A SURPRISE

Simeon with the Christ Child in the Temple – Rembrandt van Rijn – c. 1666-69

I KEEP COMING BACK TO IT - to the “miracle” of it, to the miracle of the ordinariness of it, to the surprise of the light that shone out of a Christ-child into the face – and the dawning recognition – of an old man of the Temple; to the presentation. As Austin Farrer put it so eloquently: the Maker of the World is born a begging child and does not even know that it is milk for which he begs … (in a sermon entitled A Grasp of the Hand).

It seems that “knowing” isn’t necessary. In fact this presentation rather reminds one that it was the pursuit of “knowing” that was the problem in the Genesis of things. Not that knowledge of itself is ever deemed a bad thing – we were built to explore and to enjoy exploring. No. It’s power that’s the issue at stake here: any of us believing that the knowledge we gain gives us some kind of commanding rights over others. It’s the baby’s not knowing – the baby’s powerlessness and needing the blessing, the benediction (good things being said) and protection of others that is the source of Light. It is the baby’s vulnerability, any baby’s vulnerability, that blesses the world around. And it’s the recognition in the old man that enables him to trust his own future entirely to God. Paraphrased: I’m ready to die now. Really. Ready to die. I know I can trust you completely, as this infant in my arms trusts me, effortlessly. I’ve just seen that everything you ever promised has been fulfilled – in fact I’ve held the promise, and its fulfilment, in my arms – like countless wonder-struck infant-carers before me. “According to thy word” (in this small bundle of life rather than in a sermon).

In this world in which every shape and form and faithing of humankind are all becoming Real it is necessary that our religion is real – incarnate – a proper and an intimate “binding together”, or holding together as one, of all created things. God is in the midst of us. Born in us today as well as yesterday.

Christopher Burkett reflected with the same degree of wonderment in Simeon and in Anna, in early December last year (and I hope he won’t mind me quoting him whole) …

Christmas troubles me as a preacher. The incarnation is surely God doing a new thing, but it’s so hard to express the wonder and shock of it. Often it feels as if it’s all been said. And I certainly don’t want to go down the weary path of complaining about consumerism. There’s a kind of ‘expected part of the show’ element to Christians whingeing about how Christmas is celebrated popularly that I think is counter-productive. What I’m looking for is some way of telling afresh how stupendous this birth is. I want to convey that amazing but often tearful joy of when ‘the penny dropped’ for the first time.

That might be the retelling of those ‘penny drop’ moments of my own past: standing in the gloom of an ancient abbey as part of the bass line of a school choir and suddenly realizing with dumb-struck awe the significance of the words of O Come, O Come Emmanuel; seeing the light of something beyond words in the sparkling eyes of an Alzheimer’s sufferer’s rare smile at the pulling of a Christmas cracker; recognizing in the playful determination of a small dog in deep snow a thread of life-joy that mysteriously connects sensate beings; or finding a gaggle of excited young children suddenly still and quiet as the story simply told touches them. Fortunately I could tell of many such instances, but their power, though real, is so hard to recreate as a third party retelling. Where then should I look for inspiration?

As is so often the case, looking back might be a key. Looking back at what the stream of tradition we inhabit might offer. And that brings me to a painting by Dante Gabriel Rossetti – Ecce Ancilla Domini (The Annunciation), painted 1849-50. What Rossetti portrays is the frailty of a young woman, a slip of a girl; a simple shift clinging to her figure, her arms bare, suddenly awoken from sleep perhaps, her knees drawn up, she cowers against the wall of her sleeping room. She is thin, troubled looking, and possibly feeling threatened. She avoids looking directly at the presence that has invaded her room. She certainly doesn’t look as if she considers herself favoured – much perplexity sums it up. As one scholar suggests, Mary’s exclamation at the end of the encounter, “Let it be to me according to your word” is more a shrug of resignation faced with the inevitable within the world of the sexual politics of first century Palestine, than the triumphant consent we usually take it to be. The painting is suggestive of that fearful acquiescence.

Rossetti’s version of the story of the angel Gabriel announcing to Mary her pregnancy and its purpose has none of the studious contemplation and noble acceptance of traditional renderings so beloved of Renaissance artists. This is a radical reinterpretation in which the humanity – the bodiliness if you like – of Mary is plain to see. Her holiness is apparent by the halo, but the posture and the look make her clearly a woman not a superhuman saint. The women figures of the pre-Raphaelite painters like Rossetti do have a romantic, otherworldliness about them – but those ethereal faces and forms all the more emphasise the feminine, passionate, mysterious and sensual nature of flesh, human flesh.

