Epiphany Year C
January 8th, 2007
On the Twelfth Day of Christmas
Matthew 2:1-12
Today is Epiphany Sunday. In most Christian churches Epiphany is a yearly festival, held on January 6th, commemorating the revealing of Jesus as the Christ to the three wise men who had traveled to Bethlehem. Some call Epiphany old Christmas or because it comes twelve days after Christmas day, twelfth night. This celebration lies behind the familiar song, “The Twelve Days of Christmas” in which a gift is given on each of the twelve days ending with a partridge in a pear tree. Epiphany then is the climax of our Christmas experience and our focus today is fixed squarely upon the three wise men who brought gifts to the Christ child.
I was reading an article in a scholarly journal that actually suggested that the wise men might be wise woman. I know that must be false because Wise women would have asked directions, arrived on time, helped deliver the baby, cleaned the stable, made a casserole, brought practical gifts, and there would be peace on earth.
So yes the Wise Men followed the star rather than asking for directions. Yes, they got there late. The child was already born. And yes, their gifts were not of the practical sort. Nevertheless these travelers from the East have much to teach on this Epiphany Sunday.
The story begins with the
three wise men seeing a star. In the ancient world, the occurrence of a star
or a constellation of stars was often associated with the birth of a notable
person. So having seen the star that Matthew says heralds the arrival of
Messiah, having interpreted that star as astrologers do, the Magi go to
worship, to pay homage to the child they refer to as the king of the Jews.
It is no big shocker that Herod the king is not pleased. It
has always been the case, and I am afraid that it will always remain the case,
that the presence in the world of that which is most godly evokes the
resistance of that which is most insidious. It is an inescapable spiritual
truth that when tender grace bursts upon the scene, the harsh forces of
selfishness array against it. And so like a roach scurrying for a dark place
when the light is turned on, Herod frantically plots to destroy the tender but
mighty One who threatens his throne.
He begins by inviting the Magi to a secret meeting. One
thing I have learned in the church is never to trust secret meetings. "Go
and search for the child," Herod tells the Magi. "I want to worship
him, too." Herod is a liar. He intends no worship. He intends to pay no
homage. He has no gifts to offer. He intends only to exploit the Magi, to use
them as pawns in the hidden agenda he secretly and darkly wishes to advance.
"When you find him," he says to them, "get back to me so that I
can worship him too."
And so the Magi leave Herod, the threatened one; and they
follow the star until it stops over the place where the child was. And Matthew
tells us, in a verse that almost leaps off the page, that "when they saw
that the star had stopped, they were overwhelmed with joy." And this is
where I want to spend some time digging around today.
I can promise you that when the Magi experienced that joy,
they were struck by contrast. They were struck by how different that joy felt
from the feelings they had experienced in that secret meeting with Herod. One
felt so right. The other felt so wrong. The joy they felt when the star
stopped was the inner confirmation that they had arrived at the place. Anytime
we experience that kind of deep joy that is God's gift, then we know that we
are where we are meant to be.
Have you ever had such a moment? Sure you have. Stop and
call it to mind. A moment when things seemed to really line up for you. A
moment when you felt so at home in your own skin, so at one with yourself and
the world, that you knew the place at which you had arrived is the place where
you belong. A moment when you can say, "This is me. This is why I'm
alive. This is who I am. This is where I am meant to be." A moment when
the star you've been following stops and you find yourself overwhelmed with
the joy that comes from being you. That's the moment I wish for you. That's
the moment God wishes for all of us. And what I also wish for you is that all
of your moments could be characterized by that kind of joy. In the new year to
come and in whatever years may follow for us, what if all of life could be the
delightful experience of being flooded by and overwhelmed with joy? That joy
happens, when like the Magi, we find ourselves at the place where we can
freely and truly be who we really and truly are. Where is that joy place for
you?
That's not as easy a question to answer as it may seem,
because our lives are often not characterized by such joy. Our lives often
reflect something other than the experience of being overwhelmed with joy. Why
is that?
There are lots of people-I confess to you that I have been
one of them-who live out of something other than the Self God has given as
gift. And anytime we live out of something other than the Self God has given
us, we are literally living beside ourselves, and there's not joy in that. Let
me say it this way. Joy comes when we live from the inner Self that is of God
and not from the outer expectations that come from the world.
