The Meeting in the Temple, St Simeon, and Candlemas

Icon of the Meeting in the Temple

Every February 2 we have the Feast of the Meeting in the Temple.  We meet two holy, elderly prophets:  St Simeon and St Anna.  Yet, apart from the Holy Family, St Simeon’s role in the presentation of Jesus in the Temple as part of the Law is key.  This elderly saint and prophet gave the Church a valuable hymn as it is recorded in St Luke’s Gospel:

Now in peace dismiss your servant, because my eyes have seen your salvation which you prepared before the face of all people:  A Light for revelation to the Gentiles, and the glory of your people Israel (St Luke 2: 29 -32).

St Simeon said these words as he held his long awaited Savior in his arms as Sts Mary and Joseph took in the moment and his prophecy.

Light is clearly the primary theme of this second major feast of the Church year.  Just over 30 years later we have Jesus’ own words about himself:

I am the Light of the world:  the who follows me shall never walk in the darkness, but shall have the Light of Life (St John 8: 12).

Light and Life

Once, and not too long ago, there was a world lit only by fire — by candle, torch, or fire in the hearth.  Darkness likely may have seemed darker, and those who walked and prowled in it even more dangerous.  So. light had to have been more precious in those days.  The fire for a home had to be maintained and safeguarded.  The Light of Christ is by far the most precious Light of all lights, and it is to be maintained and safeguarded with in us with even greater vigor and vigilance.

The Light of Christ has always been sung and praised by the Church.  “O Gladsome Light” is one of the oldest hymns of the Church, possibly going back to our earliest days.  It is sung as part of every vespers service:

O Gladsome Light of the holy glory of the immortal Father:  heavenly, holy, blessed Jesus Christ.  Now that we have come to the setting of the sun, and behold the light of evening we praise God:  Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.  For meet it is at all times to worship you in voices of praise, O Son of God and giver of life.  Therefore, all the world does glorify you!

Given this hymn, it is easy to understand why in every Orthodox service candle light is seen throughout the nave and in the sanctuary.  These candles made from beeswax (the bees, too, offer their gifts) signify many things.  But they always witness to the Light of Christ.

This feast day is also called Candlemas — candles are blessed this day for their use throughout the year.  After the candles are blessed, the faithful in attendance each receive and light a candle.  Its flame is kept for the duration of the Divine Liturgy (or at least as long as it lasts).  All physical lighting illuminates a room or a house.  The Light of Christ is the brilliant Light that dispels the darkness in our souls where sin and lies may find shelter and persist in bringing about spiritual ruin and disease.  If permitted to shine, the Light of Christ illumines and brings healing to those formerly dark places.  Additionally, Jesus says this as recorded in the Gospel of St Matthew:

You are the light of the world…Thus let your light shine before men, so that they might see your good works, and might glorify your Father who is in the heavens (St Matthew 5: 14, 16).

During the Divine Liturgy of this feast day, the faithful hold their candles.  The flame signifies the fire of the Holy Spirit.  The flame’s light signifies the life giving Light of Christ.  Let us take this Flame and Light into our lives.  Let us continually do this to dispel the dark corners remaining in us where sin, corruption, and lies hide.  Let his Light shine that these horrors may be excised from our lives.  Also, in and by all that we do in Christ Jesus our Lord, God, and Savior, let us bring his Light to this darkened and depraved world.

St Simeon and St Anna, pray for us!

In Christ who is the Light of the world,

Fr Irenaeus


The Light of the World

Annually in the Orthodox Church there are commemorations of the Seven Ecumenical Councils. There were seven of them. This Sunday, July 14, 2019, I served as a substitute priest at St. Sophia Greek Orthodox Church in Bellingham, Washington for Fr. Michael Tervo. The Greek Orthodox Church focused on the Fourth Council — the Council of Chalcedon — and its Definition of Chalcedon, as penned by Pope Leo the Great. The key statement of this Council involved the hypostatic union — that Jesus Christ is fully God and fully human. These two natures (divine and human) exist in the one Person of Jesus Christ in an indissoluble union. These two natures, while in union, are, at the same time, never in confusion. This definition is in response to the false teaching of Nestorius. This heretical bishop essentially made Jesus into two separate persons: one divine and one human. There could be no union of the two natures in his mind. Nestorius tried to give the Church a Christ with a multiple personality disorder. His view was rightly rejected and judged as heresy. Jesus is NOT an “either-or,” he is a “both-this-and-that.”

The gospel reading put forward by the Greek Archdiocese comes from Mt 5:14 – 19. Verse 14 grabbed my attention which quotes Jesus: “You are the light of the world…” Elsewhere, in St. John’s gospel, Jesus declares, “I am the light of the world” (Jn 8: 12). Both statements from the Scriptures are true. It is not an either-or proposition, it is “both-this-and-that.”

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