To read the texts click on the texts: Isa 60:1-6; Eph 3:2-3,5-6; Mt 2:1-12
Epiphany (Epiphaneia in Greek means appearance or
manifestation) has been defined as the manifestation of the divine nature of
Jesus to the Gentiles as represented by the Magi. The feast is also sometimes
called the twelfth day as it is celebrated on the twelfth day after Christmas.
A story is told of three individuals who professed
different religions who were discussing which religion was the right one. They
could not come to any agreement and the discussion was turning into an
argument. They decided to ask an old man who was sitting near for his opinion.
He replied in these words, “Well, you know there are three ways to get from her
to the flour mill. You can go right over the hill. That is shorter but it is a
steep climb. You can go around the hill on the right side. That is not too far,
but the road is rough and full of potholes. Or you can go around the hill on
the left side. That is the longest way but it is also the easiest.” He paused
and then added, “But you know when you get there, the mill man doesn’t ask you
how you came. All he asks is, ‘Man, how good is your wheat?’”
The choice of the Gospel text today for the feast
of the Epiphany underscores the truth that Jesus is God’s revelation not to a
select few, but to the whole world. The Magi or wise men or astrologers in
Matthew are guided not only by astrology but also by the scriptures. Revelation
outside Scriptures motivates them to obey the one God; yet, they not find their
way to Jesus without Scripture. This means that God, not the social or
political structures of the day, is the source of our light. It teaches that
openness and humility are necessary of we wish to read correctly the “signs of
the times”. It insists that when we discover the “promised one.” We must be
willing to offer him all that we have. The light has come, and we are invited
to live in it. In contrast to the Jewish leaders, the magi act rather than
merely hear. The gifts they offer – gold, frankincense and myrrh – are considered
to be symbols of the royalty, divinity and the sacrificial death of Jesus,
though Matthew does not give such an explanation. Also though Matthew does not
mention the number who came to worship Jesus, they have been identified as
three because of the three gifts.
What is more important for Matthew, however, is
that the magi are Gentiles in the extreme, characters that could not be more
remote from the Jews in heritage and worldview. Thus even at the very beginning
of Jesus’ life, then, we see the dividing walls between races and cultures
breaking down. Even here, at the beginning of the Gospel, the mission to all
nations is anticipated.Paul understood this mission perfectly as is evident in
the second reading of today, when he announces that the Gentiles are no longer
outsiders but “fellow heirs, members of the same body, and partakers of the
promise in Christ Jesus through the gospel.” This is the Gospel that he
preaches because he received it directly from God and this is the Gospel of
which he is a minister. And that is the paradox that resides deep within
Epiphany: we are made, through Christ, to be both those who bring our gifts to
offer him and those who receive the gift of God’s grace to be ministers and
stewards of the Gospel ourselves. As Paul himself notes, this grace was given
to him, the “very least of all the saints,” so that he might share the
“unsearchable riches of Christ” and help all people to know that it is God who
creates all things – not we ourselves.
This universal idea of mission is also spoken of
in the first reading of today in which the prophet Isaiah promises a light full
of hope. Jerusalem went through destruction and forced migration and is now in
desperate need of rebuilding. He proclaims to the exiles that the darkness of
despair has been lifted, and a new day of restoration has dawned.
At last, the light has come! According to Isaiah,
the glory of God will shine through Israel onto the other nations. The whole
world will come to join in the new liturgy of the new Temple. The psalm echoes
this idea when it speaks of justice flourishing and peace on all humankind. The
poor, the needy and the weak will be heard and saved.
Epiphany seeks to remind us that we cannot and
must not restrict or put our God in a pigeon hole. He is bigger that we can
ever imagine and his mercy and forgiveness are not restricted to only a few but
is available to all. The feast also challenges us to be today the star which
guided the Magi to the Christ child. It invites us to so shine that others who
have not yet encountered God in Christ will be motivated to come and encounter
him who in his love continues to sustain the world.
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