Simeon – Advent and Christmas Living
Series: Like you and me | Bible text: Luke 2:25–35
Simeon is a man who lived in Jerusalem at the time of the birth of Christ. He lived an Adventist life because he was eagerly waiting for the Messiah. But then it came to an encounter with Christ: he saw Jesus with his eyes and even took him in his arms. The quintessence of this Christmas encounter is that Simeon experienced supreme joy and was able to die in peace. Those who encounter Jesus Christ will still experience this today.
After the birth of her son Jesus, Mary was considered unclean for forty days according to Jewish law. During this time she had to «stay at home». Regardless of this, the child was circumcised after eight days and was named Jesus. After the 40 days, the whole family travelled to the temple in Jerusalem to do two things:
- They brought the purification offering (Luke 2:24). Normally people brought a sheep as a burnt offering and a dove as a sin offering. Poor people were allowed the cheaper option: two turtledoves or two young pigeons (Exodus 12:8). Jesus comes to his people as a poor Messiah (Zechariah 9:9).
- According to another law, all male firstborn had to be consecrated to the LORD (Ex 13:2). According to the Old Covenant law, all male firstborn among humans and livestock belongs to God. The human firstborn was triggered by a monetary amount of 5 shekels.
Far from all the lack of space in the inns and the birth of Jesus in a manger, far from all the heavenly choirs of angels and shepherds» conversations, far from the arrival of the magi with their gifts and the killing intentions by King Herod, there is a man called Simeon.
Advent life
«In Jerusalem lived a man named Simeon. He was righteous and God-fearing. Simeon was filled with the Holy Spirit and eagerly awaited the coming of the Christ who would bring comfort and salvation to Israel. The Holy Spirit had revealed to him that he would not die until he had seen the Christ sent by the Lord»(Luke 2:25f NL). Simeon lived an Adventist life. The word Advent means Arrival. Simeon eagerly awaits the coming of the Christ. We too are in the Advent season. Are we waiting as eagerly for the coming of Jesus? We no longer have to wait for the events that took place 2000 years ago in Bethlehem. Nevertheless, this event should be repeated in our hearts. Are you eagerly waiting for Jesus or is Advent just a romantic, annual time for you? God loves people who have a longing for Him. «If you seek me, you will find me; yes, if you earnestly, with all your heart, desire me, I will let myself be found by you, says the Lord»(Jeremiah 29:13f NL).
This Advent season could become an expression of this desire in a special way. Many children have an Advent calendar. This sweetens the wait for Christmas and builds up an excitement. Blaise Pascal affirms that every human being has a longing for Jesus within him: «In the heart of every human being there is a God-created vacuum that cannot be filled by anything created but by God the Creator alone, as He reveals Himself to us through Christ.» Augustine holds the same opinion: «We are created by God and for God. Our heart is restless until it finds rest in you, O God.»
The problem is that we have learned to serve these longings in other ways. When a child is fussy and whining – registering their cravings – parents give them a lollipop, sit them in front of the TV or let them game on their mobile to keep them quiet. A heroin addict enters a methadone programme to divert their cravings. In the same way, we often try to meet our deepest needs with a substitute action such as entertainment, consumption, work, sport or food. Writer G.K. Chesterton says: «Every man who knocks on the door of a brothel is in search of God.«Yet nothing in this world can ultimately satisfy our longing; no success, not the spouse, no adrenaline rush triggered either by sport or sex. We tend to satisfy our longings through substitute actions. The very fact that our longings are not satisfied in this world is a strong indication of God. C.S. Lewis: «If we discover a need within ourselves that cannot be satisfied by anything in this world, then we can conclude that we were created for another world.»(cf. Ecclesiastes 3:11) That is why God loves it when people have a longing for Jesus. These people are looking in the right place. By the way, you cannot long for anything as much as God longs for you!
Longing is the runway where Jesus visits us personally. We all have longings. Jesus is the right address for them. He is enough and gives enough. How can we perceive them more as longings for Jesus? How did Simeon do it?
- He heardThe name Simeon means listen from God hears. Simeon had a listening relationship with God. Let’s make time for that too!
- He was righteous and God-fearingSimeon was faithful to the ordinances of God and he knew who he was and who God was. This rather speaks for a distanced and sober relationship with God – which is also the case without Jesus.
- He often stayed at the templeSimeon loved to be in the place where God dwelt among his people. If you want to nurture your longings for Jesus, it is good to be often in a community where God dwells.
