What's a Candlemas, and why should I bother or care to know?  Here's what and why.
The Law Of Moses Observed.
In    the Law of Moses, when a woman gives birth to a boy, she is ritually    unclean for seven days, then in the "blood of purification" for  another   thirty three days, total of forty days, at which time she goes  to the   mikveh for a ritual bath of purification.
What's a  mikveh? The   word, also given as mikvah, means collection.  Collection of what?  Water, that's what, but not just any water, but water from a natural  source, such as   rain, or better yet "living water" from a spring or  well, which must be   naturally transported, not pumped or carried.  Total immersion in the   water of a mikveh -- anyone thinking Baptism?  -- is considered so   important, restoring ritual purity after ritually  impure things have   happened, such as childbirth, that a Jewish  community must provide a   mikveh even before it builds a place of  worship (synagogue).
So,   to observe and fulfill the Mosaic Law,  Mary was purified in a ritual   bath in a mikveh, after which her  first-born Son was presented in the   Temple to dedicate him to God. In  the Western Church, since the birth of   Jesus has been set on 25  December for its celebration, the celebration   of the Purification of  Mary and the Presentation of Our Lord in the   Temple is fixed forty  days later, 2 February. Easter, however, does not have a fixed date, thus Holy Week, and the preparation for it, Lent, and the transition to it,  Gesimatide, are reckoned backward from Easter's date in any given year.   That is why in some years,   like 2013, Candlemas may happen after the  transition to Lent, Gesimatide, is underway.  Or like in 2012 when it  happened only three days before Gesimatide began with Septuagesima on 5  February.
In  the Eastern Church, as we saw in an earlier post that  Epiphany, 6  January  (at least until 1960s Rome got a hold of it),  originally  contained all  the events of the early life of Jesus  including his  birth.  And, 25  December in the Gregorian calendar of  the West, now in  civil  use in  most of the world, falls on 7 January  in the Julian calendar  still  in  liturgical use in the East, so, the  40th day after it falls on   Gregorian 15  February in the East, and is  called The Meeting of the  Lord.
Either way, either part of the church, either calendar, forty days after Jesus' birth celebration.
The Gospel Fulfillment Of The Law.
The    Gospel account of it is Luke 2:22-40, the Gospel reading for the day.    Part of it relates Simeon the Elder, who had been promised that he   would  not die before seeing the Messiah. When Mary brought Jesus for   the  meeting, Simeon saw him and recognised him as the Messiah, saying   what  is now called the Canticle of Simeon, or, from its first words in   Latin,  nunc dimittis: 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, a light to lighten   the Gentiles,  and the glory of Thy people Israel. This reference to   light gave rise  to the custom of blessing on this day the candles for   use in the church  during the year, which in turn has given the day yet   another name,  Candelemas, or mass of the candles.  Some observances   include a procession with candles to the church.
Simeon's nunc   dimittis has also become a feature of the  Office of Compline, the   completing church office of prayer for the day.  In the Lutheran Common   Service, that most wonderful version of the  Western liturgy, in its   current edition known as Divine Service Setting  III in Lutheran Service   Book, the nunc dimittis is also sung after  Communion.  A practice   which continues  even in our Vatican II wannabe services of late, though   of course with  the Vatican II-esque option of doing something else   instead. 1960s Rome  downplays the candles and Mary stuff for the Simeon   thing. Simeon did no  such thing. He got the purpose about Mary and   light to the people.
The Prophecy of Simeon.
Simeon    said something else too, and it should not be forgotten. The joy of   the  Messiah cannot be separated from the reason why he came, which   isn't  all that pretty. Saviours are great, as long as it's not about   being  saved from sin. Jesus would run into this again, to put it   mildly, and  Satan  would even tempt him about it during another forty   days the church is  about  to celebrate in imitation of his forty days   in the desert, Lent. Simeon  said:
Behold, this child is set for   the fall and rising again of  many in Israel, and for a sign which  shall  be spoken against -- yea, a  sword shall pierce through thy own  soul  also (this to Mary) -- that the  thoughts of many hearts may be   revealed.
The cross, the  crucifixion, the payment for redemption   from sin, is present here too,  as the central event in the life of   Jesus, the life of Man, and the life  of each man. Bishop Sheen once   remarked that the crucifix is the  autobiography of every Christian.
Ain't It Just A Christianised Groundhog Day Or Other Pagan Stuff?
