God’s grace, peace and
mercy be with you. … My focus is the Nunc Dimittis in Luke: “Lord,
now you are letting your servant depart in peace, according to your word; for
my eyes have seen your salvation that you have prepared in the presence of all peoples,
a light for revelation to the Gentiles, and for glory to your people Israel.”
Let us pray. Heavenly
Father, the psalmist wrote, “I rejoiced when they said to me, ‘Let
us go to the house of the Lord.’” Now that our feet are within
your gates, we rejoice to hear your Word. As we listen, may your Spirit
enlighten our minds and move our hearts to love deeply as Jesus loved. This we
pray to you, Most Holy Trinity. Amen.
Christmas offers an
opportunity to reflect upon important parts of life – family and faith. On
those, I hang today’s sermon. Three Bs – baby, body and beauty. The baby Jesus
beheld by Simeon; the body of Christ we receive; and the beauty we behold.
First, the Baby Jesus
beheld by Simeon. … Grandparents and parents frame pictures of their grandchildren
and children. Similarly, in our Gospel, Luke framed pictures of Baby Jesus.
Luke framed Jesus around the faithfulness of his parents who fulfilled the
commands of the Torah as they brought him to the temple. As He entered,
two Old Testament saints, waiting in the temple for the Messiah to arrive,
greeted him.
Joseph and Mary
fulfilled the Torah by bringing Jesus to his true home. Being poor or of humble
state, they sacrificed two pigeons because they could not afford a lamb;
however, no lamb was necessary, because at 40 days, Jesus himself was the lamb
brought to the temple.
Although Luke did not
indicate Simeon’s age, he portrayed him like the other Old Testament saints in
the infancy narrative – Zechariah, Elizabeth, Mary and Joseph. Like them,
Simeon, a righteous member of Israel, received and announced the consolation of
Israel.
There are two parts to
Simeon’s words. He began by intoning a canticle that sounded like the Old
Testament, but was filled with New Testament themes announcing the presence of
God’s salvation in Jesus. The Holy Spirit inspired his song about the messiah
for whom he was waiting.
His canticle echoed
Zechariah’s Benedictus, but he directed it at Baby Jesus and not Baby John. His
song was a beautiful example of the immediate response to the inauguration of
God’s consolation and redemption in the Christ Child. Simeon is now set free to
depart in peace according to the Lord’s word for Jesus freed him – as he did
others – through his presence in the world.
God opened Simeon’s
eyes to the salvation cloaked in the 40-day-old Jesus, still wrapped in
infant’s clothing. His opened eyes referred not to physical vision, but an
understanding of Jesus’ work. Throughout his gospel, Luke wove the metaphor of
closed and opened eyes for the motifs of minds closed or opened to the
preaching of a crucified and resurrected Jesus.
Luke used the eyes as
the means of illumination, and ended his gospel by telling us that his
disciples walked in the light straight into the Book of Acts. Conversely, he
ended Acts with Paul reciting Isaiah’s prophecy. “This people’s
heart has grown dull, and with their ears they can barely hear, and their eyes
they have closed.”
Simeon’s eyes were
opened to salvation, a salvation that is a light of revelation to all nations,
but as he blessed the parents, he sounded a somber note when he said to
Mary, “This child is why many people in Israel will be condemned and
others will be saved. He will be a sign that will expose the thoughts of those
who reject him. And a sword will pierce your heart.”
Simeon’s words coupled
to the angels’ message to shepherds – “a baby wrapped in swaddling
cloths lying in a manger” – are dual signs of humility and
poverty. That perfect image of humility and poverty, an infant wrapped in
swaddling clothes, foreshadowed Jesus’ crucifixion, the ultimate manifestation
of humility and poverty. The world rejected Christ because he did not meet
human expectations.
Jesus echoed Simeon’s
words to the scribes and Pharisees in his final parable. “‘The stone
that the builders rejected has become the cornerstone.’ Everyone who falls on
that stone will be broken to pieces, and when it falls on anyone, it will crush
him.”
Jesus’ word passed
through Israel like a sword, fulfilling Isaiah’s prophecy that said, “He
made my mouth like a sharp sword,” and he compelled people to reveal
their secret thoughts.
Every participant in
Jesus’ life, including his mother, experienced sharp pain because of his
teaching and death. Simeon’s announcement shocked readers who did not expect
Jesus to lead people to conflict and upheaval and reveal their hearts.
Because of sin, people
were – and are – scandalized and crushed by Jesus’ words and death, but through
his death, his Father displayed the ultimate sign of revelation, the Resurrection.
Luke summarized the
Law and Gospel in a brief song sung by Simeon. You now know why Simeon sung his
canticle. Now, we explore why we sing it. We move from the baby Jesus beheld by
Simeon to the Body of Christ we receive.
