The Meaning of the Feast of the Entry of the Most Holy Theotokos into the Temple for Modern Youth and Children
The Feast of the Entry into the Temple (December 4) describes an event from the childhood of the Virgin Mary. According to church tradition, her parents, the righteous Joachim and Anna, vowed to dedicate their long-awaited daughter to God and at the age of three brought her to the Jerusalem Temple, where she, climbing the high steps, entered the sanctuary on her own. For a modern person, especially a young one, this story may seem archaic and even traumatic: the separation of a child from their parents, life at the temple, and the renunciation of a normal childhood. However, its profound message, when interpreted correctly, turns out to be surprisingly relevant and psychologically deep.
1. Free choice and responsibility as an antithesis to infantilism
A key point often overlooked is the voluntary nature of the little Mary's act. She was not given away against her will. Iconography and hymnography emphasize that she went "with joyful steps" towards her destiny, turning back as if encouraging her parents. This is the first important meaning.
For children (6-12 years): The story can be translated into the language of first independent decisions. This does not necessarily have to be a religious choice. It can be a decision to honestly admit a mistake, protect the weak, take on a difficult but interesting task (such as participating in an olympiad, mastering a complex musical instrument). The feast says: your will and your brave step towards something greater is a value. You are not just an object of your parents' plans, but a subject of your life already now.
For adolescents and youth: This challenges the culture of infantilism and passivity, where it is convenient to stay in the "parental home" of comfortable ready-made decisions, foreign opinions, and avoiding responsibility. The Entry of Mary into the Temple is a metaphor for self-determination. This is ...
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