Magi Sermon The Rev. Lisa Graves All rights reserved.

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1 Magi Sermon The Rev. Lisa Graves All rights reserved. I had lunch with an old college friend recently and was surprised to hear her use a Christian term to describe her rather loathsome ex boyfriend. I had an Epiphany about Lawrence. She said. He s an idiot. Now my surprise wasn t over the fact that she thought Lawrence was an idiot. I know many who might agree. My surprise was that she used the word Epiphany. I asked her what she meant. She meant of course that she had had a rather giant revelation, a sudden enlightenment. I of course, found it fascinating that she used this word with almost no understanding of what it meant as a Christian term or season, a season in fact that we are nearly upon. Epiphany in the Christian sense means "manifestation", often of divine power. We celebrate Epiphany on January 6 th, the day the magi visited Jesus in Bethlehem.

2 Because that is when God s love in Christ Was revealed to the world, Especially to the gentiles. Epiphany is the celebration of the mystery contained in today s gospel, the revelation of God to mankind in human form. Epiphany is the final celebration that bridges the end of the Christmas season and the beginning of the season of epiphany that lasts until lent. And so, today is the last Sunday of the season that celebrates Christ s birth into the world, a birth that cannot be understood if one does not leave the stable and move toward three kings bearing gifts. It s true that much of the world Will not move beyond the manger. They stay kneeling in front of a newborn king for one day and never look back as they eave the holy family intact and entombed in a perpetual birth scene that offers little more than sentiment in their daily world.

3 But in the Christian season, we celebrate not only a newborn but the mystery and meaning of that birth. We often say we are a resurrection people, which nods to the importance and life giving salvation of Easter. But we are also a people of the incarnation, the mystery of God s choosing to not only call to us always, but to come to us as one of us. The Epiphany celebrates God s revelation Of that incarnation. William Barclay says that When Jesus Christ came, the world was in an eagerness of expectation. Men and women were waiting for god, and the desire for God was in their hearts. They had discovered that they could not build the golden age without God. It was to a waiting world that Jesus came; and when he came, the ends of the earth were gathered at his cradle. It was the first sign and symbol of the world conquest of Christ. In today s gospel story

4 the dark world is blessed by those who watch the skies for light. The Magi, or Magoi were for Persia what the Levites were for the Jews, a holy priesthood of advisors and prophets. Barclay, calls them men of holiness and wisdom. These magi were men who were skilled in philosophy, medicine and natural science. They were soothsayers and interpreters of dreams. And at their best the Magi were good and holy men, who sought for truth. The Magi watched the skies for signs. In those times, the skies were God s vehicle for signs and wonders. The stars were ordered and could be observed. Any changes, any new bursts of light could be noted and attributed to god s transforming the old into the new. Many theologians and astronomers have offered suggestions for what light was seen at the time of Jesus birth. It was a light so great

5 that the magi of the east could note it and follow it to its purpose in Bethlehem. Around 11 BC Halley s comet was visible shooting across the skies. Around 7 BC Saturn and Jupiter shone brightly together. In the years 5-2 BC in the first day of the Egyptian month of Mesori, Sirius the dog star rose at sunrise and shone with exceptional brilliance. Interestingly, the name of the month, Mesori means the birth of a prince. Whatever light they saw, the magi, knew by the light of a new star that a new king was being born into the world. Now, not everyone embraced this new light. Especially King Herod. King Herod the great was not well liked. He was half Jew and half Edomite. He ingratiated himself with the Romans which left him reviled by his subjects. Most importantly, the older Herod became, the more suspicious

6 and violent he became. Out of jealousy and suspicion, he murdered his mother his wife and three of his sons. Any who opposed him were imprisoned and it was said that it was safer to be Herod s pig than to be his son. It is no surprise then that upon hearing a child had been born that might be hailed as a new king by the nations of the world, well, Herod felt a little threatened. He responds in fear and hate, with plans to kill the child, and all infants of a certain age. It is said that there are only three ways to respond to an epiphany of Christ. Once we are given the astounding revelation of God s love for us in Christ, we have a choice. We can respond as Herod does, in fear and hatred. Herod is so full of darkness that news of this good light prompts him to turn to the priests and scribes, the scriptural experts to learn enough about the covenant prophecies to find the child and assasinate his threat.

7 There are still those in the world who respond to God s love and presence in fury and anguish. We can also respond with indifference. The priests and scribes, who had lovingly tended God s prophecies and scrolls for centuries do not allow the star or the magi to change their routine. Their hearts do not quicken in hope that at last God s promise has come to live among them. You would never know that the kingdom had come near and beckoned. This is how much of our world lives now. Finally, we can respond As the Magi did, in adoration and worship. The magi saw the star, assumed the risky endeavor of travel and tracking it to find the newborn king. They brought with them their hearts and hopes and laid them at the cradle along with their finest gifts and offerings. We too bring gifts to the cradle. We bring ourselves, our hearts and minds, our deepest fears and our secret desires. But while we are at the cradle,

8 we realize, as the magi did, that this infant represents possibilities and growth and change that we cannot imagine. We cannot capture his purpose or define him, he is God among us and he is mystery and majesty and more than we can ever know. It is this epiphany, this understanding of Christ that takes us from the manger and the limited understanding of a baby s birth and flings us to the dangerous road of escape to Egypt and Nazareth and finally Golgotha. And we know that the unknowable love of God not only stands in the doorway beckoning us to him, but actually crosses the threshold of the world and come among us as flesh and blood. This is what gives meaning to the birth of our Lord, the realization that God came among us as the light of the world that leads us away from Christ s birth and on to the cross.

May the love of God in Jesus Christ bring us to the light, lost in wonder, love and praise. Amen. 9