In some Lutheran
congregations, it is customary that after people receive the Body of Christ, they
sing Simeon’s Canticle. Have you ever wondered why Christians sing Simeon’s
Canticle, also known as the Nunc Dimittis? Nunc Dimittis comes from
the Latin of the Vulgate Bible, which reads: “Nunc dimittis servum
tuum, Domine, secundum verbum tuum, in pace.” Because Simeon’s
canticle implies fulfillment, peace and rest, the church viewed it as
appropriate for the ending of the day. Since the 4th century,
the church used it in evening worship services – Compline, Vespers and
Evensong.
Thomas Jefferson used
the canticle in official correspondence. Novelists and poets T. H. White, T. S.
Eliot, Joseph Brodsky, Ezra Pound and John LeCarre employed it in their works.
Within the context of
our liturgy, it appears we take Simeon’s words out of context. After all, what
does his experience have to do with ours? How can Holy Communion compare to
Simeon's unique honor of holding the infant Jesus in his arms during the
child's first visit to the temple?
Of course, we would
love to have been in the temple and shared in the experience with Simeon. We
would give anything to have been the first – along with the shepherds – to see
the infant Jesus, or to be with the Magi as they offered him their gifts. However,
as Luther insightfully taught, we do not find Christ in
those places.
Through the events of
his incarnation, birth, crucifixion and resurrection, our Lord accomplished our
salvation; but the benefits of his saving work – forgiveness, life and salvation
– are distributed to us through Word and Sacrament, his means of grace. We
cannot go back to stand with Simeon, but the good news is that we do not have
to. Christ is present here.
So, when, following the
reception of the Lord's Supper, one sings Simeon's canticle, nothing could be
more appropriate. Our eyes saw his salvation, and better yet, we tasted and saw
that the Lord is good. So, what could be better than holding the infant Jesus
in our arms? How about eating and drinking his body and blood given for the
forgiveness of our sins? This truly is heaven on earth, because here we have
Jesus and all his benefits.
We have Jesus and all
his benefits because we believe and receive. That is the beauty of pure
Christianity as expressed in the Lutheran tradition. We believe what we receive
– Word and Sacrament. That in itself is pure beauty. Hence, my third point, the
beauty we behold.
We define beauty as
the combined qualities in a person or thing that gives pleasure to the senses
or pleasurably exalts the mind or spirit. What pleases us? The literature
of Shakespeare or Luther, sculptures of Michelangelo or Rodin, glasswork of
Chiluly or the Cathedral of Chartres, music of Beethoven or Chopin, mom’s apple
pie or dad’s grilled steak. The list is endless.
Then, there is nature.
We are pleased to gaze at stars in the midnight blue or puffy clouds, to smell
freshly cut grass or ocean’s breeze, to hear children playing or words of
forgiveness, and to taste the fruit of the vine. In the words of Poet Gerard Manley
Hopkins, “The world is charged with the grandeur of God.”
As I said earlier, the
beauty of Christmas is that it shifts our senses to the important parts of life
– family and faith. Unfortunately, for some, Christmas is the fourth quarter of
the calendar year – a period to calculate whether retail business can survive
another year. For others, it is just another day. My brother, a self-employed
handy man, told me on Christmas Day some guy called him to repair his washer.
For many, Christmas is just a busy season to shop, bake and party – void of the
reason Christians observe Advent, the Incarnation and Epiphany.
For me, Christmas is a
marvelous time to meditate on God’s beauty; and an essential function of beauty
is to give humanity a healthy shock! Whether beauty appears in talent, nature
or an act of love – an infant cradled to its mother’s bosom or a dying man
slumped in the arms of a Mother Teresa – it shocks us back to what is important
in life and creates an ineffable moment we experience but cannot sometimes
name. That is why we recall the Spirit-filled moment of a Simeon. In the moment
and presence of true beauty, he responded, as we would love to respond.
The beauty of the
first Christmas – the beauty of the first encounter with God incarnate – is
enough of a healthy shock for a lifetime, and it leaves the shocked struggling
for utterance. God entered our world as a human being, and in our world, God
has places where he can hide and reveal himself.
In the beauty of art
and nature and human relationships, God hides and reveals himself. In the
people God put in your life, God hides and reveals himself. Where love and
mercy are withheld, God hides. Where love and mercy are communicated, God
appears.
In the Baby Jesus and
in the Body of Christ, love and mercy are communicated. In the means of grace,
given to you through Word and Sacrament, love and mercy are communicated.
When you communicate
love and mercy to the people God put in your life, He is present. In that
moment, when relationships are reconciled, like Simeon, you too can cry your
own Nunc Dimittis to God for the beauty of His presence has
set you free.
And so, I close with a
request, and humbly ask you to consider it. … God gave you this Christmas to
realize the blessing of forgiveness that comes to us through his means of
grace. The Baby Jesus, the Body of Christ and a beautiful moment reflect God’s
love, God’s mercy.
God gave you Christmas
so that your eyes may be opened and you may be set free from any sin that binds
you. If you have the benefit of family for Christmas, take a moment and embrace
each person in your arms, and if there is an opportunity to offer forgiveness,
please do. I guarantee you that when you offer another family member love and
mercy, the peace of God that surpasses all understanding, will keep your heart
and mind in Christ Jesus. Amen.