This
coming Sunday is a pivot-point in the year, forty days on from Christmas, when
we turn away from celebrating Jesus’ birth and turn towards remembering his
agonising suffering, death, and glorious resurrection, in Holy Week and Easter.
This
coming Sunday we recall the occasion, forty days after his birth, when Jesus’
parents presented him before God at the Temple in Jerusalem. This coming Sunday
we bless candles — the ritual lighting of which symbolises our deepest moments
of sorrow and of joy; and of recognition that God, who is invisible, is with
us.
When
a Jewish woman gave birth, she entered niddah, a period of seclusion and
abstinence from intimacy with her husband she entered whenever she bled, in
menstruation or in childbirth. Niddah lasted around seven days (or, seven days
after the bleeding stopped) after which she would take a ritual bath before
being reunited with her husband. (In recent years there has been a renaissance
of this practice of withdrawal and reunion among Jewish women, as a beautiful
gift of self-care, and a means of sustaining intimacy over time.)
After
giving birth to a son, a woman entered niddah for seven days, followed by
thirty-three days before she returned to public life, marked by presenting her
son before God. After giving birth to a daughter, the periods were doubled —
fourteen days of niddah, followed by sixty-six days before returning to public
life.
This
much is set out in the law of Moses, though no reason is given for why it
should be thirty-three days for a son and sixty-six for a daughter — leading to
much speculation. My own speculation (no more than that) is this. In Genesis 46
we read about the family of Jacob — grandson of father Abraham, and whom God
had re-named Israel — who went with him down to Egypt to find salvation from a
lengthy, region-wide famine. Jacob had twelve sons — who would give their names
to the twelve tribes of Israel — and a daughter, by four different women, his
wives Leah and Rachel, and their slaves Zilpah and Bilhah. We read that the
number of his offspring, those belonging to him, his sons and their children,
by his first wife Leah — beginning with his firstborn son, Reuben — numbered
thirty-three; and the total number by all four women came to sixty-six. (The
list of names and the accompanying numbers don’t exactly match; but these are
symbolic numbers, not literal ones.)
I
would suggest that to wait thirty-three days before presenting a son before
God, and sixty-six days before presenting a daughter, is a means of including
them in the family of Israel. Every son extends the family into the next
generation. Every daughter completes the family again. Thirty-three. Sixty-six.
This one, too, belongs to Israel. This one, too, takes their place within the
family who are saved from famine, and, later, saved again, from enslavement.
This one, too, is numbered.
So,
Mary and Joseph bring Jesus, forty days on — seven, plus thirty-three — to take
his place within the story of his people.
And
there, there will be a reversal, a pivot-point, a turning. For the old man
Simeon will bless Mary with a strange blessing: ‘and a sword shall pierce your
heart, too.’
This
points us to the cross, where a spear is thrust into Jesus’ heart to establish
that he is, truly, dead; and the blood that has pooled there, and separated out
into red and white blood cells, pours forth as blood and water. And a sword
shall pierce your heart, too. Mary, at the foot of the cross. Her heart
pierced, in the personal pain of any mother who witnesses the violent death of
her son. But also, a symbolic union. Mary, who is the Church, the family of
Jesus, shares in his piercing, in his death — and in his resurrection.
Just
as Jesus is brought into the story of the family of Jacob/Israel, so, now, Mary
— and all future generations to come — are brought into the story of the family
of Jesus (which is a continuation, and a fulfilment, of the family of Israel).
This
is the story into which the Church enters, participated in, down through the
generations. A share in Christ’s suffering, dying, rising in glory. This is the
life we are called to live in the world, not seeking to shield ourselves from
pain but to know pain transformed, to bear faithful witness to, first, evil,
and then, good — and truth, and beauty — rising from the bloody ground.
This
is the story we enter into, symbolically — in embodied ways — in observing
Christmas and Holy Week and Easter; and in observing the pivot-point between
them, this Sunday, with the blessing of candles, which we light in times of
great joy and sorrow.




