Now there was a man in Jerusalem,
whose name was Simeon, and this man was righteous and devout, waiting for the
consolation of Israel, and the Holy Spirit was upon him. And it had been
revealed to him by the Holy Spirit that he would not see death before he had
seen the Lord's Christ. And he came in the Spirit into the temple, and when the
parents brought in the child Jesus, to do for him according to the custom of
the Law, he took him up in his arms and blessed God and said,
“Lord, now you are letting your
servant depart in peace,
according to your word; for my eyes have seen your salvation
that you have prepared in the presence of all peoples,
a light for revelation to
the Gentiles,
and for glory to your people Israel.”
- Luke 2:25-32
In order to understand Simeon, we
need to keep in mind the times in which he lived. The Jewish religious leaders
were largely political and not deeply spiritual. There had been no prophet in
Israel for 400 years. Israel had been oppressed by one foreign power after
another during those long centuries, and even now they were ruled by the
corrupt Herod under the dominion of Rome. It would have been easy for Simeon to
get caught up in the political fervor of the times and to wonder skeptically,
“Where are these great promises of God for His people?”
Simeon is described as “righteous and
devout” (2:25). These are not words we use to describe people today but they
are important to understand this faithful old man. “Righteous” means that
his behavior in the sight of God and towards his fellow man was in accordance
with God’s standards. He wasn’t a phony, practicing his religion only to be
seen and admired by others. He quietly and consistently obeyed God, even when
people weren’t looking. “Devout” has the connotation of reverent. It sometimes
means careful. It means that Simeon wasn’t careless about the spiritual life.
While you can skim over these two words in a flash, they reflect a lifetime of
cultivation. No one accidentally becomes righteous and devout. Simeon
cultivated his walk with God.
The key to Simeon’s righteous life
can be seen in his view of himself in relation to God. In verse 29, the word
“Lord” is an unusual one, used only five times in reference to God. We get our
word “despot” from it. The word means “absolute ownership and uncontrolled
power.” Simeon saw God as the Sovereign Lord who had prepared His salvation,
and had graciously allowed Simeon to see it. Simeon also called himself
the Lord’s “servant”, this is the same word that the Apostle Paul used to
describe himself as the “bond slave” of Christ in Romans 1:1. This means
that Simeon saw himself as the slave of this Sovereign Lord. Slaves have no
rights. They belong to their owner and their only obligation is to obey. Simeon
had a high view of God and a humble view of himself. Simply put, Simeon
had a very high view of the importance of God and a rather low view of his own
importance. This is why he was able to say that his eyes had seen the
salvation of the Lord.
We will never see the glories of
God right in front of us if our eyes are too focused on ourselves. If your
view of yourself is large and your view of God is small, what do you think you
will spend most of your time focusing on? Simeon spent his entire life
combing the Word of God, trusting in the promises of God, and looking for the
salvation of God. This is not a bad model for us today.
Oh God, grant us an ever enlarging
vision of You and an ever shrinking view of ourselves. Help us to focus
our minds and our hearts not on ourselves, but on You - Amen.
Jeff Frazier
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