The familiar carol stops at day 12, but today is actually the 40th day of Christmas and thus the definitive end of the Christmas season. This is a very
ancient feast, which incorporates several interrelated themes, reflected in the
different names given to this day. All these different names illustrate how
full of meaning this festival is, and how much it has to teach us.
What is currently called the Presentation of the Lord, was for several centuries called the Purification of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
When Jesus was 40 days old,
Mary and Joseph journeyed to Jerusalem according
to the law of Moses, that is to say, in obedience to God’s law, in order to
observe two important religious obligations. The first - the ordinary
obligation to be purified after childbirth - reflected ancient beliefs about
the sacredness of blood. Life was believed to reside in the blood, which was, therefore,
something sacred and mysterious. Hence, any direct contact with blood required
ritual purification. The second concerned the special status and religious
responsibilities of a first-born son (because of God’s having spared Israel’s first-born
at the time of the Exodus).
Whether officially titled the Presentation of the Lord of the
Purification of the Blessed Virgin Mary, however, the most common popular title
for today’s celebration in the West has consistently been Candlemas Day, because of the Blessing of Candles and the
Procession - originally in Rome an early pre-dawn procession – with which
today’s Mass begins.
The name Candlemas calls
attention to the blessed candles, but also to their light – and to the One whom
that light symbolizes. The Church’s official ceremonial says that “on this day
Christ’s faithful people, with candles in their hands, go out to meet the Lord
and to acclaim him with Simeon, who recognized Christ as ‘a light to reveal God
to the nations.’ They should therefore be taught to walk as children of the
light in their entire way of life, because they have a duty to show the light
of Christ to all by acting in the works that they do as lighted lamps.”
A secular version of Candlemas
is “Groundhog Day.” Not so long ago, everyone in the western world knew about
Candlemas Day. Today, many seem to have forgotten. Yet even people who have
never heard of Candlemas recognize
the folklore connected with this day and connect it with the change of seasons.
While the weather is still wintry, the days are noticeably getting longer.
Whereas Christmas comes at the mid-point of the winter’s darkness, with the
year’s shortest day and its correspondingly longest night, Candlemas comes at the mid-point between the winter solstice and
the spring equinox, the transition (according to one way of reckoning the
seasons) from winter to spring. Soon, day and night, light and dark will be
equal. So this last of the winter light festivals invites us to look ahead to
what these winter light festivals are meant to symbolize.
Today we recall with joy the Lord’s entry into his Temple: and suddenly there will come to the temple
the Lord whom you seek. At the same time, we hear, in wise old Simeon’s
words to Mary, the first reference to what lies ahead, the first reference to
the cross. Behold, this child is destined
… to be a sign that will be contradicted – and you yourself a sword will pierce
– so that the thoughts of many hearts may be revealed. So, even as we take
a last look back at winter and Christmas, Candlemas
looks ahead to spring and Lent, and reminds us that the point of Christmas is
Easter. Simeon and Anna’s encounter with the infant Jesus in the Jerusalem
Temple points us toward our own encounter with the Risen Christ here and now.
When Simeon and Anna experienced in the infant Jesus the human face of
God, they spoke about the child to all
who were awaiting the redemption of Jerusalem. They hastened to proclaim and
share their good news. That remains our task today – to take the light of these
candles out into our spiritually still so very dark world, and so to share with
all the light reflected in our own lives from the brightness of the human face
of God.
Homily for the feast of the Presentation of the Lord (Candlemas Day), Immaculate Conception Church, Knoxville, TN, February 2, 2017
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