Luke 2:21-40 · Jesus Presented in the Temple
Life and Light to All He Brings
Luke 2:21-40
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
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God called creation into being with the words “Let there be.”
Son of God was called into creation with the words “Let it be.”

May you “Let Be” Christ in you this 2015.
May you “Let Be” you in 2015.

The first sound of God’s voice we hear in Scripture is the divine round of “Let there be....” The first sound in that “Let there be” round was “Let there be light” (Genesis 1:3). To “see the light” has been a repeated, yet ever changing metaphor ever since that first creative burst. God’s first breath of words brought actual, physical, life-stimulating light.

Skip ahead a few thousand years. Now the symbol of “light” is not the sun, but the invention of the Thomas Edison Research Laboratories. It’s called the “light bulb.” In 1879 the research team that Thomas Edison oversaw created a filament that could burn an “electric arc” for forty hours without burning out. By 1882 the tungsten-based version of this filament made long-life light bulbs a reality. “Let there be light” was converted by the lowly light bulb from a sacred mantra to a hardware-store purchase. And as anyone who has ever watched a cartoon knows, a big, bright, new idea or insight is demonstrated by a “light bulb” going off over someone’s head.

Except now.

Now everyone had an “app” that gives light. No more need for “presto,”  “let-there-be-light” bulbs. We are guided in the darkness by electrodes.

Before the light bulb, before the light “app,” there was darkness. Lots of darkness. The division between the light of day and dark of night was the major distinguishing point in everyone’s daily existence. Night and Day governed what we did, where we did it, and how long we did it. Light and dark regulated everyday existence like clockwork.

Today when the power goes out we panic. We are shocked. We feel “powerless.” No lights, no heat, no TV, no umbilical electronic connections to comfort us. We are on our own, in the dark. Especially at this darkest time of the year we find our lives divided into two very basic experiences: the experience of light, and the experience of darkness.

As it was in Genesis, so it is in Luke’s gospel. When the infant Jesus is presented at the Temple in Jerusalem, light is the first reason for celebration. Simeon is given incredible credentials by Dr. Luke. He is “righteous and devout;” he is “looking forward to the consolation of Israel;” he is one on whom “the Holy Spirit rested.” Simeon is the first prophetic voice to recognize the baby Jesus as the Messiah, the one he has been waiting for all his life. At the sight of Jesus, Simeon, infused by the Holy Spirit, suddenly “knows” that he is in the presence of much more than just another lovely baby. Simeon’s Spirit-directed x-ray vision is that now “My eyes have seen your salvation, which you have prepared in the presence of all peoples, a light for revelation to the Gentiles and for glory to your people Israel.”

Light bulb. Simeon sees baby Jesus, just another of the hundreds of ordinary babies awaiting presentation, and a “light bulb” goes off. Suddenly the ordinary banishes and he is flooded with the extraordinary. The Hebrew word for “Redeemer” is “Go’el.” Suddenly Simeon launches into the first Noel Go’el. Instead of a simple purification and presentation ritual, Simeon proclaims Jesus’ presence to be “salvation.” Jesus is nothing less than “a light for revelation to the Gentiles” and salvation for “your people Israel.” Simeon sings the First Noel to the Long Expected Go’el. Noel Goel. 

Light is a lovely gift, a living lift. We all know when the power goes out how much we praise the moment when the lights and heat finally kick on. When the power comes back and the lights go on, it is a big deal. It is a moment when we no longer worry about keeping our family safe and warm and fed.

And yet these days there is communal light and selfish light. The “light” that issues from our cell phones is most often singular and selfish. At this darkest time of the year in the northern hemisphere, Christians need to redefine what the ultimate “selfie” is. And guess what. It is not a picture of yourself. To take the Ultimate “Selfie” you need Jesus Light.

To take any picture we need light. To take a picture of some person who matters today and tomorrow we need a glorious light, a lovely light, a hallelujah light. The ultimate “selfie” is a quick pic that exposes your soul, not just catches you at a moment of fun and frolic. And that means, to take the ultimate “selfie,” you need the light that comes from The Light of the world.

Aimee Semple McPherson, who founded the unconventional “Four Square Gospel” church in the 1930s, got a lot of things wrong. But she did name her “churches” right. She called them “Lighthouses.” “Lighthouses” are what all churches should be. Churches should be the places where those of us who have been infused with the illumination of the Holy Spirit hang out and light up our world.

Simeon reveals his absolute commitment to God’s providence and portfolio. Simeon’s divination of “a light for revelation to the Gentiles, and for glory to your people Israel” is a quick pic, a selfie of the soul that points toward a greater, more glorious future that is now available to all people regardless of race, class or gender: Jew and Gentile, slave and free, male and female.                                                                                     

Simeon’s “light effect” upon Christianity, and Simeon’s “light effect” upon this Christmas season, was not about prophecy being fulfilled. It was about letting the light shine in our lives in a new way. A tiny newborn babe was not a spotlight. You might say that Jesus started out as an “app,” as a “here I am because you need me” individual light for each of us, reachable and accessible by the simplest touch. For Simeon and Anna, the “one touch” was just seeing Jesus and holding him. For twenty-first century Christians, you might have to reach your hand out to the person next to you, or send a message of love to an online companion. But one touch is enough.

