Malachi 3:1-5 * Luke 2:22-40
We learn
from the Book of Leviticus, the twelfth chapter, that after the days appointed
for the mother’s purification, the child is to be brought together with a
sacrifice of a lamb of the first year for a burnt offering, and also a young
pigeon or a turtle dove for a sin offering. We see in the last verse of that
chapter:
“And if she be not able to
bring a lamb, then she shall bring two turtle [doves], or two young pigeons;
the one for the burnt offering, and the other for a sin offering...Lev. 12: 8)”
Remembering that, let us look
again at the words from today’s Gospel reading:
“And when the days of her
purification according to the Law of Moses were accomplished, they brought him
to Jerusalem ,
to present Him to the Lord; (as it is written in the Law of the Lord, Every
male that openeth the womb shall be called holy to the Lord;) And to offer a
sacrifice according to that which is said in the Law of the Lord, A pair of
turtledoves, or two young pigeons. (Luke 2: 22-24).”
We need to understand the
theology of what is happening in these verses. To begin with, St Luke is very
clearly telling us that the family into which God became manifested, in our own
human nature, was not a family of wealth, but of poverty; for they were not
able to bring a lamb. The royal line of David, the line of the Jewish kings,
had been reduced to poverty by the process of history, of wars and of
subjugation to the Roman
empire , And so it is that Joseph, in the line of those
ancient kings, was a poor carpenter. Into his house of nobility, but of
poverty, was our Lord born; this same Lord of glory, who had only a month
before been laid in a manger because there was no place else for Him.
Remember the
words of St. Paul :
“For ye know the grace of our
Lord Jesus Christ, that, though He was rich, yet for your sakes He became poor,
that ye through His poverty might be rich (II Cor. 8:9).”
The implications of this are
very deep, and very profound. It is a picture of the mystery of the Incarnation
itself, that the One Who did not grasp onto His own equality with God, but
became a man, Who humbled Himself in obedience as a servant unto the death of
the cross, is the One to Whom every knee shall rightly bow, and Who shall be
called Lord on every tongue, at the mention of His human name, the name of
Jesus. Here He was, noble and the heir to the throne of David, yet poor. Here
He was, true man yet very God. Here He was, the Lord Who had suddenly come to
His temple, yet a new born babe, without power, and without wealth.
To see Him as He truly was
required the eyes of faith, a certain faith which is knowledge, and that comes
only by the revelation of God. Eyes that see, ears that hear and a heart that
understands are the gift of the Holy Ghost. So it is that the true wisdom which
comes from above is given to an old man, who wears the mantle of a prophet,
seeing the Lord by the revelation given to Him from the Lord’s Holy Spirit.
This is expressed in the words which live on in the Church every evening at
prayer:
“Lord, now
lettest thou thy servant depart in peace, according to thy word; For mine eyes
have seen thy salvation, which thou hast prepared before the face of all
people; a light to lighten the Gentiles, and the glory of thy people Israel.”
The wisdom of God contradicts
everything that a fallen and sinful world holds dear. It contradicts the wisdom
of the wise, the might of the powerful, the haughtiness of kings, the wealth of
riches. “He hath put down the mighty from their seat, and hath exalted the
humble and meek; He hath filled the hungry with good things; and the rich He
hath sent empty away.”
An old man takes in his arms
an infant from a poor man’s house, and declares that He is the salvation of God
for all the world. An elderly widow, also given the true wisdom from above, the
gift of the Holy Spirit, speaks of Him to all who looked for redemption in Jerusalem .
The prophet Hosea wrote that, in the understanding of sinful man, “the prophet
is a fool, the spiritual man is mad (Hos. 9:7).” How could this poor son of a
poor carpenter, bring salvation to the world? Let alone, to Israel ?
And what light could He give to the Gentiles, light that would overturn the
pagan religions, the ignorance of idolaters in every land, including the
powerful empire of Rome with
its many gods? How could this child born into a carpenter’s house, restore the
glory of Israel ,
as if the throne of David could replace the rule of the cruel gentile tyrant,
Herod, and banish the powerful legions of Rome ?
What might was wrought by a young mother, by the willing obedient faith
expressed in her words, "Behold the handmaid of the Lord; be it unto me
according to thy word." A woman, "the weaker vessel," welcomed
the Word of God to the world in her womb, giving Him human nature,
accomplishing in her weakness what no army, in its strength, could do.
