31 December 2023 St. Athanasius Lutheran
Church
The First Sunday after Christmas
Vienna, VA
“The Inflating Joy of
Jesus”
Text:
Luke 2:22-40
After
a very long year and a very busy Christmas season, a gently reworked encore presentation
of a sermon from yesteryear, which will be new for all but a
handful of folks in my congregation.
Grace, mercy, and peace
to you from God our Father, and from our Lord and Saviour
Jesus Christ.
Amen.
If your neighborhood is like mine, or like the
one we drive through coming to church, there have been lots of Christmas
decorations lighting up the night these past few weeks.
And if your neighborhood is like mine, then among
those decorations have been some rather large inflatable figures, of all kinds
of people and animals and snowmen, anchored on lawns in front of houses.
And if your neighborhood is like mine, those
figures now lie dead on the ground, all the air, all the spirit, taken out of
them. Now they are lifeless lumps of deflated plastic testifying that Christmas
is over. Ho ho ho.
And if you’re like me - not like my
neighborhood, but like me - you sometimes feel that way. Deflated. All the wind, all the spirit, sucked out of you.
But if you had been in Jerusalem, right after that
first Christmas, and especially that day 40 days after Christmas when Mary and
Joseph brought Jesus to the Temple, you would have seen the exact opposite
happening! On that day, not a great deflating, but a great inflating
took place! To a man named Simeon.
We’re not told much about
him. He probably went unnoticed by most people in their day-to-day lives.
Another man just blending in with the crowd. We are told that he
was a man of faith, righteous and devout, waiting for the consolation of
Israel. And then this also: the Holy Spirit was with him. It had
been revealed to him by the Holy Spirit that he would not see death before he
had seen the Lord’s Christ. And this day, he had been led into the
Temple . . . and perhaps he was praying . . .
Now the Temple was a busy place, with lots of
hustle and bustle. And so a man and a woman and a newborn child, entering the
Temple, wouldn’t have attracted much
attention. They were, after all, doing what all devout,
law-keeping, parents did - bringing the mother 40 days after her delivery to
the Temple for her purification (Leviticus 12), and bringing their first born son to be
presented to the Lord (Exodus 13). And so it was a day
just like any other day . . . a man praying . . . a father, mother, and child
come to offer a sacrifice . . . just like any other day . . . until the
paths of these two crossed . . .
And then suddenly this man was inflated
with Christmas joy! Filled with the Holy Spirit, Simeon comes alive and
announces to all that God has kept His Word of promise and sent a Saviour. And Mary and Joseph, who had seen a lifetime of
wonders the past year, now see another, as Simeon takes Jesus up in his arms
and rejoices. And the words that seem to dance off his lips reveal the dancing
joy of his heart that cannot be contained. This was no rehearsed speech, but
the Word of God given Simeon to speak, from the joy that filled his heart, the
joy that comes with receiving the greatest gift of all.
And I wonder if Mary smiled just a bit, because
she knew this joy. It was the same joy that filled her own heart, which had
overflowed into dancing words of her own, when she herself had said: “My soul magnifies the Lord, and my spirit
rejoices in God my Saviour” (Luke 1:46-47). God had looked on the
humble estate of another, just as He had with her. This child born to bring joy
to so many . . .
And so now Simeon needs nothing more. His eyes
have been opened to see this child who would soon open the eyes of the blind
and the ears of the deaf. And so now he can depart not just the
Temple, but this world, in peace, because the Word and promise of
God has been fulfilled. But not just the Word and promise of
God to Simeon, but His Word and promise to us all, to
send a Saviour. Simeon can depart this world
in peace, and so can we, because this child would not - because
this child would be a light for the Gentiles and the glory
of Israel from a throne not of gold but of wood, where He would hang in
the midst of - not joy, but hate and mocking and death; where He would make
peace between God and man. Peace in the forgiveness of our sins.
And of this work of Jesus Simeon speaks as well,
for He says that this child will cause the rising and falling of many;
that He will be opposed; that He will cause Mary’s own heart and soul to
be pierced
in two; that He will reveal the thoughts and desires of our hearts. But all this is the reason
for our Christmas joy. This is not bad news (though it may sound like it),
but good news!
