Presentation and Generations

Presentation and Generations

Today we celebrate the Feast of The Presentation in the Temple.  I think it’s a lovely Feast Day that sees a young couple responding to tradition whereby their forty day old baby is presented to The Lord.  When in Hounduras towards the end of last year with Trocaire, I witnessed something of this at a Sunday Mass when a young couple presented their baby at the Offertory of the Mass and the priest received the baby into his arms, turned towards the Altar and raised the baby on high.  The congregation applauded the moment and the parents beamed with happiness.  Later we were told the baby was forty days old and that this is tradition too for families there.

Little boy with his parents and the priest after Sunday Mass in Honduras (November 2016)

We bless candles in the churches today.  These will be used in our churches during the coming year.  People bring candles for blessing too. Some they leave in the church for use there and others they bring home so that there will be “blessed” candles in their homes.  Again a lovely tradition.

“Candlemus Day” Kilmovee Parish Church

One of the things I like about this Feast Day is the coming together of generations for that is very much at the heart of the Gospel account.  The baby carried by Joseph and Mary, a young couple, are approached by Simeon and Anna, two of the oldest people in the Temple at that moment and a conversation begins. It is a conversation rooted in faith for the old man, Simeon, had been told he’d not die without laying his eyes on “The Christ”.  He knew his moment had come and felt drawn to this little family grouping.  So too, Anna, who at the age of eighty-four spent all her waking hours in the Temple at prayer. It’s lovely the way they can blend as one around Christ.  It always strikes me that the church on any given Sunday is a place where the generations meet under one roof to be together, gathered in faith.

Yesterday we had something of this in our schools when grandparents came along to spend time with their children’s children during Catholic Schools Week. Again, a lovely and memorable moment for all.

Part of “Grandparents’ Gathering” in Kilmovee N.S. Catholic Schools Week 2017

Today we value the generations, respect them, learn from them and, in all that, seek to come to know and recognise Christ.

Better to light a candle …..

Better to light a candle …..

20160202_103641-1Earlier today, at 10am Mass in Kilmovee, we blessed candles for Candlemus Day.  There were a few extra people there, to mark the feast of The Lord’s Presentation in the Temple.  I was happy to see them.  A few brought candles to be added to our church’s supply, placed before the Altar for blessing.  It’s a nice tradition, whereby people bring candles to be blessed – some for use in the church and others to be brought home and used there throughout the year.

Just before going down to Mass, i picked up a small candle holder in the house and put it in my pocket.  Somewhere, in the back of my mind, I thought I’d make use of it but wasn’t sure when or how.  I left it on the middle of the Altar and when we blessed the candles, I took one and lit it, then I placed it in the little holder on the middle of the Altar.  There, needless to say, it stayed.  (No “moving candles” in Kilmovee, thank God:) )

After Holy Communion I turned off all the lights in the church and quenched the candles – except one – the one blessed and lighted earlier in the Mass.  I sat down and heard myself singing “How Great Thou Art” – it seemed so appropriate.  I said a few words around the light in this single candle, drawing us towards its flame and warmth. When other distractions are taken away, the one point of focus is the “Light – the Light of Christ” and I prayed that we might allow ourselves be caught in its invitation to come and worship and recognise, in its simplicity, something of the Divine.

Maybe that’s what happened for Simeon and Anna!

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