Forty days after Christmas, the Church brings us back to the temple in Jerusalem. Mary and Joseph are doing something beautifully ordinary and deeply faithful: they are following the Law of the Lord. They bring Jesus to be presented to God, and they offer the sacrifice of the poor — two turtledoves.
Nothing flashy. No crowd. No miracle. Just quiet obedience.
But in that quiet moment, heaven breaks in.
An elderly man named Simeon takes the child into his arms and says words we still pray every night in Compline:
“Now, Master, you may let your servant go in peace… for my eyes have seen your salvation, a light for revelation to the Gentiles and glory for your people Israel.”
Today is often called Candlemas because of that word light. Simeon calls Jesus a light for revelation to the Gentiles. This child, carried into the temple like any other baby, is the Light of the world.
Light does two things:
It reveals and it guides.
Jesus reveals who God really is — not distant, not harsh, not uninterested — but a God who comes close enough to be held in human arms.
And He guides. In a world that can feel morally confusing and spiritually dark, Christ is not just a teacher among many; He is the Light by which we see everything else clearly.
The question for us is simple and personal:
Is Christ the light by which I make my decisions?
Or is He just a candle I light occasionally, while I navigate life by other lights — culture, comfort, popularity, fear
Like the watchful Simeon and Anna, may we recognize Christ when He comes.
Have a wonderful week
