Sermon Text 2025.02.02 — The blood is the life
February 2, 2025 Text: Luke 2:22-24
Dear Friends in Christ,
When the Gospel was read today, how many of thought, “I remember hearing these same words recently.” Well, you would be correct. You are dismissed. No, please stay. Our text for today we also heard on December 29, 2024. That day the sermon was also on the Gospel, but we concentrated on Simeon and his words. Today we focus on the first three verses which are right before Simeon enters the picture.
Back in 1931 Universal Studios produced the movie Dracula. In that movie you may remember the creepy black and white details of the interior of the eerie castle. Spider webs are everywhere. The white webs remain undisturbed as the Count makes his way through them. On the other hand, Mr. Renfield, who is following the Count, must cut through the webs. Dracula pauses and remarks, “The spider, spinning his web for the unweary fly. The blood is the life, Mr. Renfield.”
As we focus on Mary’s purification today and Jesus’ presentation in the temple, we tie these happenings together with the Old Testament commands. It helps us to see . . .
“THE BLOOD IS THE LIFE”
As Lutherans one of the things that we believe is that “Scripture interprets Scripture.” That is so true today. Mary and Joseph are going for Mary’s purification because it was commanded in Leviticus chapter 12.
In this chapter God speaks to Moses who then passes on these instructions to the people. The Lord tells him that when a woman bears a male child she shall be unclean for seven days. On the eight day the child is to be circumcised. That happened to Jesus right before our text in Luke 2:21. Then the woman is to continue in the blood of her purifying for thirty-three more days. So, we know that Jesus when presented is 40 days old. The first verse of our text says, “And when the time came for their purification according to the Law of Moses, the brought him up to Jerusalem to present him to the Lord.”
We don’t follow the Old Testament laws today, there is no 40-day purifying for women, but they do need time to recover from childbirth. We could say we do present our children, either at the birth, the baptism, a gathering. There is a moment of “welcome to the world.”
Mary and Joseph did this for Jesus. They presented him to His Father. Back to Leviticus. The Lord commanded that after the purifying the parents bring to the priest at the entrance to the tent of meeting a lamb a year old for a burnt offering or a pigeon or turtledove for a sin offering. This made atonement for the mother. She would be clean from the flow of her blood. Since Mary and Joseph gave the birds instead of the lamb for the sacrifice, we know that they were poor. Again, our text, verses 23 and 24. (“As is written in the Law of the Lord, ‘Every male who first opens the womb shall be called holy to the Lord’? and to offer a sacrifice according to what is said in the Law of the Lord, ‘a pair of turtledoves, or two young pigeons.’”
A sacrifice meant blood was spilled. This whole thing is bloody. The circumcision would have been bloody. The purifying was bloody. But you see, the blood meant something. The blood is the life.
We can bloody ourselves up pretty good with our behavior. A right cross to the mouth when we talk about others. A left jab to the eye when we see things differently than the Lord. An uppercut to the nose when we sniff around in places we shouldn’t be. Then the knockout punch to the side of the head when we downplay our deeds. We are bloodied. We are down . . . and we are out. We need some help getting back to our feet.
The blood is the life, but not our blood. It is the blood of the circumcised child who became an obedient Son of the Father all the way to the cross. It is the blood mingling down to take care of our questionable behavior. God set aside animal blood in the Old Testament as a picture that pointed to the person and work of Jesus Christ. Deuteronomy 12:23a says, “Be sure you do not eat the blood, because the blood is life . . .” But Jesus freed us from this restriction through his blood. So much so that the Apostle John writes in chapter 6, “I tell you the truth, unless you eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you have no life in you. Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood has eternal life, and I will raise him up at the last day.”
Jesus was born to shed his blood and give us life. The blood is the life.
Amen.