Let me give you an example. Many people in this culture are
following stars that they intuitively know will never come to stop at any
place they could ever call home, but they try to follow them anyway. Many in
this culture are in a frantic and feverish gallop to have all the things the
culture says represent success and happiness. But after getting all that, I
still hear people say, "I'm not happy in this job. I feel like a rat on a
wheel. But I have this house and the second mortgage and all the other stuff
and I'm up to my eyes in debt to pay for. I've always been told that when I
got all this, I'd be happy, but I'm not." I've heard that before. There's
no joy in that, because that's living from the world's outer expectations and
not from the inner Self that is of God.
Some of us never have such experiences of joy because
we live under the burden of the expectations other people have of us, which
keep us from being able to align with our real selves. "I feel like I'm
living for everybody else. I've lost me along the way." I've heard that
before. And so lots of people live lives of fragmentation because they try to
find their center in everyone else they are trying to please rather than
within themselves. No wonder people are so dizzy. Their center is out there,
in a million different others, with a zillion different expectations; and they
live dizzying lives of spinning from one false center to another.
The Magi were overwhelmed with joy, because they realized,
they recognized, that they had arrived at the place where they were meant to
be, the place where they were most themselves, the place where they could say
that they were at home. They had arrived at the place where the divine and the
human meet. They had arrived at the place where heaven and earth come
together. "Yes, this is it." The joy they experienced confirmed
that.
But at that moment, the Magi had a decision to make. You
see, as soon as they stopped and bathed in the delicious joy that confirmed
their arrival at the right place, they remembered their secret meeting with
Herod, and they knew that they had to decide what they would do with what he
had asked. And at that moment, they were caught in between their joy and their
fear. After all, it's not every day that King Herod the Great asks something
of you. And if you don't do what he asks, you could be in trouble. It's not a
good thing to cross a fearful and threatened King.
We all know what it's like to be caught between our
joy and our fear. Every human being has both sets of forces within. One set
clings to safety and defensiveness, hanging on to the past moving in a
backward direction, afraid to grow, afraid to take chances, afraid to
jeopardize what one already has, afraid of independence and freedom. The other
set of forces impels one forward toward wholeness and uniqueness of self,
toward confidence in the face of the world.
And so the Magi,
like every one of us, had a decision to make. They were in a free choice
situation, between the joy of the King and the fear of the king, and they had
to choose between the delight and joy of one and the anxiety and fear of the
other. They had to choose between the forward movement of one and the backward
movement of the other. In that way, they mirror what is true for all of us;
afraid to grow and afraid not to grow.
Well, verse 12, the verse that closes this story, may be
one of my favourite verses in the whole Bible, because it is a verse of hope
and courage and life; and as I sat with this passage, this is the verse that
opened up the whole experience of the Magi to me. "Having been warned in
a dream not to return to Herod, they left for their own country by another
road."
The Magi refused to go in the direction of their
fears. Through the language of their dream, which is another way of saying
that through their own God-given, inner voices, they chose life and growth and
joy. They trusted their own inner experience of joy, even if that experience
flew in the face of the power and authority and expectations of the world.
They went in the direction of the Divine, even though Herod wanted them to go
in another direction. They did that because that inner joy they experienced
was worth trusting and worth following and worth building a life around. That
inner joy you experience when you're who and where you're meant to be is the
still, small voice of God, beckoning you to live and move and have your being
in the Self God has given you and not in what the world expects.
Herod has a thousand faces. He is alive today in anyone or
anything that leads you away from being overwhelmed with the joy God wants you
to have, the joy that comes from being who you really and truly are, where you
really and truly want to be, and doing what you really and truly want to do. I
know what it's like to capitulate to Herod. I also know what it's like to be
flooded by joy. And I think I'm finally learning that any fear I have of Herod
is not worth comparing to the delights of trusting my inner experience of joy
that is the gift of God and moving courageously, confidently, in that
direction.
That's what God wishes for you. I do know it's a tough
move. Herod's pull is strong. But on this Sunday of Epiphany, when once again
we watch a few stargazers offer some gifts to the child who is a king, perhaps
we can recognize as well that the Magi bring a gift today to you and to me.
What they bring is the gift of their example. It's the example of saying
"No" to Herod and "Yes" to Christ. It's the example of
saying "No" to fear and "Yes" to joy. It's the example of
saying "No" to the painful past and "Yes" to the joyful
future. It's the example of trusting your joy enough to build an entire life
around it, whether the rest of the world understands and approves or not. And
if we can receive that gift, then out of the experience of our lives joyfully
lived, we will be more fully and richly able to offer our own gift to the
Christ child. And I can think of no gift that would grace him more than for us
to trust and to live each day in the joy that is the reason he came in the
first place.