The picture is almost wholly restricted to white and the three primary colours – a curious goldness hangs around the angel’s feet, blue drapes signify heaven and the virgin, red hair brings to mind Christ’s blood, and the whiteness of cloths and the lily mark purity. The symbols that any earlier artist might have used are all there – yet the picture makes a new statement. When it was exhibited in 1850 criticism rained down on Rossetti and he vowed never to show it again in public.

The Church sees fit to label this cowering girl the Blessed Virgin Mary – we should hear that not such much as a title but as a description of her body. Virgin here can designate nothing else but a body. Her swollen womb is just that, her carrying as tiring as any mother-to-be’s carrying, her labour as painful and exhausting, her birthing as bloody and as emotional as any birthing. God will be born a body of a body. And we will carol the promise of long ago made new again in amniotic fluid spilt, a slimy form squealing and stretching in air for the first time, and breasts heavy with milk.

That’s wonder; that’s gospel. God is born a body to make holy every body. A place to begin …..

The sermon woven from this strand is here. (highly recommended! – SRM)

via Christopher Burkett’s Blog.

Here’s a presentation that is wholly ordinary and yet holy. Ordinary ordinariness. Body of body. A relief. A light. Hope. Love. Blessedness. Emmanuel. A surprise.

A LIGHT FOR WHOM?

CANDLEMAS. The Presentation of Christ in the Temple. Just what most people were NOT expecting. Just what the old man Simeon had NOT been expecting, until it dawned on him, with a tender warmth, WHO he was holding.

Anna, daughter of Phanuel, on the other hand, would probably not have been surprised. Dare I wonder aloud whether hers might have been a slightly more intuitive faith? I should not presume, of course, being a man, but I do dare to wonder.

At any rate, both Anna and Simeon recognised, according to holy writ, that what the world waiting to be “saved” really needed was really just a baby. Really! But not what anyone had expected. Everyone had expected – everyone wanted - someone with a much clearer place in line management structure than a baby could have. (It’s always handy to have Some One to Whom one can abrogate one’s own responsibilities). Still, the Saviour was a baby. Just an ordinary baby. Nothing to be done about it. Except believe it, of course. And that quickly became the sticking point for not a few, and – according to some of the papers again today – is still a live issue for me and you.

Is the Saviour of the World a perfect human? Is he perfectly powerful? Perfectly knowing? Predestined and automatically infallible? Above and beyond human feelings, needs, emotions? Sexless? A chaperone? Without need of human love, sustenance, care or prayer? Only kidding, only pretending to be grief-stricken when his friend died? Keeping his distance, only feigning love for Mary when she anointed his beloved feet with her hair?

Or is the Saviour of the world an ordinary baby at heart, and not just in part, like me and you? Could it be (and I think St Teresa of Avila used to wonder along these lines)  - that we’re to take up something of the role of the saviour too? Ordinarily.

And what would being “saved” look like? Would it be different for a child, or a woman, or a man, or a gay person, or a straight one? If saved is something that’ll only happen for some of us, (and “some”, some say, apparently couldn’t include same sex partners, no matter how much they loved God, or their neighbours, or one another) – then who can?

Is it true that All are welcome, all are welcome, all are welcome in this place ? What answer might we find in a saviour’s (baby) face?

I find myself, albeit a much less faithful and much less prayerful priest than either Simeon or Anna, longing for a day when the Temple of our time welcomes the children of God into tender embrace – without examination, without asking how old they are, or how powerful, or whether they’re male or female, or straight or gay; for then shall she and we – in company with an old man and an old woman of long, long ago – be able to say:

Lord now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace, according to thy word,  for mine eyes have seen thy salvation.

- “ordinary” infants having turned out to be ExtraOrdinary saviours … each of us showing each other the way home to ourselves. Showing us how to “get a life” …

GOING, OR STAYING, IN PEACE

Rembrandt van Rijn (1606-1669) – Simeon in The Temple

NOW THERE WAS A MAN IN JERUSALEM … righteous and devout, looking forward to the consolation of Israel, and the Holy Spirit rested on him. Righteous and devout. Inside and out (Luke 2).

Righteously present to God in Jerusalem’s Temple. Devoutly present to God in his own inner temple. Expectant: looking forward to the consolation of God’s people. On the look-out for new life. So the Holy Spirit rested on and in him.

