The Feast of the
Presentation of the Lord, Luke 2:22-40
When the days were
completed for [her] purification according to the law of Moses, Mary and Joseph
took Jesus up to Jerusalem to present him to the Lord.
The
Feast of the Presentation of the Lord has been called the Feast of the
Purification of the Blessed Virgin Mary – and although the Marian nature of
this feast has been completely lost in the reformed calendar, at least the date
has remained: As the new mother went to the Temple forty days after having
given birth, so too the Blessed Virgin Mother of God came to fulfill the Law
through her Purification.
But
why did Mary come to the Temple to be purified? Was she not already most pure?
Had her Son defiled her in his most wondrous Birth? No, certainly he did not –
in being born of the Virgin, Christ did no harm to her virginal integrity but
rather consecrated it. Simply speaking, Mary had no need of purification, but
she humbled herself (after the example of her Son) to follow the precepts of the Law which was soon to pass away.