During
the recent holiday season, my wife and I eagerly awaited the return
home of our two daughters and our son-in-law. Upon each of their arrivals
we joyously embraced them, wrapping our arms around our loved ones who
had been absent from us. How joyous it is to embrace a loved one whose
arrival we have been eagerly anticipating! To hold in our arms that
person we have longed for is one of life's greatest joys.
We have all felt that embrace and know its joys. Imagine for a moment
what it would be like if that person we were embracing, that longed-for
person so eagerly awaited, was God himself - our very life and salvation!
How would it feel to embrace God?
On February 2, the Church celebrates the Feast of the Meeting of Our
Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. This great feast, which commemorates that
event at which Mary presents herself and her child in the temple for
purification prayers forty days after the birth of her Son, is the culmination
of the celebration of the Nativity of Christ. Once again, this feast
reminds us of the Incarnation of God. As a man, Christ is submitting
Himself to the Law that all might be fulfilled. We are confronted again
with the amazing truth of the Incarnation -that God lowered Himself
to become a man so that man might be lifted up out of his sin. Christ
was truly a man, "like us in all respects save sin," says
St. Paul.
While remaining fully God, He submits Himself to the Jewish law as a
man, "For I come not to destroy the law, but to fulfill it."
Upon their arrival at the temple, Mary presents the Christ Child to
the Elder Simeon. It is this "meeting" that the feast celebrates.
The second person of the Trinity "meets" his people as represented
by Simeon, allowing mankind to embrace its creator and the author of
its salvation.
Simeon knew it was his salvation he embraced and for him, life was now
complete. "Lord now lettest Thou Thy servant depart in peace according
to Thy Word. For mine eyes have seen Thy salvation which Thou has prepared
before the face of Thy people; a light to lighten the gentiles and the
glory of Thy people Israel."
How many times have we heard those words uttered in church? Countless
times, no doubt, for they are uttered at every Vespers service and at
the churching of infants. Perhaps we have heard them so many times that
the words flow right past us.
But listen! Do you really hear what is being said? Simeon the Elder,
he who originally spoke these words, certainly knew their import. In
fact, Simeon is asked to explain in one of the hymns of Great Vespers
preceding the Feast of the Meeting of the Lord: "Simeon, tell us:
whom dost thou bear in thine arms, that thou dost rejoice so greatly
in the temple? To whom dost thou cry and shout - Now I am set free,
for I have seen my savior?" And Simeon responds: "This is
He who was born of a Virgin: this is He, the Word, God of God, who for
our sakes has taken flesh and saved man. Let us worship him." (Great
Vespers sticheron.)
It had been revealed to Simeon by the Holy Spirit that he would not
die until he had beheld "the Lord's Christ."
Simeon knew what he beheld. Simeon knew he could now "depart in
peace," for he had encountered his salvation, the source of his
eternal peace. He knew once he had embraced His savior, that life was
fulfilled and death was nothing to be feared. Upon meeting Christ, his
joy was complete.
In Simeon, we see the response of a man who has encountered his salvation.
Let us ask ourselves, what do we encounter when we enter the Temple?
Who is it we expect to see? Who is it we embrace as Christ is presented
to us?
Each time we enter Christ's Church, we are offered the opportunity to
embrace our Savior. Through the services and the sacraments, He is a
living reality, the savior of our souls, the granter of eternal peace.
Do we receive Him? Or do we allow the distractions of life to cause
Him to pass by unnoticed? Simeon shows us the way - He is faithful,
he is patient, he is obedient to be where he needed to be in order to
embrace his salvation.
Like Simeon, let us embrace our salvation. Like Simeon, let us be at
peace with God, with all men and with ourselves. God has come in the
flesh and allowed us to embrace Him. So intimate is his love for us
that He allows us to carry Him within us, even as Simeon carried Him
in his arms. Christ is among us! "Let the choir of angels be amazed
at this wonder and let us mortal men raise our voice in song, beholding
the ineffable condescension of God. Aged arms now embrace Him before
whom the powers of heaven tremble, He who alone loves mankind"
(Orthros of the feast).