Luke 2:21-40 · Jesus Presented in the Temple
The Defining Moment (A Sermon for New Year's)
Luke 2:21-40
Sermon
by King Duncan
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We're only two days away from the New Year, and I can feel the anticipation--or dread, depending on your point of view--growing.

I heard one guy say he already dreads the new year. He said, "The holidays aren't quite over and already I'm about 90 days ahead on my calories and 90 days behind on my bills." Some of you can identify with him.

Our calendar did not come down from above. It was established by human minds. There is no real reason why one day on the calendar should bear more significance than any other day of the year. Yet still we invest the changing of the year with a great deal of meaning. It is a time of hope, of planning, of vision-casting, to use a business buzzword. And, of course, it is a time for resolutions. Ready or not, it is time to set yourself on a course of self-improvement.

I like a list of resolutions prepared by the Rev. Walter Schoedel. He calls them 7-UPS FOR THE NEW YEAR. No, this has nothing to do with the soft drink. These 7-UPS fall under the heading of attitudes and actions.

The first is WAKE UP--Begin the day with the Lord. It is His day. Rejoice in it.

The second is DRESS-UP--Put on a smile. It improves your looks. It says something about your attitude.

The third is SHUT-UP--Watch your tongue. Don't gossip. Say nice things. Learn to listen.

The fourth is STAND-UP--Take a stand for what you believe. Resist evil. Do good.

Five, LOOK-UP--Open your eyes to the Lord. After all, He is your only Savior.

Six, REACH-UP--Spend time in prayer with your adorations, confessions, thanksgivings and supplications to the Lord.

And finally, LIFT-UP--Be available to help those in need--serving, supporting, and sharing. (1)

If you're going to make new year's resolutions this year, let me suggest Rev. Schoedel's list.

Why do we bother to make New Year's resolutions in the first place? Why do we feel this need each January 1 to set new goals? Maybe it is because resolutions help us to identify our priorities. They answer the Question: how do I want to invest my time, energy, money, and talents in this new year? The new year reminds us that time is passing. It is up to each of us to maximize the potential of every moment.

Someone wrote some thought-provoking words on the meaning of time: To realize the value of "one month" ask a mother who gave birth to a premature baby. To realize the value of "one week" ask the editor of a weekly newspaper. To realize the value of "one hour," ask the lovers who are waiting to meet. To realize the value of "one minute," ask the person who missed the train. To realize the value of "one second," ask the person who just avoided an accident. To realize the value of "one millisecond," ask the person who won a silver medal in the Olympics. (2)

The coming of the new year forces us to face the question: what will be my priorities this year?

That's a question that Simeon, the central figure in today's Bible passage, didn't have to ask himself. His New Year's resolution was the same every year: to wait for the Messiah.

Years ago author J .C. Ryle wrote these words (and please, feel free to substitute the word woman where you feel it is appropriate): "A zealous man in religion," writes Ryle, "is pre-eminently a man of one thing . . . He only sees one thing, he cares for one thing, he lives for one thing, he is swallowed up in one thing; and that one thing is to please God. Whether he lives, or whether he dies--whether he has health or whether he has sickness--whether he is rich or whether he is poor . . . for all this the zealous man cares nothing at all.

"He lives for one thing; and that one thing is to please God, and to advance God's glory. If he is consumed in the very burning, he cares not for it--he is content. He feels that, like a lamp, he is made to burn; and if consumed in burning, he has but done the work for which God appointed him." (3)

Simeon lived for one thing. This was his passion--to greet the coming Messiah.

In the Hollywood movie, THE TIN CUP, golf pro Roy McAvoy calls it "the defining moment." McAvoy, played by actor Kevin Costner is a happy-go-lucky, underachieving golf pro who finds himself miraculously playing in the U.S. Open. Tied for the lead on the final day of the tournament, he faces a critical decision on a very difficult shot on the last hole: take a big risk, go for the green, and win, or play it safe, make par, and force a playoff. Risk it all or play it safe?

This is a defining event for Roy. In fact, Roy uses his favorite expression to sum up his situation: "Define the moment or the moment defines you."

Roy is a risk-taker. He always has been; probably he always will be. Sometimes he has won; sometimes he has lost--sometimes badly. But he spurns the idea of playing it safe. And this time is no exception--he goes for the green. (4) This is who he is. He can do no other and be true to himself.

Simeon was zealous for only one thing. Only one purpose in life. Only one focus in prayer. His first thought upon rising and his last thought upon lying down was, when will I see God?

In the book of Jeremiah, chapter 29, the Lord tells His people, "You will seek me and find me when you seek me with all your heart." (Jeremiah 29: 13) And many centuries later Jesus would echo this sentiment when he said, "Blessed are the pure in heart, for they will see God." (Matthew 5: 6 and 8)

Our Bible passage tells us that Simeon was a man with a pure heart. He had been blessed with a special assurance from the Holy Spirit: that he would not die before he had seen the coming Messiah.

