The message given in the United Methodist churches of the Wheatland Parish on Sunday, January 2, 2022. The Bible verses used are Luke 2:21-38.
Well, Christmas is over. So is New Year’s.
Tomorrow will be just another Monday. The kids will be back in
school. Everyone will go back to work. Christmas is over.
And too
often, that’s how we look at it from a faith standpoint. We drop
Christmas as soon as it’s over. We leave the baby Jesus in the manger and
go on to something else.
But of
course, Joseph and Mary could not just go to something else. They had to
deal with the reality of raising this baby, this divine Son of God that they
had responsibility for. That’s quite the responsibility. So,
obviously, they wanted to do it right. So they presented Jesus at the
temple.
First,
of course, Jesus was circumcised when he was eight days old. That was in
accordance with the law. In fact, today would be anniversary of that–it’s
eight days after Christmas today. Then, we’re told of Jesus being
presented at the temple of the Lord. This happened, according to Luke,
“when the time came for their purification according to the law of Moses”,
which would have been forty days after Jesus was born. That means that at
some point in those forty days, Mary, Joseph, and Jesus made the trip from Bethlehem
to Jerusalem.
That was not
a long trip--it was about six miles. But, of course, Mary and Joseph
would’ve had to walk it, carrying Jesus, so it’s not like it was really
easy. You and I would probably be really upset if we had to walk six
miles carrying a baby. But back then, it was just the way things
were. People were used to walking everywhere they needed to go. It
was no big deal.
So Mary and
Joseph walk the six miles from Bethlehem to Jerusalem, and then walk some more
until they get to the temple. They buy the required sacrifice. And
while they’re there, they meet two people.
The first
was a man named Simeon. Simeon lived in Jerusalem, and he had been told
by the Holy Spirit that he would not die until he saw the Savior. This
day, this day when Mary and Joseph are presenting Jesus at the temple, the Holy
Spirit told him to go to the temple courts. We don’t know if the Spirit
told him why, but he went there. And he saw Jesus. And as soon as
he saw Jesus, Simeon knew that this was, in fact, the Savior he had been kept
alive to see.
And as you
read what Simeon said, you get the impression that Simeon understood, far
better than most people at that time, just who the Savior was going to
be. Most people at that time thought the Savior would be a great king,
someone who would return Israel to power as a great nation. But look at
how Simeon describes Jesus: “a light for revelation to the Gentiles, and
the glory of your people Israel.” And then he tells Mary: “This
child is destined to cause the falling and rising of many in Israel, and to be
a sign that will be spoken against, so that the thoughts of many hearts will be
revealed. And a sword will pierce your own soul, too.”
Simeon
understood that Jesus was not going to be a political leader. He was
going to bring salvation to both the Gentiles and the Jews, but that salvation
would be spiritual salvation, not a political salvation. And he would
cause “the thoughts of many hearts” to be revealed, both for better and for
worse. Simeon understood exactly what kind of Savior Jesus was going to
be.
And then we
meet Anna. Anna was a prophet. She was eighty-four years old.
We’re told she had lived with her husband for seven years after their marriage
and had been a widow ever since. Assuming she was married young, as was
often the case at that time, Anna may have been a widow for sixty years or
more. I know there are people in our parish who’ve lost spouses, but
think of that. To be a widow or a widower for sixty years. That’s a
long time to be alone.
We’re told
that she never left the temple, but worshiped night and day, fasting and
praying. We don’t know how long she’d been doing that. It was not
necessarily for the whole sixty or so years she’d been a widow, or even for
most of those years. But it seems like it must have been a while.
And just as Simeon finishes talking, Anna comes up, gives thanks to God, and
starts telling everyone about this child who’s going to be the Savior.
So what’s
the point? As we asked last week, why is this story in the Bible?
Is it just an interesting story, a little piece of the life of Jesus, or is
there more to it? What are we supposed to learn from this?
Well, I’m
sure there’s more than one thing we can learn from it. There almost
always is, when we read the Bible. But here’s the one I want to focus on
today.
