CHAPTERS
- Preliminaries
- Eternal Plans
- Prophetic Plan
- Sinai Covenant
- Immaculate Conception
- Realisation of the Eternal Plan
- Perpetual virginity
- Divine Motherhood
- The Temple Presentation
- The Finding in the Temple
- Difficulties for Mary's faith
- Start of His Public Life
- Cooperation in Redemption
- Mediatrix of All Graces
- At the First Pentecost
- Mother of the Church
- Assumption
- Queenship
- Consortium
- Mary and Vatican II
- Revelation 12
- Some Marian Devotions
- To Imitate Her Virtues
- Marian Consecration
- Infused Contemplation
- Our Lady in Heaven
- Private Revelations
- Appendix: Discernment of Spirits
- Supplement: Appearances and revelation
- Study Questions
- Answers To Study Questions
Books/Resources by Fr. Most
- EWTN Scripture Q & A
- Basic Scripture
- Bible Commentaries
- Our Lady in Doctrine And Devotion
- Outline of Christology
- An Introduction to Christian Philosophy
- The Living God
- The Holy Spirit and The Church
- Catholic Apologetics Notes
Apologetic Resources
- Ask Father
- Biblical Catholicism
- Theology/Philosophy
- Scripture Resources
- Scott Hahns Lectures
- Apologetics Links
Other Services
- Catholic Chaplaincy
- St. Anthony Communications
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CHAPTER VIII. The Presentation in the Temple
THE SCENE
Commentators often worry about the plural "their" purification. Really,
Luke is being general, for Mary and Joseph went up to Jerusalem with Jesus,
and all took part in the event. Jerusalem was only 5 miles from Bethlehem.
Leviticus 12. 2-8 prescribed that a mother was ritually unclean - was not
to touch anything sacred or enter the temple - for 40 days after the birth
of a son. After that she was to bring to a priest serving that week in the
temple, a one year old lamb for a holocaust and a young pigeon or
turtledove for expiation. If she could not afford the lamb, she would bring
two turtledoves or two young pigeons. Of course, the birth of Jesus did not
make His Mother unclean in any sense. But Mary was always obedient to the
law, did not claim she was an exception, even though that would have been
supremely true. We think of the words of Jesus to John the Baptist in Mt 3.
15 that He willed to fulfill everything that righteousness called for.
In Exodus 1. 1-2 God ordered: "Consecrate to me every firstborn... both
human and animal." The firstborn human was to be redeemed by paying five
shekels of the sanctuary to member of a priestly family, according to
Numbers 18. 15-16.
The Significance
Jesus was not really being bought back. He was formally turning Himself
over. This was, as it were, the offertory of the Great Sacrifice. The
Epistle to the Hebrews 10. 5 says: "When Christ came into the world, he
said: 'Sacrifices and offerings you did not will, but you prepared a body
for me. You took no pleasure in burnt offerings and sin offerings. Then I
said, 'Behold, I come to do your will, O God'" The will of the Father was
that He should go to the cross.
How could Jesus make such an act of will when He first was conceived? Pope
Pius XII, in the encyclical Mystici Corporis , June 29, 1943, DS 3812
taught: "But the most loving knowledge of this kind, with which the divine
Redeemer pursued us from the first moment of the Incarnation, surpasses the
diligent grasp of any human mind; for by the blessed vision which He
enjoyed when just received in the womb of the Mother of God, He has all the
members of the Mystical Body continuously and perpetually present to
Himself, and embraces them with salvific love... . In the manger, on the
Cross, in the eternal glory of the Father, Christ has all the members of
the Church before Him and joined to Him far more clearly and far more
lovingly than a mother has a son on her lap, or than each one knows and
loves himself." The Pope means that the human soul of Christ from the very
first instant saw the beatific vision, in which all knowledge is contained.
By means of it He could know each member of His mystical body, and could
make the offering pictured in the Epistle to the Hebrews. This same
teaching has been repeated many times, e. g, in Sempiternus Rex, Sept 8,
1951, DS 3905 and Haurietis aquas, May 15, 1956, DS 3924, For additional
texts and data on Scriptural , Patristic, and speculative aspects of the
matter, cf. Wm. G. Most, The Consciousness of Christ, Christendom, Front
Royal, 1980.
Even without the help of the magisterium, it is easy to show theologically
that Jesus human soul not only happened to have that vision, but had to.
For any soul to have the beatific vision, two things are required: (1)
elevation of its power to know by grace. Of course this was present in
Jesus. (2) The divinity needs to join itself directly to the human mind
without even an image in between (images are finite, God is infinite). Then
the divinity does the work an image would have done. But in Jesus, not just
His human mind, but His entire humanity was joined most directly to the
divinity, in the hypostatic union, that is, union within the Second Person
of the Holy Trinity. So the union of His mind with the divinity is
inescapable, and is far closer than that of an ordinary soul that attains
the vision.
It follows that He surely could and did make the offering at the first
instant of which Hebrews speaks. The vision of all He had to endure was
wearing, a constant stress, that increased from its very prolongation.
Twice during His public life He allowed us to see within Himself, as it
were. In Luke 12. 50 He said: "I have a baptism to be baptized with, and
how am I straitened until it be accomplished." That is, I must be plunged
into the deep waters of suffering; I cannot be comfortable until it is over
with. In John 12. 27 He allowed Himself to break into a discourse to a
crowd not long before His death: "Now is my heart troubled. What shall I
say? Father, save me from this hour." Then not long after, all the tension
grew to such a point that the capillaries near the sweat glands burst, and
poured out their red blood through His skin: the agony in the garden. Such
a phenomenon is medically known as hematidrosis. In passing we note: If
someone has a long running anxiety, which normal measures do not remove,
that one can accept it as a means of greater likeness to Christ.
Someone will ask: How could He suffer when He had the beatific vision? We
reply: Let us think of a mountain 25, 000 feet high. It can easily happen
that on some days the peak will stick out through black clouds, and be in
calm and sunshine. But all the lower slopes will be in darkness and storm.
Similarly, a human has many levels of operation, both in body and in soul.
There can be a peace on the fine point of the soul, as St. Francis de Sales
calls it, while all the lower slopes are in great distress. Some mystics
have had such an experience. On this cf. The Consciousness of Christ, pp.
150 -153.
His Mother too knew, as we have seen, through her understanding of the Old
Testament prophecies. If even the stiff-necked Jews could know so much as
the Targums show, then she, full of grace would know all the more clearly.
So she knew all too much for comfort even before the prophecy of the sword
that Simeon gave. And as His public life advanced, it would be easy, and
frightening, to see events moving to their climax.
At the presentation, He would renew in His heart the offering He made on
entering into this world. In unison with His offering, she would renew her
fiat. This was, then truly the offertory of the Great Sacrifice.
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