Some random thoughts that had bounced around my head during the day having nothing whatsoever to do with the photos…

We are a pattern-seeking species. We see them everywhere, and when they don’t occur naturally, we make them appear magically.

Take, for example, all the chatter online and off about the significance of today’s date: February 20, 2020. “It’s the same forwards and backward!” L explained cheerfully. “A palindrome!” I guess she learned that word from some social media post or other about the date, but there it is:

02022020

It even works if we write the year first, which I do when name files:

20200202

Of course, this only works if we’re writing the day and month with leading zeros. Otherwise, it’s just 222020 or 202022 — not nearly so exciting.

If you use the Hebrew calendar, it would be 07055780 or 05075780, depending on whether we’re to put the day or month first. In the Islamic calendar, it’s 06081441 or 08061441, again depending on whether day or month is to come first.

All of that is to say the obvious: it’s an arbitrary, meaningless day made somehow special because of an equally arbitrary way of numbering the day. There is no pattern there. We make the pattern and then feel special when it “appears.”

Sometimes, when people see patterns, they read prophetic significance into it. Take, for example, today’s reading in mass:

Thus says the Lord GOD:
Lo, I am sending my messenger
to prepare the way before me;
And suddenly there will come to the temple
the LORD whom you seek,
And the messenger of the covenant whom you desire.
Yes, he is coming, says the LORD of hosts.
But who will endure the day of his coming?
And who can stand when he appears?
For he is like the refiner’s fire,
or like the fuller’s lye.
He will sit refining and purifying silver,
and he will purify the sons of Levi,
Refining them like gold or like silver
that they may offer due sacrifice to the LORD.
Then the sacrifice of Judah and Jerusalem
will please the LORD,
as in the days of old, as in years gone by. (Malachi 3.1-4)

Fr. Longenecker suggested that this first portion is a prophecy that was fulfilled when Jesus was presented in the temple. In the day’s gospel reading, we find:

The child’s father and mother were amazed at what was said about him;
and Simeon blessed them and said to Mary his mother,
“Behold, this child is destined
for the fall and rise of many in Israel,
and to be a sign that will be contradicted
–and you yourself a sword will pierce–
so that the thoughts of many hearts may be revealed.”

And so this is seen as a proof of providence, a proof that God controls everything. Except that the Old Testament source says he will “purify the sons of Levi, / refining them like gold or like silver.” Since the majority of the Jews of Jesus’s time did not convert to Christianity, it seems the sons of Levi weren’t immediately purified — if that’s what it means, and that’s not clear either. Perhaps it’s about corruption: was there less corruption among the “sons of Levi” after the appearance of Jesus? Hard to say, but doubtful. (I don’t even know if there was corruption — I’m just working under the assumption of people being people.)

So this whole thing presents a pattern of prophecy and it’s fulfillment. But it doesn’t. It only creates that pattern if we accept certain interpretations (which I don’t) and go into it with certain presuppositions (which I don’t). For that matter, we don’t even know if this Simeon bloke said these things or even if he existed — the only evidence we have is the scriptural reference, and for many of us, that’s dubious at best.

In other words, there is no naturally occurring pattern there. We create the pattern and then feel special when it “appears.”