Luke 2:21-40 · Jesus Presented in the Temple
Memories
Luke 2:21-40
Sermon
by Daniel G. Mueller
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Hidden away in just about every family’s photo album is a cute little picture of a baby’s buns. Along with all the other photos of baby’s first haircut, first birthday, first bike ride, and the like, there’s also that one picture, that infamous photo showing off baby’s buns. Parents love to have at least one such photo; but the individual whose anatomy is so displayed grows up living in fearful dread that one day his girlfriend or her boyfriend will actually see that awful picture.

It’s fun to look through a box of old pictures and to relive all those memories. There’s a picture of Mom and Dad when they were first married. There are pictures showing how much more hair Dad had back then, and how dark it was. A picture of your first home. Baby coming home from the hospital. Christmas at Grandpa’s farm. Your first high school picture. (Why do people snicker when they see that one?) All kinds of pictures. We look back and relive our own childhood, or when our children were babies, and we remember special times, special places, and special people.

The second chapter of the Gospel of Luke is a lot like a photo album of our Lord’s childhood, a glimpse back into the simpler times of his life. Obviously there are no photos for us to look at, but in this chapter we hear a little about our Lord’s early life, from his birth through an event in his twelfth year. Not much is told about those years. It’s almost as though a whole box of memories was lost.

The memories belong to Mary, the mother of our Lord. She told them to others. They were remembered, and Luke, inspired by God, wrote them down for us. These memories are not your average memories. There is no recollection here of birthday parties, of first words spoken, of little friends. There is, rather, a testimony to one life that, from its very beginning was God’s greatest gift. It is the life of one man who was, from his birth on - and still remains - the Savior of the world.

Looking back into our Lord’s childhood we see, first of all, parents who were God-fearing and religious. Mary and Joseph were Jews who believed in God and practiced the religion of the Old Testament. In keeping with Old Testament laws they brought Jesus to the Temple when he was about forty days old, in order to offer there a sacrifice that God prescribed for a new mother and her new child. Luke tells us that Mary "found favor with God." We can only assume that Joseph did too. They found favor with God because God was a vibrant part of their life, and they believed in him, obeyed him, and lived in him. Jesus was fortunate to have been blessed with good, God-fearing parents.

Something happened that day when the parents of our Lord carried him, tiny and vulnerable, into the Temple. An old man and an old woman became part of his childhood memories. Simeon and Anna were their names and they feared God also. They were looking for the "consolation of Israel," hoping for God’s Messiah, the promised Savior to come. The moment they saw the baby Jesus they recognized him to be the Lord’s Christ and spoke of him to all "who were looking for the redemption of Jerusalem." Simeon especially was filled with joy and blessed God for his great gift.

Simeon had been waiting to die. He was an old man who had lived a full life and was ready to go home. The only thing missing was seeing God’s salvation, and God had promised him that he would not die until he saw the Savior. God kept his promise to that old man. Simeon saw Jesus. When he saw him, it was the very climax of his life. "Lord, now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace ..." Simeon prayed. Let me die, Lord, because you have done everything for me that you said you were going to do. Simeon was full of trust in God.

After he prayed his joyful prayer of thanks to God, Simeon then turned his attention to Mary, the Lord’s mother. His words to her were not about how cute the baby was, but about the ministry her son would perform. Simeon told Mary that Jesus would be the cause of many falling and rising. All those who rejected Jesus, believing in their own righteousness, were going to be lost, falling to the depths of hell. All those who despaired of themselves because of their sinfulness and looked to Jesus alone for forgiveness and rescue would be saved, lifted up to heaven itself. Then Simeon gave Mary a hint about our Lord’s ultimate purpose for coming: his death on the cross in payment for the sins of the world. "A sword will pierce through your own soul also," he told her.

Those words themselves must have caused Mary’s heart to skip a beat the moment she heard them. Her baby, this perfect little boy whom she had borne, was going to be a cause of grief for her. She couldn’t see how it was possible, but the words surely came back to her the day she stood at the foot of her son’s cross and watched him die; the day he gave her to John and she heard him say to her, "Mother, there is your new son."

There’s a beautiful new song titled, "For When Jesus Gets Back Home." In the song a woman sings about how hard it is to know what Mary must have felt all those years that she was with Jesus. Who could know what emotions churned inside her that day in the Temple when Simeon spoke to her and at the Temple again, twelve years later, when she found Jesus after he had been lost? How can we feel what it was like to be the mother of the Lord on that day when Jesus was too busy to see her? Who could know what it felt like when she stood by the cross? In the song, we are told that, above all else Mary felt, she believed that Jesus was her Savior. She believed in his Resurrection. She watched him die and then hurried back home again, we hear in the song, to get things ready for "when Jesus got back home."

All these memories Saint Luke recorded for us quite a while after the Lord died, rose again, and ascended into heaven. One gets the distinct impression reading them that Mary looked back over our Lord’s whole life and saw how, from the very beginning, he came to be the Savior, to give joy to an old man, comfort to an old woman, forgiveness of sins, life and salvation to all who believe in him. He came to live a single, solitary, purposeful life, a life of redemption.

One other figure is prominent in our Lord’s "scrapbook": The Holy Spirit. It was through the Holy Spirit that Simeon and Anna knew Jesus. It is through the Holy Spirit that anyone ever knows him. The Gospel of Luke, like his second book, Acts, is a testimony to the work of the Holy Spirit who guides us into the way of peace. He guides us to know Jesus.

People believed in Jesus only because of the Holy Spirit. Isaiah’s words apply to Jesus: There was nothing in him that appeared unusual. "He had no form of comeliness that we should look at him, no beauty that we should desire him" (Isaiah 53:2). Even when Jesus did his miracles and shared his majestic teachings, the people weren’t impressed. "He’s just the son of Joseph the carpenter and Mary his wife," they said. There was no halo around the Lord’s head when he ministered in Palestine, no way to tell, just from looking at him, that he was the Christ. The Holy Spirit persuaded the people to believe in him.

The Holy Spirit persuaded Simeon. Luke tells us the Holy Spirit was upon him. One day in the Temple Simeon saw a couple with a new baby. They were not at all unusual. Yet Simeon took that child into his arms and confessed him to be the Christ.

We aren’t always able to discern the work of the Holy Spirit in our lives. Sometimes we can’t tell he’s been with us until we look back and see his work in retrospect. Simeon probably thought he went to the Temple that day just because he had felt like going. He hadn’t had much else to do, so he just went by the Temple to see "what was cooking" there. But once he got there he learned the Holy Spirit had guided him to be where the Christ was going to be.

The Holy Spirit is active in our lives, working through God’s marvelous coincidences, seeing to it that you and I are at the right place, at the right time, to meet the right people. The Spirit works in us most of all to bring us to meet Jesus, the Christ, our Savior. It’s good to be able to look back over our lives and see God’s hand in it all, the Holy Spirit guiding us.

The collection of memories about our Lord’s childhood ends with these words: "He grew up and became strong, filled with wisdom; (he was very close to God) and the favor of God was upon him." The favor of God was upon Jesus and through Jesus, God’s favor is upon each of us. Amen

CSS Publishing Co., Inc., Just Follow The Signs, by Daniel G. Mueller