For first, the falling and rising
of which Simeon speaks is the falling of our old sinful man and for the rising
of a new man, a death and resurrection to a new life which takes place for us
in Holy Baptism. And then second, that Jesus was opposed, so much
that He was crucified in our place, is so we may be welcomed by our
Father in heaven. Third, Mary’s heart and soul which will be mightily pierced
as she witnessed her son’s brutal death will be healed with the joy of the
resurrection. And then fourth, the revealing of the thoughts and desires
of our hearts is the work of the Law, that thus
revealed, they may be confessed and removed, forgiven by the blood of this
child, shed for us.
And it would not take long for all these things
to begin. For when King Herod found out about this child, he did not rejoice,
but set in motion a bloody slaughter, killing all the boys two years old and
under in Bethlehem and the surrounding region, that in this sweeping holocaust
he might kill off this rival baby king (Matt 2:13-18). That was the slaughter of the Holy Innocents,
which is commemorated on the fourth day of Christmas - December 28th - every
year. But Herod was not successful, because it was not yet time for this child
to die. For, in fact, no one could take His life from Him -
He came to lay it down of His own accord (John
10:18); to give His life for the life of the world. To give His life for you and me. That was His joy,
and what brought Him and His inflating joy, here on Christmas.
And then, having thus spoken, Simeon disappears
from the scene. We never hear of him or from him
again. Yet one thing, I think, we can be sure of - his Christmas joy was never
deflated! Whenever he did depart (whether it was soon after this or a while
after this), it was in the peace of which he spoke - the peace of the Spirit,
the peace of forgiveness, the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding (Philippians 4:7).
But that’s not the end of this story. Luke then
goes on to tell us also of Anna, a widow, a prophetess who
lived day and night in the Temple, but about whom we also know very little
else. But her witness is important as well, as the second witness required by
the Law (Deuteronomy 19:15) and being from the tribe
of Asher, a representative from the ten tribes of the Northern Kingdom of
Israel. For Jesus had come for all of Israel - indeed, for all
the world. And perhaps her witness foreshadows what would happen some 33
years later, when a few other women would also testify of Jesus - the
resurrected Jesus, the life-inflating, joy-giving resurrection of Jesus,
after the joy of seeing the empty tomb.
And when they had performed everything according to
the Law of the Lord, they returned into Galilee, to their own town of Nazareth.
And the child grew and became strong, filled with wisdom. And the favor of God
was upon him.
And then they went home, Luke says.
Just like that. It’s over as quickly as it began. Seems very anti-climactic, doesn’t it? After such joy in the Temple! Like all those figures
now lying dead on the ground around my neighborhood, all the air, all the
spirit, taken out of them. But there is even joy here, too, in this little
fact, as Jesus lives as we live, though without sin. In His life He fulfills
every jot and tittle of the Law that we have broken, in our place. And He
experiences all that we do, and so knows what you are going through in your
life. All the trials and troubles and deflating. And
the favor of God was upon Him, that it may now be upon us. All that He
did was to inflate us with the joy of the Spirit. To give life to us who were
dead in our sins. To raise us up to a new life that will never end . . . or be
deflated.
And so Simeon’s Christmas joy is our
joy as well. Which is why we sing Simeon’s song not just at
Christmas, but each time we, too, take up the body and blood of this
child - not in our arms, but in our mouths, as we eat His body and drink His
blood, given and shed for us for the forgiveness of our sins. Given and
shed for us for our consolation. For us who need consolation.
I mentioned earlier that sometime I feel like
those deflated decorations. And I’m sure you do, too. And I’m sure Simeon did,
maybe even that day in the Temple! Maybe that’s why he was there, maybe why he
was praying. And waiting for the consolation of Israel, he received it. Consolation that is for us, too. Consolation from the sin
and hurt in this world that is inflicted upon us; from the guilt of the sin and
hurt that we inflict upon others. Consolation from the despair and doubt we
feel in our hearts. Consolation from the disappointments and
pains of life. Consolation from the fear and worry that sometimes
consumes us. In Him, in the midst of all this, like Simeon, we too can have
peace and joy. The peace and joy of sins forgiven. The
peace and joy of our enemies - satan
and death - defeated. The peace and joy of the Spirit, who
has inflated us with life both now and forever. The
peace and joy which surpass all understanding.
So yes, Simeon’s Christmas joy is our joy as well. And so like Simeon, we
are ready to depart in peace. Whenever and
however. For we too have been given the greatest gift of all - for
to us a child is born, to us a Son is given (Isaiah 9:6). Today we
heard that God kept His Word to Simeon, so that we know He keeps Word to us.
In the Name of the
Father, and of the (+) Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Now the peace of God which passes all understanding, keep your hearts and minds through faith in Christ Jesus, our Lord. Amen.