Have you
ever had a time when you felt like God was giving you a message? Or, have
you ever felt like the Holy Spirit was leading you to do something, or to say
something, or to go somewhere? Or maybe you did not recognize it as the
Holy Spirit, but you just felt like there was something inside you telling you
that you needed to talk to some specific person, or go to some specific place,
or do some specific thing. You did not know why, but you just had this
strong feeling that this was what you were supposed to do.
Have you
ever had that? I think probably most of us have, at one time or
another. And probably most of us have followed that prompting, at least
some of the time.
But here’s
the thing. Sometimes, we get that message, or we follow that
prompting--we do what we’re led to do, we go where we’re led to go, we say what
we’re led to say--and it seems like nothing happens. And some time goes
on, and nothing continues to happen. And we start to wonder. Did
God really give me a message? Was the Holy Spirit really leading me to do
that, or say that, or go there? Or was it something I made up, something
I imagined, something that came out of my own head or from someone else and I
just fooled myself into thinking it was from God?
When that
happens, we need some confirmation. We need to get some kind of a signal,
some kind of sign. We need something to encourage us to stay the course,
something to let us know that yes, we really did get that message from
God. We really were led by the Holy Spirit. God really did speak to
us, and God really is going to be faithful and keep the words God said.
God does not
always give us that confirmation, and God does not promise that God will give
it to us. Sometimes we’re asked to have faith and to trust and to keep
believing. But sometimes, God will give us that confirmation. God
will give us that encouragement. God will give us a signal, a sign, that
we really did get that message from God that we thought we did.
That’s what
happened here. Look at Mary and Joseph. The angel Gabriel had told
them that their child was the divine Son of God. They’d listened, and
they’d believed. They’d gone everywhere they were supposed to go, they’d
done everything they were supposed to do. But still, they had to
wonder. You know, it had been several months, at least, since they’d
heard from Gabriel about who this baby was going to be. They had to be
thinking, you know, our baby looks like any other baby. He acts like any
other baby. Is he really going to be that special? Are we really
going to be raising the Savior of the world?
And then,
when they take Jesus to the temple, here come Simeon and Anna. And they
say, yes. Yes, your child is going to be that special. You really
are going to be raising the Savior of the world. All that stuff that
Gabriel said is really true. You really have received a message from God,
and God will be faithful to God’s word. That had to be a huge relief to
them. It had to feel so wonderful, to have someone come along and confirm
that they really had received a message from God, that things were going the
way they were supposed to go, and that they really could trust God’s promises.
You and I
have been given messages from God, too. There are places were supposed to
go, words we’re supposed to say, things we’re supposed to do. That’s true
for us as individuals, and that’s true for us as a church.
And a lot of
us have been doing them. Some of us have been doing them for a long
time. And sometimes, we don’t seem to see any results. We wish a
Simeon, or an Anna, would come and confirm God’s message for us. We wish
they’d come and tell us that we really have received a message from God, that
we really are doing what we’re supposed to do, that we really are going the way
God wants us to go. We wish they’d say things are going the way they’re
supposed to go, that we really can trust God’s promises.
Well, we may
not actually get Simeon and Anna. But I think there are signs all around
us, if we look for them. I can’t speak to each person’s individual
calling, but look at our parish. Despite the pandemic, we’ve still kept
our kids programs going in both Onida and Gettysburg. In fact, the Faith
Builders program has started to grow a little. We don’t always have as
many people worshiping in person, but we’re reaching people on the
livestream. We’re expanding our ministry, reaching people in other towns,
reaching people who would never come here in person. We’ve stayed in
relatively good shape financially–we’re not exactly swimming in cash, but
thanks to your generosity we’re getting our bills paid. Despite
everything, there are signs of all kinds of good things going on in this
parish, if we just look for them.
Does that
mean everything’s perfect? Of course not. Far from it. We
have challenges, and the pandemic has given us more challenges. But you
know what? We’ll always have challenges. Mary and Joseph had a lot
of challenges, too. God never promised us everything would be smooth and
easy.
But if we
keep doing what we’re supposed to do, if we keep going where God wants us to
go, things will go the way they’re supposed to go. God will confirm God’s
message to us in any number of ways. God really is speaking to us.
And God’s word is always true.
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