Homily for December 30th, 201: Luke 2:36-40.
The prophetess
Anna, whom we have just heard about in the gospel, was very old. “She never
left the Temple ,
“Luke tells us, “but worshipped day and night with fasting and prayer.” There
are such people in the Church today: contemplative nuns, who do not leave the
convent for charitable or other good works, like most Catholic Sisters. They
lead mostly hidden lives, praying for others.
Anna has
evidently been praying, as devout Jews had done for centuries, for the coming
of God’s promised anointed servant, the Messiah. When Mary and Joseph brought
their baby into the Temple
to present him to the Lord, as the Jewish law required, both the priest Simeon
and Anna recognized at once that this infant was the long awaited Messiah. How
they most have rejoiced! Anna’s joy is evident in the fact that she cannot keep
the news to herself. “She gave thanks to God,” Luke tells us, “and spoke about
the child to all those who were awaiting the redemption of Jerusalem .”
Then comes
what at first seems like an anti-climax. Mary and Joseph return to Nazareth with their
child. Save for a glimpse of Jesus back in the Jerusalem Temple
at age twelve, we know nothing about his boyhood, adolescence, or young manhood
until, at age 30, he begins his public ministry with 40 days of fasting in the
desert. These are called his so-called “hidden years.”
Are they
really so hidden, however? “Isn’t this the carpenter’s son?” people in Nazareth will ask later
(Mt. 13:55). So we can assume that as a boy, Jesus must have worked in the
carpenter’s shop. Is it conceivable that any shoddy work came out of that shop?
that customers were kept waiting beyond the promised date? Luke tells us that
in that shop, Jesus “grew in size and strength, filled with wisdom.” He did
that by accepting the burdens, duties, and frustrations of a very ordinary and
outwardly uninteresting life.
He calls us to do the same.
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