February 2, 2022
Very Rev. Denis Robinson, OSB
There is a wonderful quote by the American literary critic, Barbara Johnson.
"Faith is seeing light with your heart when all your eyes see is darkness."
How appropriate for our feast today.
When we look at our ancestors in faith, their eyes saw only darkness.
From the sin of Adam, the time of our first parents, in shame the light had been cut off from the world. Wandering in the darkness of the outer Eden, they groped the ragged ground for meaning, they became lost in incomplete relationships, they cursed themselves, they became enslaved, they denied the prophets, they refuted the Law, they sold one another into exile.
So it was, there was nothing but the grave Sheol of the grave that overwhelmed them, wallowing in the memory of creation, but lost, blind to its truth.
This is the legacy of St. Luke’s Gospel, a Judaism old and lost. Zachariah the ancient priest, Elizabeth, his barren wife, Simeon the doddering old man, Anna the widow. They were losing, but they were holding on, hoping that the light extinguished so long ago by their own folly might be restored to them.
"Faith is seeing light with your heart when all your eyes see is darkness."
And so they haunted the temple, that monument of Herod’s victory and his down fall, they wandered its cold precincts filling their old lungs with the daily stench of burning animals, fractured dreams and hopelessness.
They felt their ways along the walls of its precincts, its wailing walls hoping to pick up some gossip, some shred of good news.
They knew the darkness, knew it intimately in their ancient bones, felt it keen as wind winding across the desert at night, understood it like the loss that had already circumscribed their withering lives.
And then, one day it happened. They appeared, the poor couple from Nazareth, money spent, aching feet for the presentation of their (her) little boy in the Temple, the fulfillment of the Law’s strict code. The teenage mother, the older stepfather and the fat baby, known as Jesus waving his dimpled hands in the air as the whole precinct teemed with action.
Who were they? They were nothing in the world’s eyes, nothing, lowly peasants for whom these isolated visits to the temple were the highpoints of otherwise drear existences.
Mary the mother clutching a candle that she prayed the futile traversals of the temple’s stampeding worshippers would not extinguish.
Joseph, the shield, the protector
And the ever conscious baby, did he know that all of this activity was ultimately about him?
It was then that the old man and the old woman spotted them in the chaos, from the depths of their souls they spotted them, from the longing in their hearts they caught hold of them, from the rolling tide of history they grasped them.
Israel, raw with darkness, tottering on extinction saw in its last moment that flame, that flickering glow of light that looked for the world like a child’s eyes, a baby’s eyes.
From the soul of those eyes shone the light of nations, from his eyes he communicated in a moment to those old folks the history of a people, a shabby people rising to meet God face to face once again, from those eyes the pools of darkness swirled and then were illuminated by the light of Mary’s little candle.
"Faith is seeing light with your heart when all your eyes see is darkness."
From the depths it trembled, as the smoke consumed the pigeons, the poor boy’s offering. The little fire quaked. It might so easily have been lost, but it was not lost.
Its flame was passed along. Passed over Simeon and Anna to fishermen, anxious to hear a word of Good News in the midst of their nets.
Passed along to tax collectors lost in the morass of their ill begotten greed.
Given to political pot boilers and doubters and traitors
And there was more beyond the ragged twelve. The light passed to sinners, to Gentiles, to adulterers, the unclean, to politicians, to sorcerers, to hermits, monks, nuns, sisters, brothers, mothers, fathers. It passed on and on.
The light passed down the litany of saints and sinners, holding on, tentatively as flame passed to an unlit column of wax, the work of bees.
It made its way into the halls of power, into house churches, into basilicas, monasteries, humble homes.
It burned its way through the pages of history, a history of ravaging wind that might have stifled it but for its divine temperament.
It burned its way across the threadbare landscape of human history until he touched the lives of those who continued to cling together in the shadows of darkness and shiver in the cold of indifference.
It burned its way over the fields of folly cultivated even in our day with the plowshares of men’s ignorance
It burned and it eradicated bigotry, racism, sexism and all the other isms that plague the human heart.
It burned and lightened lives controlled by the horrific darkness of addiction.
It burned and touched the molting draperies of turmoil, sending their shards flying aimlessly in the air.
It burned down the corridors of culture and comes to us today.
That flame which wavered in the Temple, that fire which is the very Son of God is here brothers and sisters and now it is a conflagration. It consumes us. It tears at our mantles of indifference that false armor we have composed for ourselves.
It touches us, it opens our hearts, our skin and makes us vulnerable. It wounds us, flays us, but it makes us warmer in a cold world. It gives us light when vision fails.
It passes its brilliance over lives shut off from the hermeneutic of salvation.
It is Christ the light. It is ours today. It surrounds us as it surrounds this altar, drawing us ever nearer to the source of light and tearing away our blindness, our stumbling ineptitude, our spiritual darkness.
Simeon and Anna finally saw him in the Temple. That same temple is opened for us now. That same revelation. It is the temple of our hearts, the revelation of our deepest desire.
"Faith is seeing light with your heart when all your eyes see is darkness."