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		Stories Seldom Heard307th Edition - 
		February, 2025
 
   
The Prophetess Anna - Luke: Chapter 2: 
22-40 
Welcome to Stories Seldom Heard. Sunday, February 2nd, is the feast day 
of Mary’s purification and the presentation of Jesus in the temple in Jerusalem. 
To celebrate this feast, a reading from Luke’s Gospel has been inserted into a 
long line of Sunday readings from Mark. Luke’s Gospel introduces us to two very 
holy and faithful people who are not mentioned in the other gospels: Simeon and 
Anna. Simeon recognized Jesus as "the light to the Gentiles” and “the glory for 
your people Israel" (Lk 2:30). Anna also recognized the child and “gave thanks 
to God and spoke about the child to all who were awaiting the redemption of 
Jerusalem” (Lk 2:38).
 
 Often Simeon is the only person whose story we hear because the preacher has a 
choice to use either the shorter or longer version of the Gospel 
(1). The shorter version stops before we hear about Anna’s 
presence. What a shame! Scripture reminds us that God calls all people—women and 
men—to be prophets and to proclaim the Good News. Anna understands her 
responsibility and immediately begins to preach.
 
 Despite Anna's near invisibility and brief appearance, this passage offers us a 
unique insight into her character. She also reminds us of the graces that come 
as a result of a life of prayer. Anna is of the tribe of Asher, one of the 
twelve sons of Jacob. In this passage, they name her the “daughter of Phanuel.” 
Phanuel could refer to her blood line, but the reference also has another 
connotation. We might miss the importance of this reference, but the Jewish 
community understood. Phanuel is the place where Jacob met "the stranger" or 
"the angel" (Gen 32:23 -32). All night long Jacob, Anna’s ancestor, wrestled 
with a powerful force that never gave up. At dawn the angel gave Jacob a 
blessing and a new name, Israel. Jacob named that place Phanuel: the place of 
struggle where he "met God face to face." To be remembered as the daughter of 
Phanuel is to say she is a woman who never abandoned her search for God even if 
it meant a life of struggle and because of that she, like her ancestor Jacob, 
met God face-to-face.
 
 We don't know a lot about Anna's life, but we can assume it wasn’t easy. She was 
a widow, after only seven years of marriage. Even though she was probably only a 
teenager when she got married, she never remarried. She never had children or a 
family of her own. She led a very lonely and difficult existence in a culture 
where children were a sign of God's blessing. But Anna was no withering widow, 
even in a society that offered women limited options. She didn't get lost in a 
small village or become an anonymous temple dweller. She was the “daughter of 
Phanuel,” a faithful daughter even in the midst of darkness and doubt. Nothing 
blocked her search for God. Nothing lessened her trust in God, not even the 
struggles involved in a long life of widowhood and waiting!
 
 Waiting is not one of our favorite occupations. The adage “practice makes 
perfect” usually doesn’t fit the situation. Often the longer we wait the more 
difficult it is to hope that what we expect will come to be. But Anna is the 
daughter of Phanuel. She understood the importance of holding on to the end, 
even if it meant daily disappointment and careful vigilance. How and when the 
Promise would be fulfilled was a mystery and she was willing to dwell within 
that mystery.
 
 I've often wondered how many times, in her thirties, fifties, and into her 
eighties, Anna had to adjust her expectations of the Promise that God made. What 
illusions did she have to let go of to recognize the Promised One of God? 
Certainly, she would not have expected the Promised One to come as an eight-day 
old child bundled in plain, common cloth. "Wonderful, Counselor, a mighty King, 
the Prince of Peace," would most likely arrive in purple and gold: royal 
clothing. Where was his entourage to announce his arrival?
 
 Don’t you wonder? Was it disturbing to Anna that Mary and Joseph were poor 
people who couldn’t even afford a lamb to offer to God? Did Anna question God’s 
judgment? God's choice of Jesus' parents? Or perhaps, did she question her own 
judgment? How did she know she was not mistaken before she "spoke to all who 
looked forward to the deliverance of Jerusalem?" (Lk 2:38).
 
 Anna spoke with clarity. She was a prophetess: the mouthpiece of God. Waiting 
sharpened her discernment. It purified her vision. It gave her time to pray and 
ponder the prophetic words of scripture. Attentive waiting deepened Anna’s 
relationship with God and it can do the same for us. Waiting can help us 
reevaluate our expectations and clarify what we have mistaken for the truth. 
Waiting can give us the wisdom to let go of what is false. Waiting, used well, 
can give us the courage to be disillusioned without losing hope. In fact, Thomas 
Merton describes this kind of attentive waiting as prayer.
 
 Truly Anna is a watch woman for God. Eighty-four years old and waiting, not for 
death, but for new life. Anna's quite a teacher. She teaches us how to move 
gracefully through the seasons of our lives: the seasons of struggle, insecurity 
and change without losing hope. Her faithfulness to prayer and fasting reminds 
us of what carries us through unexpected cold winters of grief, and dry summers 
of unanswered hopes. She also teaches us that often God appears to us at 
unexpected times and in ways we least expect.
 
 Anna's story is not exactly comforting. It would be easier to hear that the 
process of meeting God face-to-face is a much gentler evolution. But that's not 
the way Anna's life developed and often our lives follow the same pattern. Yet, 
in the process Anna became a prophetess, one who recognized and announced the 
arrival of the Promised One. We, too, are called to be daughters and sons of 
Phanuel: people who struggle with our questions, delayed answers and 
disappointments; people who trust that while we wait God has not left us on our 
own; people who become wiser and more discerning as we wait; people who with 
surety proclaim God’s small and large daily arrivals; people who wait not for 
death, but for abundant life.
   
 
1. Simeon’s prayer, the "Nunc 
Dimittis," is a prayer we pray each day as part of the Divine Office (the 
official prayer of the church). 
 
Special thanks to Mary Ellen Green 
and Maria Hetherton who have helped in editing this article. Also, 
special thanks to Bob McGrath who conscientiously mails SSH to you 
each month. Without Bob’s generosity, this service would not be possible. To 
make changes or remove your name from Stories Seldom Heard mailing list, please 
contact Bob at robert.mcgrath@mgrc.com. 
Thank you.  
 
"Stories Seldom Heard" is a monthly article 
written by Sister Patricia Bruno, O.P. Sister is a Dominican 
Sister of San Rafael, California. This service is offered to the Christian 
Community to enrich one's personal and spiritual life. The articles can be used 
for individual or group reflection. If you would like "Stories Seldom Heard" 
sent to a friend, please send a note to Sister Patricia at 
brunoop2017@gmail.com. If you 
would like to support this ministry, please send a donation to Dominican Sisters 
of San Rafael, c/o Sister Patricia Bruno, O.P., 40 Locust Avenue, San Rafael, CA 
94901. Thank you. 
 
				
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