Tags
attention, Epiphany, faith, fear, God, Jesus, joy, learning, magi, mess, pilgrimage, questions, Sermon, wonder
When you are preparing for ordination, you get asked lots of “big picture” questions: Who is Jesus to you? Why do you think you need to be a priest to live out your call? Where do you see God in your daily life? Fortunately, or not, those are not really questions we ask each other in our everyday lives. We sort of settle into a comfort zone with our faith, hoping that just being in church, or maybe being in a study group, or doing some sort of devotional practice will help us grow in faith. We likely feel connected to God, but we may not regularly engage in the rigorous questioning of our faith.
Our gospel lesson today opens up for us how easily we can miss the activity of God if we aren’t paying attention. Today we celebrate the feast of the Epiphany – the revelation of Jesus’ identity as the Messiah through the journey of the Magi. But before we get to those cool, and slightly odd gifts, we learn a lot about the context of Jesus’ arrival. First, we are told about King Herod – a man desperate to hold on to power by whatever means possible. Who, when hearing a child has been born, a tiny little baby – who might, one day – threaten his power, is terrified. And so, Herod goes to the scholars to confirm where this threat is. Then, he proceeds to meet with the Magi in secret, pretending that he too wants to honor this new leader (as if that would ever be something a paranoid, power-hungry leader would do), and schemes to make sure he can find this threat through the Magi. And we learn, well after this passage, that his terror is so strong that he kills a whole generation of male children to ensure this supposed future king cannot threaten his power. Herod is so obsessed with power, he is blind to the extraordinary thing happening in front of him.[i]
Then we are told about the people of faith. We are told that the Magi’s news terrifies all of Jerusalem too. For a people of faith who were eagerly awaiting a Messiah, we now see how the system of oppression and fear that Herod has created has paralyzed them. Though a Messiah would free them, they only know that in their day-to-day life, any threat to Herod means havoc and suffering in their lives. Even the Biblical Scholars of Herod’s day miss the movement of God. They very clearly state that the Messiah is to be born in Bethlehem. One would think that even if strangers tell you the Messiah has come, your scholarly training might make you curious enough to follow the Magi and see if a revolution is coming. But even their academic training does not embolden them for action.[ii]
Instead, strangers to faith – the “unchurched” as we might call them today – are the ones able to point to God. These are people who study. These are people who do not just bury themselves in books, but also keenly pay attention to the world around them. These are people courageous enough to confirm their conclusions – even if confirmation means traveling quite far. These are people willing to ask for directions, open to help to understand their suspicions. These are people capable of great joy, gratitude, and reverence for something that is not even a part of their sense of identity. And they are vigilant and attentive, willing to keep responding upon further dreams and insight, going another way to their home.[iii]
The good news for us today is that even when we are overwhelmed by fear, even when we are stuck in our faith life, even when we have the truth in our hands but are missing the living Lord, God will find ways to break through the mess of life and break into our lives. As one scholars says, “Just as the powers that be try and fail to prevent the resurrection, so they try and fail to prevent the birth of God’s child. God’s purposes cannot be thwarted; God’s purposes will prevail.”[iv] If, then, God appears anyway, our invitation is to open our hearts, minds, and lives to receptivity to that presence. Maybe that happens in your daily spiritual practices of prayer, journaling, or study. Maybe that happens by surrounding yourself with people – churchy types or those foreign to the faith – who are already attuned to God and can help you see the movement of the Spirit in your own life. Or maybe that happens simply by committing not just to being in church regularly, but being fully present when you are here, cultivating the practice of openness to Jesus. The promise of accepting that invitation is a journey of adventure, not unlike the Magi – full of learning, joy, and wonder. Come join the great pilgrimage!
[i] William R. Herzog, II, “Exegetical Perspective,” Feasting on the Word, Yr. B, Vol. 1 (Louisville: Westminster John Knox Press, 2008), 215.
[ii] James C. Howell, “Theological Perspective,” Feasting on the Word, Yr. B, Vol. 1 (Louisville: Westminster John Knox Press, 2008), 214.
[iii] William V. Arnold, “Pastoral Perspective,” Feasting on the Word, Yr. B, Vol. 1 (Louisville: Westminster John Knox Press, 2008), 212, 214.
[iv] Herzog, 217.















