesus, the Word of God, when we hear the scripture, the word about the Word, proclaimed and broken open. In a special way, if we’re receiving communion today, we hold Christ with our bodies. The Church offers two ways to receive the host, on the tongue or in the hands. On the tongue has a wonderful directness to it, but if we choose to receive in the hands, there’s a wonderful closeness with Simeon who took Jesus in his arms and was moved to joy-filled prophetic speech. The church father St. Cyril, who was bishop of Jerusalem, spoke to his church about receiving communion, and he spoke of how they made of their hands a throne to hold, but briefly, their God. For in that moment, we receive Christ, body, blood, soul, and divinity, and we embrace and consume, being led to something even more intimate than Simeon knew. But it is still a foretaste. Our embrace of Christ is but a foretaste of that day we all hope for, when Christ will embrace us and welcome us into the halls of heaven, the place he has prepared for us. We can pray, in our preparation for each communion, and in our thanksgiving after each communion, that this communion would prepare us for the next, conscious that the next might be that heavenly reception where Christ will receive and embrace us.

But let’s not get ahead of ourselves. The road to resurrection leads through the cross, the cross on which Jesus, priest and victim, offered the perfect sacrifice, re-presented to us here today in this Mass, and the cross he bids us, his disciples, take up as we come and follow him. I’m sure Simeon didn’t know the details of how Jesus would offer his life for the life of the world. But he knew that dynamic. He told Mary that a sword would pierce her heart too. St. Bernard of Clairvaux describes Mary as “more than a martyr,” because she consented to know much sorrow. She stayed at the foot of the cross, and joined her grief with Jesus’ pain. She stands with us when we suffer, and she bids us stand with others on their crosses.

The founder of my religious community, the Congregation of Holy Cross, entrusted his religious to the patronage of Our Lady under the title, Our Lady of Sorrows, that is Our Lady who let her heart be pierced by loving a Son who sacrificed himself for us. I’d like to close with a few words from our Constitutions that speak of the role she plays:

There stood by the cross of Jesus his mother Mary, who knew grief and was a Lady of Sorrows…. To her may sons and daughters, whose devotions ought to bring them often to her side, she tells much of this daily cross and its daily hope.

If we drink the cup each of us is poured and given, we servants will fare not better than our master. But if we shirk the cross, gone too will be our hope. It is in fidelity to what we once pledged that we will find the dying and rising equally assured. … It is the Lord Jesus calling us. “Come. Follow me.”

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