George H. Morrison - Devotional Sermons
Devotional For
December 27
Simeon and Anna -- Part I
And behold, there was a man in
Jerusalem, whose name was Simeon; and the same man was just and devout, waiting
for the consolation of Israel: and the Holy Ghost was upon him .... And there
was one Anna. a prophetess .... which departed not from the temple, but served
God with fastings and prayers night and day--Luk 2:25, Luk 2:36, Luk 2:37
Age and Infancy Meet
No more beautiful scene could be imagined
than this meeting of age and infancy in the Temple. As we read the story of the
life of Jesus, we find Him surrounded on all hands by hypocrisy, until we begin
to wonder if there was any religion left in those who haunted these sacred
courts. But here, for a moment, the curtain is drawn aside. We get a glimpse of
a Jewish man and woman. And we find them living holy and separated lives, and
longing for the advent of Messiah. On a gravestone erected over certain
soldiers in Virginia there are these words, "Who they were, no one knows;
what they were, everyone knows," and we might use these words of Simeon
and Anna. Who Simeon was we shall never learn; Luke is at no pains to tell us
that; but what he was in his daily life and walk, in his inmost desire, and in
the sight of God, everyone knows who has read this Gospel chapter. Simeon and
Anna, then, entered the Temple when the infant Savior was there, and to them
the glory of the child was shown.
Never Give Up Hoping
First, then, we learn that we should never
give up hoping. When Alexander the Great crossed into Asia he gave away almost
all his belongings to his friends. One of his captains asked him, "Sir,
what do you keep for yourself?" And the answer of the king was, "I
keep hope." Now we do not read that Simeon was an old man, though it has
been universally believed that he was (see Luk 2:29). But through all his years
Simeon was like Alexander: he had parted with much, but he had held fast to
hope. The days were very dark days for Israel; no John the Baptist had sounded
his trumpet note; everything seemed hopeless for the Jews, and some of the
noblest of them had taken refuge in despair. But this brave soul "waited
for the consolation of Israel," and we know now that his waiting was not
vain. Do you see the roots of that heart-hopefulness of his? It ran down to justice
and devotion (Luk 2:25). It would have withered long since if it had not been
rooted in an upright life and in fellowship with God. Dishonest conduct and
forgetfulness of God are always visited with the withering of hope, for hope
hangs like a fruit on the first two great commandments. Let us all keep hoping,
then, as Simeon did; let us be expectant and on the outlook to the end; and let
us remember that a glad and helpful temper is only possible when we are just
and devout.
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