Many older people face the future with anxiety. They may fear a future of failing health, shrinking finances, social isolation. Some people reach their senior years only to face a void of meaninglessness. Their self-imposed goals have been met. Their socially-ascribed roles no longer fit. Their life dwindles down to a period of anxious waiting.

This was not the case with Simeon. Because of the Holy Spirit's promise to him, he could face the future with hope and joy.

Composer Oscar Hammerstein once claimed, "I just can't write anything without hope in it." Remember these lyrics from the musical Oklahoma!: "Oh, what a beautiful morning, Oh, what a beautiful day! I've got a glorious feeling. Everything's going my way."

In his show South Pacific, one of the songs contains these words: "I'm stuck like a dope/ With a thing called hope, And I can't get it out of my heart."

I think that was Simeon's theme song: "I'm stuck like a dope with a thing called hope, and I can't get it out of my heart." Hope for what? Hope that he would see the Lord's power and glory and mercy in the flesh. Hope that he would see God's ultimate plan for His chosen people.

And thus the stage is set for Simeon's defining moment. He is in the courtyard of the Temple and he spies a humble young couple. There was nothing distinguishing about this couple--except for the squirming baby in their arms. There is nothing about the baby that we know of that distinguished it from other babies, but somehow old Simeon knows this is the one he has been awaiting. He walks up to the poor couple, takes their squirming baby boy from their arms, and announces that he has finally seen the Christ.

Listen to Simeon's declaration: "Sovereign Lord, as you have promised, you may now dismiss your servant in peace. For my eyes have seen Your salvation, which you have prepared in the sight of all people, a light for revelation to the Gentiles and glory to your people Israel . . ."

"You may now dismiss your servant in peace . . ." Have you ever thought about what Simeon's life was like after he saw Jesus? The Bible doesn't give us any details. For all we know, Simeon may have died a happy man that very afternoon. Or he may have lived for a few more years. What was his life like after that? He had seen the Lord's promise of salvation. He had found perfect peace. There was certainly no more anxiety in Simeon's future. He had seen Jesus.

As John Donne so perfectly put it: "I shall not live till I see God. And when I have seen Him, I shall never die." (5)

There is a Hebrew word for the emotion Simeon felt on that day. According to Pastor Lloyd John Ogilvie, the Hebrew word SHALOM carries both the meaning of peace and of salvation. (6)

In a tiny baby, Jesus, Simeon found shalom. His life was complete. An encounter with Jesus will do that. And here's the Good News: you and I can have the shalom that changed Simeon's life 2,000 years ago. You and I can also find peace and salvation.

Pastor Tom Rakow was making his way home from the hospital. He was driving over snowy, slippery roads when he came across a car stalled in a snowbank. Spotting a man in the passenger's seat, Pastor Tom pulled over to help.

The man's name was John, and he was suffering from a cancer in his chest. Tom noted that John was listening to a religious program on the radio, and he felt compelled to ask him if he knew Jesus as his Savior.

John turned to look at Tom and said, "I've been trying to find God--but I don't know how." And so Tom explained how Christ came into the world to seek and to save that which was lost. And he invited John to allow Christ to take residence in his heart. And John did. Afterwards, he remarked to Tom, "I've been waiting for you--for a long time!"

A month later, Tom was invited to John's funeral. There he learned that John had lost his voice soon after their encounter on a snowy road. Although many of his family had been praying that he would come to know Jesus, John had been unable to tell them of his experience. And so Pastor Tom Rakow was able to tell John's family that their prayers had been answered--before his death John had come to know the Master. (7)

"Sovereign Lord," prayed Simeon, "as you have promised, you may now dismiss your servant in peace. For my eyes have seen Your salvation, which you have prepared in the sight of all people, a light for revelation to the Gentiles and glory to your people Israel . . ."Do you want to face the New Year with Shalom--peace and salvation? Before we leave the Christmas season behind, you are invited to look into the face of the Christ Child one last time and to see there your hope for this year and every year. May this be your defining


1. The Joyful Noiseletter, 1-2002, p. 5. Contributed by Dr. John Bardsley.

2. As told by Mark L. Feldman and Michael F. Spratt in Five Frogs on a Log (New York: HarperBusiness, 1999).

3. Found on the Internet. Author unknown.

4. J. C. Ry1e in Practical Religion.

5. Cited in John Andrew, Nothing Cheap (Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1988), p. 91.

6. "Perfect Peace" by Lloyd John Ogilvie, Preaching, Jan./Feb. 2002, p. 25.

7. "Meeting in a Snowbank" by Tom C. Rakow, Decision, January 1997, p. 15.

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan