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One of my favorite passages in Scripture is Luke 2:22-31, the account where Mary and Joseph took Jesus to the Temple for circumcision and to offer a sacrifice.
In the account we see a godly priest, Simeon, and an elderly widow, Anna, who came every day to the Temple to worship and pray. Both of these characters recognized who Jesus was the moment they saw him.
What’s interesting to me is the fact that lots of people probably
saw the infant Jesus during the first eight days of His life. I’m sure
well-intentioned women visited Mary to admire her newborn. Perhaps as
people passed Mary and Joseph on the street they stopped to look at
Jesus. They stroked His chin; cooed at Him; perhaps kissed His
forehead. They were that close to Him . . . but none of them recognized
who He was!
Think about that. Many of these people were good godly Jews. They
worshiped at the Temple, offered the right sacrifices, believed the
Christ would come. Many were hoping and praying for the Messiah. But no
one—except a few Shepherds, Simeon and Anna—recognized Him. Why? What
made the difference?
The Holy Spirit and prayer. Scripture tells us that because of his
devoutness and faithfulness, the Holy Spirit told Simeon that he would
see the Christ before he died. And the Holy Spirit moved Simeon out
into the courtyard at just the right time on just the right day so he
would see Jesus.
Anna had been coming to the Temple for more than 60 years (she was
widowed after only seven years of marriage, then came every day after
that). She spent so much time in the “prayer closet” fasting and
praying that she had quite a connection with God! As soon as she saw
the baby Jesus, her spirit was quickened, and she prophesied over Him.
Many of us are deeply religious—good Christians. We are believers
who go to church, seek to live holy lives, and try to grow in our
knowledge of God. Those are all good things. But like the “believers”
in Jesus’ day, we can often miss Him. Now I don’t mean we are not
saved; rather, I mean that often we can get caught up in “the right
things to do” that we do not experience the living Christ the way we
should. We need spiritual glasses to better see Jesus.
Those glasses come though prayer and the work of the Holy Spirit.
The more time we spend in prayer, connecting with God, the more He can
and will work in our lives (see Luke 11:13, Acts 4:31, Acts 13:2-3).
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