- He knew the propheciesThe Messiah was promised many times in the Old Testament. Simeon built his longings on this. We should also hold on to the promises of the Bible. There are so many promises like: Jesus fills all your lack, he gives life in abundance, he is the bread that nourishes us, he is our peace, he gives enough, he is always there, etc.
- He was filled with the Holy SpiritIf the Holy Spirit then meets this breeding ground, a great longing grows out of it. The condition for the fulfilment by the Holy Spirit here and now is a personal relationship with Jesus Christ, which is manifested in baptism. «You have believed in Christ, and he has confirmed you as his own with the seal of his Holy Spirit, which he promised long ago»(Ephesians 1:13 NL).
In English sinew After with long for translated. This implies concepts like perseverance, waiting or endurance. Simeon waited many years until his longing for Jesus was satisfied. Let’s stay tuned!
Living Christmas
And then it will be Christmas: «On that day, the Holy Spirit led him into the temple. When Mary and Joseph came to consecrate the child to the Lord, as prescribed in the Law, Simeon was there. He took the child in his arms and praised God, saying: «Lord, now I can die in peace! As you promised me, I have seen the Saviour whom you have given to all people. He is a light who will reveal God to the nations, and he is the glory of your people Israel!» «(Luke 2:27–32 NL).
Jesus is not opium for the people, as Karl Marx put it. He is not a pipe dream or a crutch for people who cannot cope with life. The key word in Simeon is see (4x in this text!). Simeon heard, he groped (took Jesus in his arms) and saw him. The divine promise through the Holy Spirit to Simeon was, «that he did not see before he can accept the Christ of the Lord. viewed have»(v.26 Elb). And now Simeon «the saviour viewed». We should definitely see Christ, the Lord, before death! This is vital, because now Simeon had the certainty that he could die in peace. Peace means at its core be fed up. In dying, it is decisive whether Jesus is enough for us. The question after dying, when we then stand before God, is not: «Have I done enough good?», but: «Is what Jesus did on the cross enough?» And: «Have I accepted it for myself personally?«In Job it sounds like this: «Until now I only knew you from hearsay, but now I have seen you with my own eyes»(Job 42:5 NL). Have I seen Jesus or only heard about him? It is not about seeing Him face to face, but it is about a personal relationship. That is why Christmas is so important. Angelus Silesius once said: «And if Jesus had been born a thousand times in Bethlehem and not in you, you would still be lost.«Jesus must be born in us. Christmas turns a brittle and distant relationship with God into an emotional and fulfilling and existential relationship with Jesus.. Any distance is bridged. Now God is no longer only the Holy One, but also our Daddy. Christmas makes God touchable and visible. Can you die in peace like Simeon? Jesus also wants to be your peace, your being enough!
Simeon knew even then that the Jew Jesus would not only be light to the Jews, but to all nations (Isaiah 52:10). All peoples should see and know God through Jesus, the light of the world.
Jesus our destiny
«But Simeon blessed them and said to Mary: «This child will be rejected by many in Israel, and that will mean their downfall. But for many other people he will be the highest joy. In this way, what moves many in their innermost being will come to light. But a sword will also pierce through your soul».»(Luke 2:34f NL).
A life with Jesus does not only mean die in peacebut also in supreme joy live. He is also already in life enough. And – Jesus is a bone of contention. He is the cornerstone on which many will take offence. «For Jesus is the stone you builders rejected, who has now become the cornerstone» (Acts 4:11 NL). This phrase from Psalm 118:22 is quoted five times in the New Testament. It was the reality in which Jesus lived. Your attitude towards Jesus also determines your fate between supreme joy and destruction. Do you embrace Him – like Simeon – or do you look at Him from a distance? Do you know Jesus only by hearsay or have your eyes seen Him?
At the end, Simeon says to Mary: «A sword will also penetrate your soul». With the Son, the Mother also walks the path of suffering. The climax of this suffering is reached on the cross of Jesus, where every blow of the hammer became a «sword through the soul of Mary. Perhaps Mary collapsed spiritually and physically at that time.
Advent and Christmas living is a cycle. If we direct our longing towards Jesus, we will be able to find him and embrace him. This leads to a life of supreme joy and a dying in peace. Every human being longs for this in their innermost being. Search in the right place. Search with Jesus!
Possible questions for the small groups
- What longings do you know from your life? How do you satisfy them?
- Do you believe that Jesus satisfies all our longings? What does it mean that Jesus is enough?
- How could we make Advent a time of longing for Jesus?
- What could it mean for us to experience Christmas and to embrace Jesus?
- «Jesus divides minds and ways.» To what extent is this sentence true or not true?