Simeon's Calling
A meditation for Vocations Sunday
I heard the call a long time ago. Not really sure when it began, but I just
began to watch, to look out for where I might find him. Once I realised I was doing it, I started to listen
hard. My name, Simeon, it means the one
who listens. So I would live up to my
name. I listened for God, and I asked
him about this calling. Was it for me?
Why on earth me? What was I to look for?
A new prophet or a holy one? And from
somewhere the answer came – ‘I am calling you.
Look for the Messiah!’
I’ve looked for a long time – I wasn’t always this old –
carefully checking and testing. A few
have claimed that they were the one. But
they weren’t. But just sometimes, there
was enough doubt in my mind to leave me confused. This calling has been a challenge. Not everyone likes me saying, ‘no, not
them.’ And it’s puzzled me why I should
be so interested, or so particular.
But then, today. The child in her arms! I didn’t think it would be a child. But just suddenly, like a thousand lights
suddenly being lit, there was the child, the Messiah. That it should be him, that I should see him,
I couldn’t help it. I sang. ‘Lord, now lettest thou thy servant depart in
peace, according to thy word. For mine
eyes have seen thy salvation.’
That was a while ago.
It changed me. I no longer look and
turn back disappointed. Now I see him
everywhere. Seeing that child, means I
see God at work in all kinds of places.
I see him in the poor, scratching together enough to feed their
families. I see him in those who arrive
in the city having fled a home somewhere else.
I see him here at the Temple, in the quiet faithful ones who come each
day to pray for someone else. I see him
where old enemies make peace, and where families build bridges to one
another. I see him where I shouldn’t –
in the women who ply their trade on the streets. In the foreigners, who are perplexed by our
ways but want to live with us. In the
crippled and the widowed, and those who God seems to have abandoned. I see him in all these places and more.
And finally, I think I might understand why my song on that
day finished the way it did. Because my call continues, no longer in looking
but in seeing. ‘To be a light to lighten
the Gentiles and the glory of thy people Israel.’
First given at Derby Cathedral 17.4.16.
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