Today’s feast is always celebrated 40 days after Christmas, the day in which Jesus is presented in the Temple by his parents, according to the Jewish custom. Because February 2 falls on a Sunday this year, we celebrate this feast day as a part of our Sunday liturgy. Mary and Jospeh travel to the temple in Jerusalem in order to offer Jesus to God as their first-born son and in order for Mary to be purified 40 days after giving birth according to Jewish custom.
Traditionally, before the reforms of the Second Vatican Council, this was also referred to as candlemas. We still retain the blessings of the candles as a part of the Mass ritual today. The theme of light in today’s Mass is carried over from the Christmas season in which Jesus is born as the light of the world on Christmas Day, in which the light of the star guide the wise men to Jesus on the feast of the epiphany. Today, we also celebrate this feast of light. It is interesting that the Vatican keeps up the nativity display until today, the feast of the presentation of the Lord, continuing the theme from the Christmas season, as Simeon prophesies in today’s Gospel that Jesus will be “a light for revelation to the Gentiles.”
In a symbolic sense, today’s feast celebrates the meeting point of the New Testament and the Old Testament. Jesus, the new Temple of God, enters the ancient Temple of the old covenant in Jerusalem. Jesus, who ushers in God’s law of love, come to visit the people of God in the Temple, the place where the God’s law of sacrifice was practiced, bringing to fulfillment obedience to God’s law and ushering in this last period of salvation. The Temple is where divinity and humanity embrace, where the past and the future converge.
Out of all the people in the Temple that day, two elders of the Jewish people, Simeon and Anna, notice the Holy Family, seeing in them a new and special presence. Their watchfulness and their period of waiting, of worshipping God day and night with fasting and prayer, comes to a joyful end.
For us Catholics, Candlemas is also a moment for us to renew our commitment to following Christ. With the challenges and obstacles that face us in the modern world, that is a commitment we must constantly consider, because it is so easy to get off track. Just as Jesus’ family brought him to the Temple to present him to God, we the faithful are invited to present themselves to God, offering our lives in service and love. Today, we remember our call to live as “children of the light,” to walk always in faith and trust.
Today, we are going to hear the audio message from Bishop Kopacz about our Catholic Service Appeal. Next week, we will have the envelopes available for the service appeal. Here is the Bishop’s Message.