Protecting Catholic Families for Generations
Council 10802

 
Knight Time
February 2006

THE MONTHLY NEWSLETTER OF THE KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS,
COUNCIL 10802
2960 CANYON ROAD, ESCONDIDO, CA 92025

Mission Statement . St. Timothy's Council Knights of Columbus is an association or brotherhood of Catholic gentlemen. The Council provides an opportunity for fellowship with men who hold the same beliefs, values and priorities in life. This Council is dedicated to the support of the parish, the family, the Catholic faith, the Escondido community, and our country.

Presentation of the Lord
February 02, 2006

According to the Mosaic law a mother who had given birth to a man-child was considered unclean for seven days.  Moreover she was to remain three and thirty days "in the blood of her purification." For a maid-child the time which excluded the mother from sanctuary was even doubled.  When the time (forty or eighty days) was over the mother was to "bring to the temple a lamb for a holocaust and a young pigeon or turtle dove for sin." If she was not able to offer a lamb, she was to take two turtle doves or two pigeons.  The priest prayed for her and so she was cleansed.  (Leviticus 12:2-8).

Forty days after the birth of Christ, Mary complied with this precept of the law.  She redeemed her first-born from the temple (Numbers 18:15), and was purified by the prayer of Simeon the just, in the presence of Anna the prophetess (Luke 2:22 sqq.).  No doubt this event, the first solemn introduction of Christ into the house of God, was in the earliest times celebrated in the Church of Jerusalem.  We find it attested for the first half of the fourth century by the pilgrim of Bordeaux, Egeria or Silvia.  The day (14 February) was solemnly kept by a procession to the Constantinian basilica of the Resurrection, a homily on Luke 2:22 sqq., and the Holy Sacrifice.  But the feast then had no proper name; it was simply called the fortieth day after Epiphany.  This latter circumstance proves that in Jerusalem, Epiphany was then the feast of Christ's birth.

From Jerusalem the feast of the fortieth day spread over the entire Church, and later on was kept on the 2nd of February, since within the last twenty-five years of the fourth century, the Roman feast of Christ's nativity (25 December) was introduced.  In Antioch it is attested in 526 (Cedrenue).  In the entire Eastern Empire it was introduced by the Emperor Justinian I (542) in thanksgiving for the cessation of the great pestilence which had depopulated the city of Constantinople.  In the Greek Church it was called Hypapante tou Kyriou, the meeting (occursus) of the Lord and His mother with Simeon and Anna.  The Armenians call it "The Coming of the Son of God into the Temple" and still keep it on the 14th of February (Tondini di Quaracchi, Calendrier de la Nation Arménienne, 1906, 48); the Copts term it "presentation of the Lord in the Temple" (Nilles, Kal. man., II 571, 643).  Perhaps the decree of Justinian gave occasion also to the Roman Church (to Gregory I?) to introduce this feast, but definite information is wanting on this point.  The feast appears in the Gelasianum (manuscript tradition of the seventh century) under the new title of Purification of the Blessed Virgin Mary.

From The Catholic Encyclopedia


February 2006 Newsletter

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