Let me allude to a fantasy
story: Perhaps some of you have seen the movie The Return of the King, or, better yet, have
read J.R.R. Tolkien’s The
Lord of the Rings. If so, you recall that the world is saved from
the power of the evil Sauron by two very little, and completely powerless
people. Two hobbits of the shire, Frodo and Sam, accomplish what the warriors
of Middle Earth, even under the leadership of King Aragorn, could not do
themselves. In the climax of the story, the armies of Middle Earth can only
fight their battle to serve as a distraction, while the two little hobbits,
both under four feet tall, and without any strength of arms, manage to take the
One Ring to its destruction, thus toppling the power of Sauron, and freeing Middle Earth from his grasp. Tolkien wrote his story with a Christian mind, as a very
devout Catholic; and he made it obvious that the victory was wrought by Providence through
the hobbits.
“God hath chosen the foolish things of the world to confound
the wise; and God hath chosen the weak things of the world to confound the
things which are mighty (I Cor. 1:27);” so wrote St. Paul .
The true victory that banishes oppression from the world, and overturns all of
the power of evil, was accomplished by a naked and wounded, beaten and
humiliated man, breathing His last breath nailed to cross, as a spectacle of
all that appears to be weak and powerless. In His humility and obedience to the
Father, His submission to the will of God in giving His life, he is the One
true hero Who breaks all of the power of Satan, and liberates the whole world
from sin and death.
But, the world saw Him in His
weakness and foolishness. It saw Him in His poverty and want of all things,
having His garments parted among the gambling soldiers, being given nothing to
quench His thirst, but only vinegar as if by a cruel joke. By all the wisdom
known to sinful men, this was no conquering hero, no victorious king. The words
of Simeon and Anna must have seemed a hundred times more mad and foolish than
when they had spoken of Him in the time of His infancy. Anyone old enough to
have remembered them, who may have recalled hearing them about thirty three
years earlier, surely thought that they must have been no true prophets.
Of course all of this brings
me to my second theological point from today’s Gospel reading. Here we see
Jesus being presented in the temple, and an offering being made for Him as if
He were a sinner. His mother, the Blessed Virgin, is obeying the Law of
Purification, as if this child had been born in uncleanness, that is, as if
tainted with original sin: As if, in the prayer of David: “in sin hath my
mother conceived me (from Psalm 51).” You and I can pray those words, for we
were born in original sin, subject to powers over which we could not prevail;
for we could never have made ourselves pure. But, Jesus needed no such
offering, and His mother needed no purification. Yet, Mary and Joseph obey the
Law; and this foreshadows for us the fact that Jesus would fulfill the Law.
The scriptures say that “He
was tempted in every point as we are, yet without sin (Heb. 4:15).” And, that
“God made Him to be sin for us, Who knew no sin, that we might be made the
righteousness of God in Him (II Cor. 5: 21).” Isaiah had written, “And He made
His grave with the wicked, and with the rich in His death, because he had done
no violence; neither was any deceit in His mouth...He bare the sin of [the]
many, and made intercession for the transgressors (from Isaiah 53).” The
offerings that day, in the temple, foreshadow the life of Christ as one of
perfect obedience to the Father’s will, in this case specifically by adhering
to the Law of God given through Moses. It foreshadows the words he spoke to
John the Baptist at His own baptism in the Jordan
River : “Suffer it to be so, for thus it becometh us to
fulfill all righteousness.” For in His baptism He let Himself be identified
with sinful humanity, and began then to take upon Himself the sins of the
world, remaining Himself pure from all sin; as John the Baptist said that day,
“Behold the lamb of God, which taketh away the sins of the world.” He bore them
all the way to the cross; for “surely He hath borne our griefs, and carried our
sorrows.”
Yes, He needed no offering,
and His mother needed no purification since Her Son was borne in complete
purity. But the offerings that day, in the temple, teach us that He was taking
our sins on Himself. As the only pure Man ever to live, His death would be the
only death that is completely undeserved. He did not merit death. Death came
into the world through sin, and it is our penalty because of sin. When the
sinless One died, death was undone. The power of Satan was destroyed, and with
it the values and principles of a sinful world were turned upside down. On the
day of his death, certified by His resurrection on the third day, all that was
powerful was shown to be weak, all that was rich was shown to be poverty, all
that was mighty was shown to be weak. “He hath put down the mighty from their
seat; and hath exalted the humble and meek.” The two old prophets, who seemed
foolish and mad, had spoken wisdom and reason when they spoke of this child as
the One Who would bring redemption in Jerusalem .
And now, unto God the Father,
God the Son and God the Holy Ghost, be ascribed, as is most justly due, all
wisdom, might, power and glory, now and forever. Amen.
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