+ 1st Sunday after Christmas - December 30th, 2018 +
Series C: Exodus 13:1-15; Colossians 3:12-17; Luke 2:22-40
Beautiful Savior Lutheran, Milton
In the Name of the Father and of
the + Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
In The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe, C.S. Lewis tells the reader
that in Narnia it was “Always winter and never Christmas.” These days in the
Christmas season sometimes feel like that in our world. Everything is labeled
“after-Christmas”. The music fades. Unwanted presents are returned. Christmas
comes down and the New Year’s signs go up.
But here in Christ’s Church, Christmas
continues, a bit like our family holiday schedules: a few hours one evening
with Mary and Joseph in Bethlehem – everyone has to see the baby! The
obligatory time with your gruff, oddly dressed uncles, the Shepherds. Next
weekend the Magi’s visit; because even God’s family table has room for
outsiders.
Christmas continues today with
Simeon and Anna. Anna leaves the temple like grandma scurrying about the
delivery room, phone in one hand, camera in the other: did you hear the good
news? It’s a baby boy…and he’s the Messiah! The wait is finally over.
Simeon was waiting… Not
twiddling-his-thumbs or yawning away the hours, but the kind of waiting that
knows that, sooner or later, God will make good on his promise. And this was
the Lord’s promise: before he saw death, he would see the Lord’s Christ. The
Seed that Adam longed to see sprout. The Rest Noah longed for. The everlasting
on David’s throne. The child born of a Virgin whom Isaiah prophesied. This One,
Simeon cradled in his arms.
Even Simeon’s name points to the
momentous occasion. Simeon means, “He has heard.” Simeon’s name comes from the
same word in the great OT creed: “Hear oh Israel, the Lord our God, the Lord is
one.”
The Lord had heard Simeon’s cry
for rescue. And already at 40 days old, your pleas for mercy, your cries of
distress at sin’s torture and the prayers of the faithful – “Come quickly, Lord
Jesus” – fill the ears of the child held in Simeon’s arms.
God’s promise fulfilled. The Christ had come. No more waiting. Simeon
was free to die in peace.
“Lord, now You are letting Your servant depart
in peace,
According to Your word;
For my eyes have seen Your salvation
Which You have prepared before the face of all peoples,
A light to bring revelation to the Gentiles,
And the glory of Your people Israel.”
According to Your word;
For my eyes have seen Your salvation
Which You have prepared before the face of all peoples,
A light to bring revelation to the Gentiles,
And the glory of Your people Israel.”
Yes, there is marvelous joy in
Simeon’s words. And yet Simeon knew that waiting comes before fulfillment…falling
comes before rising. That Jesus’ cross is at the heart of Christmas.
Falling and rising. Those were Simeon’s words to Mary: “This Child is destined for the fall and
rising of many in Israel, and for a sign which will be spoken against (yes, a
sword will pierce through your own soul also), that the thoughts of many hearts
may be revealed.”
Simeon wields God’s two-edged sword, skillfully piercing our hearts,
slashing away everything that stands between you and Christ. For we must be
like Simeon, ready to die. It’s the only way to depart in peace. Drop the
charade of self-devotion and self-righteousness. For you cannot cling to sin
and expect to stand with Simeon holding the Christ in your arms. Fall, that you
might rise. Die that you might live.
At first, Simeon’s words don’t sound very Christmasy. We’d rather pack
him and his words up and send him out to the curb along with all the Christmas
clutter. But as the world tries to forget Christmas, Simeon comes along to
remind us that hidden under that weak and helpless baby in his arms was the
truth about Christmas: this Child was born to fall and rise for you.
And that’s precisely what Jesus is doing in the temple that day for
Simeon and you. He came to bear the cross for you. His name is Jesus, for he
will save his people from their sins. He sheds his blood at 8 day old, bearing
the Law in his flesh. At 40 days old the Firstborn who needs no redemption comes
to redeem you. The Lord of all becomes the Servant of all. The Law giver
becomes the Law bearer. Jesus does what you cannot and will not do, crawls
under the Law’s demands and curse in order to lift them off your shoulders and
onto his. And all while being held in the arms of Simeon.
And where the world only sees a powerless infant, Simeon holds the
power of God hidden in human flesh. He came this way for you as an infant and
he goes this way for you to the cross. Here, in God’s lowly, weak and beggarly
ways…he hides his love and mercy for you.
Behold, this child is appointed for the falling and rising of many –
for Simeon and for you. Christ falls in order to raise you up. For all that we have spoken against…he speaks
for us. For all of the sinful thoughts of our heart revealed by his Word, Jesus
reveals God’s heart of mercy and peace and redeeming love. The sword that
pierces Mary’s soul and ours first pierced Jesus with nails and spear. Christ
departs in shame and guilt and sin so that we depart in peace made by his
blood. Jesus’ eyes are closed by bloody, sweaty death so that our eyes are
opened to find salvation in this Child and his cross. Jesus is held in the arms of the cross in the
darkness in order to embrace you and all nations in the everlasting light of
Christ’s salvation. Jesus becomes the despised, scorned and rejected in order
to make you a people of his Father’s glory.
This is the way God works. He
hides himself in the opposite. The eternal God is hidden within the flesh of an
ordinary, helpless baby. Simeon embraced the Savior of the world who came to
embrace his death and bring salvation to all, to you. God’s greatest glory is
found hidden in the weakness and suffering of the cross.
And Jesus works the same today: Ordinary
words of sinful preachers are vehicles for Christ’s eternal absolution. Ordinary
water is blessed flood and a lavish washing away of sin. Ordinary bread and
wine hide the flesh and blood of Jesus your Savior.
That’s why we sing Simeon’s song after
communion. Here, you stand on heaven’s threshold and hold the Christ
Child in
your arms, in your ears and in your mouth. At the Altar you see the Lord's
salvation, which He has prepared before the face of all people.
Here in Christ’s Church,
Christmas isn’t packed away and saved for next year. There are no such things
as “after-Christmas” sales in Christ’s Church. Here at Christ’s table, in His
Supper, it’s always Christmas.
In a way, we’re all 21st century Simeons and Annas in the
temple, watching, waiting for that Day when Christ’s salvation becomes visible
to our resurrected eyes. And as we wait, God gives us his signs to cling to -
Baptism, His Word, His Body and Blood. We embrace Him as old Simeon and Anna
once did. And we take up Simeon's song
and make it our own: "Lord now let
your servant depart in peace according to your Word. For my eyes have seen your
salvation, which you have prepared in the sight of all people. A Light for
revelation to the Gentiles, the Glory of your people Israel."
In the Name of the Father and of
the + Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
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