The Presentation of the Lord

All these are very good questions. But they are not the questions that interest St. Luke. Neither then are they the focus of the Feast of the Presentation which has been observed in the Church with great solemnity at least since the fourth century.
The most important thing about this feast is not even the intriguing prophecy of Simeon to Mary that a sword would pierce her heart “that the thoughts of many hearts would be revealed.”

We like candles because they are cozy, homey, and festive. As a child, I used to love to light votive candles at the back of the church. They would continually remind God of my special intention, even when I had long since left the sanctuary. Today I love the cheerful, hopeful candles of the Advent wreathe. And there is nothing like a votive candle burning before an icon to help create an atmosphere of prayer.
These are good reasons to love candles. But the primary meaning of candles in the Catholic tradition is not to create atmosphere or to remind God to answer our prayers.

This Light of revelation to all nations, for that is what “Gentiles” means, later came back to the Temple precincts as a grown man to celebrate the Feast of Tabernacles. On a festive autumn evening, while the Temple plaza was ablaze with torches and full of Jews dancing in celebration of their special relationship with the Almighty, Jesus echoed the words of Simeon and boldly proclaimed “I am the light of the world”(John 8:12).
To become a Christian in the early Church meant to have the darkness of error and despair scattered by this radiant light of revelation. In his light, everything looks different. What was formerly drab grey suddenly becomes dazzling Technicolor. What had been murky becomes clear. What was a conundrum now finally could be understood. This was so much part of the early Christian conversion experience that baptism was called “the enlightenment” and the newly baptized, who wore white robes for the entire week after Easter, were called “the enlightened ones.”

This is stirring to watch. But I daresay we often miss the point. Yes, Christ is our light. But he has ignited us with the fire of his Spirit, and he calls us “the light of the world” (Mat. 5:14). We are not meant, any more than He was, to keep our light under the bushel basket of the home or the church. The light we have received is meant for an entire world languishing in darkness. The Presentation is a feast of mission, a reminder of the call to commit ourselves wholeheartedly to what our last three Popes have called “The New Evangelization.” The candles which we so enjoy in our liturgies and devotions are a reminder that we must not rest while there is even one left who remains in the valley of the shadow of death.