Good, prayerful, hopeful. And thus able to see the fulfilment of all the promise of God, for all creation, in one five pound baby, and therefore, thereafter, in any baby. New life and light, the promise of a future, to lighten all “the descendants of Abraham” (Hebrews 2.14-18). Consolation. For me and you. Going, then, or staying, we may be at peace.

FRESH EXPRESSION (dated 1662)

THERE ARE MOMENTS OF PURE JOY in parish life. What better gift, what better way to celebrate the first of our Parish Centenary events across 2010 than a Sunday Candlemas – the Feast of The Presentation of Christ in The Temple. Better begin (in these days of Growth Action Planning and “He’s turning the world upside down”) with a “fresh expression”. So we did. With (1662) Prayer Book Choral Evensong, a mixed choir of thirty, robed and unrobed, ‘traditional’ and ‘music group’, and the nave filled row after row. And it’s one of the seven deadliest sins, I know, but of all of them tonight, of all of us, of the entire parish family here, I’m proud as Punch! We’ve been helping each other along the road to glory for years and years and years …

A blind man recognises a beloved face by barely touching it with seeing fingers, and tears of joy, the true joy of recognition, will fall from his eyes after a long separation.

Osip Mandelstam, The Word and Culture

Subtitled text from Haggai 2 announced reflection on The Future Glory of the Temple. And Romans 12 exhorted us to “present your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God, which is your spiritual worship”.

What then is to be “The Future Glory of this Temple?” I wondered aloud in the pulpit. “What is the name of the song, the psalm, the canticle of praise that we would sing a hundred years from now?”

In Lent this year some of us will take up Terry Hershey’s “The Power of Pause”. It holds some clues as to the whereabouts of the Temple “not made by human hands”:

“… when I am present I am grateful. And gratitude is always a type of prayer.

… the entire region is bathed in sunshine. Now, at dusk, the cloud cover is scattered like tattered pieces of cloth … the sky is spring blue, baby boy blue … the water is ice blue and the mountains are blanketed with snow. In the clear winter air the mountains stand stalwart – enduring, comforting, and settling. they are bigger than any of my pettiness. And their beauty slows my breathing and eases my mind (page 27)

The well known priest and author, the late Henri Nouwen once wrote:

Too often I looked at being relevant, popular and powerful as ingredients of an effective ministry. Jesus sends us out to be shepherds and Jesus promises a life in which we increasingly have to stretch out our hand and be led to places where we think we’d rather not go. He asks us to move from a concern for relevance … to a life of prayer; from worries about popularity … to communal and mutual ministry. What is new is that we have moved from the many things, to the Kingdom of God.

Henri Nouwen, In The Name of Jesus.

Ah! To the Kingdom of God. Look, my friends. Look beyond our little Evensong. Look hard. Can you see him there, with Anna? They’ve been dreaming about mountains and hills, and valleys and plains, and rising up like eagles, and blue sky and a blue lake, and a Kingdom promised from the beginning of time. And whilst they’re waking from their slumbers, as though in direct response to the prayers of their patient waiting, one of the most beautiful women that ever walked upon the face of the earth came near. A young woman most pure, still seeking purification.

Simeon stumbled forward, barely able to see through tears of recognition. He touched Mary’s beautiful face, and she placed a small white bundle into the trembling arms of this old man of the Temple.

And a rainbow stretched out over Mount Zion. The elderly Anna gasped and knelt down at Mary’s feet and the old man said, a little croakily:

Nunc Dimittis

Lord, now lettest thou thy servant depart in peace : according to thy word.

For mine eyes have seen : thy salvation;

Which thou hast prepared :

before the face of all people;

To be a light to lighten the Gentiles : and to be the glory of thy people Israel.

Luke 2.29-32

Glory be to the Father, and to the Son : and to the Holy Ghost; as it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be : world without end.  Amen.

Never was fresher expression uttered. All that we ever longed for has been made available to us. All that we ever feared about death, or life, has been put to flight. Though hearts may sometimes be seared by sword, yet may we hold the Saviour. Yet we may hold, in an infant then and in every infant littleness now, a Song, a Psalm, a Canticle of Praise that we would sing a hundred years from now, and that with heartfelt gratitude and awe:

Nunc Dimittis. Now I may die in peace. I’ve longed for a fresh expression.

So I came. Present. Really there. And I opened the Church’s ancient Prayer Book, and found the reason it was written. God be praised.