Great photographers know that a great photo has nothing to do with the beauty of the subject. Everything—and a photographer will tell you that means EVERYTHING—is about lighting. It is not skill, or timing, or beauty that makes a great photo. It is all about the light.

The right light is every photographer’s “secret weapon.” If you want to be beautiful, you don't need plastic surgery. You don’t need a make-up artist. You don’t need the best clothes. You just need the right light. Everyone is beautiful if the lighting is right.

The Light of the World is the greatest beautifying force in the universe. No wonder the Psalmist sang, “In Your light shall we see life” (Ps.36:9). You need the light of the Light of the World to take the ultimate “selfie.” You can’t “Let Be” YOU without “Let There Be” and “Let It Be” Light.

New Year’s celebrations start out with an extravagant show of lights. Fireworks and festivities around glowing balls are showcased in the most famous New Years’ parties. At the darkest time of the year we crave flashes of light—momentary glimmerings of a future that is to come. We dream of a light-infused future.

Unfortunately a significant number of wonderful people suffer from a malady now known as “SAD”—“Seasonal Affective Disorder.” This is a genuine health problem triggered by the reduction of light to our eyes and so to our brains. Depression, lethargy, moodiness, anger, all can be brought about by SAD symptoms. The “cure” (seasonally) for this SADness is phototherapy. Patients are given light therapy to try and offset the darkness that holds them down. More light means more hope, more light-headedness—rather than dark and dreariness.

Instead of being SAD, being kept captive by life’s ensnaring darkness, Christians are being called by Simeon to celebrate the light that has come into our world by the first Noel Go’el. At this darkest time of the year, we who celebrate the presence of Jesus coming into the world should be infected for the New Year, not with SAD but with SEE—“Seasonally Effective Enthusiasm.”

As Jesus was revealed to Simeon at the Temple, so is Jesus our Redeemer, our Noel Go’el, unveiled to us at the Christmas season. Jesus is the “light” God has sent into our midst. It is time to be “lit up” with SEE, Seasonal Effective Enthusiasm, not dragged down by SAD.

In these darkest days of the year, Christians “SEE” more brightly and clearly because of the miraculous new light that has been gifted to us by God. It is a light that shines first on the humble birth place and birth parents of Jesus, but it is a light that has since reflected and refracted to illumine all the world. 

Sharing light, celebrating lightness in the darkness, transforms us. Thomas Jefferson declared “He who lights his taper at mine receive his light without darkening mine.” Sharing light is like sharing love. It never diminishes, it only dispatches more energy and enthusiasm. Moms and Dads all know that having another child never means halving love, it always means the multiplication of love.

The light of the world came in a small, fragile package—the candle of a newborn child. But Jesus was recognized as the “light” that would bring “life” to this world “Light and Life to all He brings.” Jesus is the Torch that shines with its own light. The rest of us, you and me, reflect a borrowed light, that light that comes only from The Light of the World, the light that can make us all beautiful.

The British philosopher John Lucas (b.1929) offers an encouraging analogy for God's providential SEE activity, using the picture of rug-making in a Persian family. The children weave from one end and the father from the opposite end of the rug. The father takes into account whatever mistakes his children make, and skillfully works the whole into a beautiful pattern. That is what God does with our lives. (As referenced by Rodney Holder in Longing, Waiting, Believing [2014]), bringing beauty out of flaws and imperfections.

A similar analogy comes from the great English preacher Leslie Weatherhead. In 1936 he wrote a book entitled "Why Do Men Suffer?" In it Weatherhead showcases a conversation he had with an Arabic student who was studying medicine in London. Weatherhead knew that in making a genuine Persian rug, the artist sets up a vertical frame. Apprentices, sitting at various levels, work on the backside of the rug, while the artist works on the side people will see and walk on.

Weatherhead asked the student, "What happens when an apprentice working on the backside makes a mistake or puts in a wrong color?" The student said, "Quite often the artist does not make the apprentice take out the mistake or change the color. If he is a great enough artist, he weaves the mistake into the pattern."

"You and I are working on the underside of the rug,” Weatherhead continued. “We cannot watch the pattern developing. I know I put in the wrong color very often. I put in black when God meant red, and yellow when God meant white. And the other workers with whom I am making my rug make mistakes, too.”

"Sometimes I am tempted to say, 'Is there anybody on the other side of the rug? Am I just left to make a mess of my life alone?' Then, through the insight which comes with returning faith, I realize that instead of making me undo it all or letting my life's purpose be ruined, God puts more in….it isn't what it might have been; but, because God is such a great artist, I haven't quite spoiled everything. So at the end, when God calls me down off my plank and takes me round to the other side, I shall see that just because God is such a great artist, no mistakes of mine can utterly spoil the pattern. Nothing can divert God's purpose ultimately, or finally spoil God's plan.”

Will you get in the Light in 2015? Will you stay in the Light in 2015? Will you sun-bathe in Jesus light every day? If you trust the Light, you will find that all your pain and hurt, all your failures and foibles, will take on a whole new light. And that the beautifying light of Christ will so infuse yourself that you shall say “It is the Lord's doing, and it is marvelous in our eyes.'"

You are marvelous in God’s eyes. Don’t be SAD. Let the Light help you SEE. Take that Ultimate Selfie with the only light that brings out all your best qualities. Let the Light of the World so shine in you this coming year that you can truly sing, “Light and Life to all He brings”….starting with me.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Leonard Sweet Sermons, by Leonard Sweet