“IS THIS STUFF TRUE?”
I preached
at Hillside Presbyterian Church yesterday as part of “B” team ministers all
over the country preaching on the Sunday after Christmas, known as the First
Sunday After Christmas. I used the
Epiphany text in Luke 2, where two old people, Anna and Simeon, are struck by
lightning when Mary and Joseph bring the baby Jesus to the Temple to be
dedicated to God. Mary and Joseph have
also come so that Mary can be cleansed from the “unclean” blood of the birth of
Jesus.
Jewish law
required that women giving birth go through a ritual of purification because
all the blood flowing in childbirth has made them unclean. From a literary point of view, we know that
this is at least 33 days after the birth of Jesus, because the law required
that. If Jesus had been a girl (and that
would have really changed things, wouldn’t it!), Mary would have had to wait 66
days to come for purification, meaning that the uncleanliness of women was much
deeper than the uncleanliness of men.
That same old song of inequity continues to the present day.
They also
come to dedicate Jesus to God, but they do not intend to leave Jesus to be
raised in the Temple, as Hannah did with her Samuel (I Samuel 1). The law requires that they buy a sheep from
the Temple and sacrifice it to God there.
That will satisfy the requirement.
Luke’s story tells us that they buy two birds instead, a sign that they
are poor and have very little money.
While they are going through this process, lightning strikes two old
people who are in the Temple that day:
Anna and Simeon. Simeon’s story
comes first, and he has been waiting to see the Messiah. He takes the baby Jesus in his arms and
blesses him and gives thanks that he has been allowed to see the Messiah: “our
eyes have seen Your salvation.” He has
several surprising parts in his prophecy about this baby: he will offend many people; he will reveal the hearts of many; and perhaps
most surprising of all in this center of Judaism: this baby will be a light to the Gentiles, to
the unclean ones. He closes out his
prophecy with an acknowledgment of the price of this baby’s witness – a sword
will pierce the heart of his mother.
Also in the
Temple that day is an aged, widow woman named Anna. Anna is marginalized in several ways: she is a woman; she is old;
she is a widow. Because she lives
at the margins, she is able to see who this baby is, and she begins to tell
everybody she meets about this message from God. Luke’s story lifts her up as the first named
evangelist in his Gospel. The shepherds in
the fields precede her in sharing the story of Jesus, but none of them are
named. It is highly unusual for women to
be named in the Bible, but here she is:
Anna the evangelist.
As we stand
on the cusp of a new year, rounding out Christmas and heading for 2019, let us
remember these two old folks who are the first named people to recognize this
revelation from God. We long for this
story to be true – whether the details are exactly like this does not matter as
much as the central theme: at the heart of
the universe is the power of love and justice and equity, at the heart of our
lives are love and justice and mercy. Is
this true? Most of us do not experience it
as true, so we tend to box up the Christmas story and put it back in the attic,
just like we do the decorations. At best
it is a nice diversion from this crazy world.
At worst, it is sentimental slop which we use to sell a lot of products. And we do live in a crazy and chaotic
world! The stock market seems to be
correcting and perhaps collapsing. The
Trump presidency IS collapsing, and we wonder what is next: will Trump be indicted? Will he resign? Will he start a war overseas as a
diversion? Will he encourage a civil war
here in order to hold on to the presidency?
We all tremble at these prospects, but we know that something is coming
in this year.
In the
midst of this kind of world, we are asked to hear this Christmas story again
and keep it with us. Let us have hearts
to see as Simeon did, and let our hearts dance, as did Anna’s, so that we too
can share this good news of love and justice and equity. Let us too be evangelists of this view of the
new reality in the world. I’ll close
with my final Howard Thurman poem from his book on Christmas (“The Mood of
Christmas”):
“Christmas Is the Season of the Heart”
The Time of Forgiveness for injuries past,
The Sacrament of sharing without balancing the deed,
The Moment of remembrance of graces forgotten,
The Poem of joy making light the spirit,
The Sense of renewal restoring the soul,
The Day of thanksgiving for the goodness of God,
CHRISTMAS IS THE SEASON OF THE HEART.
A nice poem.
ReplyDeleteGreat to hear from you - I guess it is a poem for both of us. How are you doing these days?
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