Saturday, January 4, 2025

AfterWords: "Bridges--Old to New"

 


Luke 2:22-35

We look forward to the New Year as a time for making changes. We clean out the house and we strive to “clean out” our lives.

As we consider what we want to do better, or do differently, or stop doing, the Cleveland Clinic offers helpful suggestions[i]:

  1. Focus on starting a new habit, rather than quitting an old one.
  2. Choose realistic goals that are sustainable for the long term.
  3. Make sure your goals are specific and measurable, not vague.
  4. Be flexible and open to changing them along the way, if you need to.
  5. Identify obstacles that might get in the way of your success.
  6. Partner up with an accountability buddy.
  7. Set up reminders to help you stay motivated.
  8. Track your progress.

We need these because people are not doing too good a job of keeping their resolutions. The website, Discover Happy Habits[ii], reports that…

  • The most popular resolutions…are…. improving physical heath (20%) and
    saving more money (20%).
    Others were exercising more (19%), eating healthier (18%), being happy (17%), and losing weight (17%). (NONE OF THESE ARE SPECIFIC ENOUGH)

However, by the end of February, almost 80% of those people of great resolve had abandoned their goals. Yikes!

One of the most helpful of the suggestions above for me has been accountability. I tell someone what I’m going to do, and they hold me to it.

You may or may not have noticed that God makes promises changes publicly as well—through the prophets: Jeremiah—I will put my laws in my peoples’ hearts and minds, and I will forgive them; Joel—I will pour out my Spirit on all people…young and old, male and female, slave and free; and Isaiah—I will bring good news, healing, liberty, release, and comfort to my people.

In our reading today, Simeon notes that God has made good on His promises. On this day in the Temple courts, there is the Child—the One in whom all of God’s promises come together.

Simeon stands on a bridge in time. He stands with one foot in the former world—the world of prophets. He is waiting for Israel’s consolation. And, he stands with one foot in the new world—the world of Jesus Christ, the Word made flesh, Immanuel…God with us. Likewise, you and I stand now on a bridge. From 2024 to 2025 may not be quite as significant a span to cross, but we stand here today looking back over 2024, assessing our lives, our ministry together, our thinking, our relationships with family and friends. Socrates was the one who said, “The unexamined life is not worth living.” So, we examine, we look back. And, we look forward to 2025—a chance to do things differently, to do things better, or to stop doing things that have hurt us or others.

But, if we look only at our own lives, then we have missed the whole point of the Gospel, we’ve missed the whole point of God coming to us. God coming to us is God saying “no” to self and “yes” to us—to someone other than self. So, as we look back on 2024, we should also take account of whether we lived for others, whether we did anything to better others’ lives. And as we look to 2025, we must ask how we might get outside of ourselves and bring life to others. As Christians, we have to think about someone other than ourselves.

We don’t know what happened to Simeon. He’s never mentioned again. Maybe he went to sleep that night and awoke in God’s presence. We do know that what and who he saw that day in the Temple courts is the One who moves us to live better, to serve others—the one who later tells us that we must love God, love our neighbor, and love ourselves. Because of Simeon, thanks be to God, we, too, can say and pray—For our eyes have seen your salvation, which you have prepared in the sight of all nations: a light for revelation to the Gentiles, and the glory of your people Israel.”

As we step into the New Year, let us go boldly as followers of Jesus looking forward to what God will do through our lives personally and through our family faith. May 2025 be the best year yet!

Amen

Sunday, December 29, 2024
“Towards Bethlehem—Mary”
Watch/Listen: HERE