As    with Christmas, Candlemas is sometimes taken as simply a Christian    version of pre-existing observances. Well there are pre-existing observances.  2 February is the date of Imbolc, a    Celtic observance of the mid-point between the Winter Solstice and    Spring Equinox. It was associated with the goddess Brigit, where sacred    fires were maintained by 19 consecrated women in Kildare -- sort of an    Irish Vesta -- some of whose legends seem to have been passed to the    Christian St Brigit.  And Brigit, through mingling of Irish and   African  slaves in the New World, may be the source of Maman Brigitte in    Voodoo. Imbolc was also a time of weather forecasting, with Spring    coming on, when snakes or badgers or other animals were watched to see    if they would come out of their Winter hibernation, indicating a short    Winter, or not, indicating a longer one.
Howere, as with    superficial similarities with pre-Christian Winter solstice observances,    the content of fulfilling the Mosaic Law by the newborn Messiah is    rather different than simultaneous pagan observances, including the   references to light. But,  as to watching animals for a clue to the   length of the remaining cold  weather -- hello, Groundhog Day, which is   also, guess what, 2 February!
And  then there's the Roman   Lupercalia, the Wolf Feast, honouring the  she-wolf who raised Romulus   and Remus, the founders of Rome, celebrated  this time of year too. In   it, the Luperci, the priests of the wolf  (lupus in Latin) sacrificed,   well, originally people, but then two male  goats and a dog, whose blood   was put on the foreheads of other Luperci,  then there was a feast,   then the Luperci cut thongs from the animal  skins -- called februa,   from which comes our month name February! -- and put on the  rest,   running around town, with women coming forward to be lashed by the    thongs to insure both fertility and easy childbirth.
Hey, this   lasted well  into Christian Rome and beyond, and some think Pope   Gelasius in the 490s  -- after the sack of Rome by the Visigoth under   Alaric in 410 and by  the Vandals under Geiseric (aka Genseric or  Gaiseric) in 455 and the deposing  of the last Roman  Emperor in the  West, Romulus Augustus, by the Arian  Germanic-Italian  King Odoacer on 4  September 476 -- used  Candlemas to  replace and remove Lupercalia.
So What's A Candlemas?  This.
So    what do we have here? Later, Christianed-over versions of universal    themes, or, universal themes that derive from natural knowledge of God,    and therefore have something to them, but could never even have  guessed   the Law and Gospel in the revealed word of God in Scripture.
Well,    as we saw with Christmas and will see with Easter, both. You got your    choice. Yeah, there is 2 February as modern and presumably more    civilised and less superstitious observances that Winter will end sooner    or later and nice weather come back -- Groundhog Day, which also has    the advantage that you're way less likely to have the cops called on    your Groundhog Day party than if you try to have a Lupercalia.
And,    there's 2 February as something to which these things have only the    crudest of inklings in the fallen heart of Man -- The Presentation of    Our Lord and the Purification of Mary.
Collect for Candlemas, to collect our thoughts for the day. (From The Lutheran Hymnal)
Almighty   and ever-living God, we humbly beseech Thy majesty that, as  Thine   only-begotten Son was this day presented in the Temple in the  substance   of our flesh, so we may be presented unto Thee with pure and  clean   hearts; by the same Jesus Christ, Thy Son, our Lord, who liveth  and   reigneth with the Father and the Holy Ghost, ever one God, world    without end.
VDMA
Verbum domini manet in aeternum. The word of the Lord endures forever.
1 Peter 1:24-25, quoting Isaiah 40:6,8. Motto of the Lutheran Reformation.
Fayth onely justifieth before God. Robert Barnes, DD The Supplication, fourth essay. London: Daye, 1572.
Lord if Thou straightly mark our iniquity, who is able to abide Thy judgement? Wherefore I trust in no work that I ever did, but only in the death of Jesus Christ. I do not doubt, but through Him to inherit the kingdom of heaven. Robert Barnes, DD, before he was burnt alive for "heresy", 30 July 1540.
What is Luther? The doctrine is not mine, nor have I been crucified for anyone. Martin Luther, Dr. theol. (1522)
1 Peter 1:24-25, quoting Isaiah 40:6,8. Motto of the Lutheran Reformation.
Fayth onely justifieth before God. Robert Barnes, DD The Supplication, fourth essay. London: Daye, 1572.
Lord if Thou straightly mark our iniquity, who is able to abide Thy judgement? Wherefore I trust in no work that I ever did, but only in the death of Jesus Christ. I do not doubt, but through Him to inherit the kingdom of heaven. Robert Barnes, DD, before he was burnt alive for "heresy", 30 July 1540.
What is Luther? The doctrine is not mine, nor have I been crucified for anyone. Martin Luther, Dr. theol. (1522)
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27 January 2013
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