The following are three reflections on today’s beautiful feast in which the church celebrates the manifestation of Jesus to the Gentile world symbolized by the presence of the three wise men.
The first piece is by the late Scottish biblical scholar, William Barclay. In his commentary on Matthew’s gospel, he shares with us some of the legends that grew up around the story of the Magi. Barclay writes:
So the wise men found their way to Bethlehem. We need not think that the star literally moved like a guide across the sky. There is poetry here, and we must not turn lovely poetry into crude and lifeless prose. But over Bethlehem the star was shining. There is a lovely legend which tells how the star, its work of guidance completed, fell into the well at Bethlehem, and that it is still there and can still be seen sometimes by those whose hearts are pure.
Later legends have been busy with the wise men. In the early days, Eastern tradition said that there were twelve of them. But now the tradition that there were three is almost universal. The New Testament does not say that there were three, but the idea that there were three no doubt arose from the threefold gift which they brought.
Later legend made them kings. And still later, legend gave them names, Caspar, Melchior and Balthasar. Still later, legend assigned to each a personal description, and distinguished the gift which each of them gave to Jesus. Melchior was an old man, grey haired, and with a long beard, and it was he who brought the gift of gold. Caspar was young and beardless, and ruddy in countenance, and it was he who brought the gift of frankincense. Balthasar was swarthy, with the beard newly grown upon him, and it was he who brought the gift of myrrh.
From the early times, people have seen a peculiar fitness in the gifts the wise men brought. They have seen in each gift something which specially matched some characteristic of Jesus and his work.
Gold is the gift for a king. Seneca tells us that in Parthia it was the custom that no one could ever approach the king without a gift. And gold, the king of metals, is the fit gift for a king of people.
So then Jesus was “the Man born to be King.” But he was to reign, not by force, but by love; and he was to rule over peoples’ hearts, not from a throne, but from a Cross.
We do well to remember that Jesus Christ is King. We can never meet Jesus on an equality. We must always meet him on terms of complete submission. Nelson, the great admiral, always treated his vanquished opponents with the greatest kindness and courtesy. After on e of his naval victories, the defeated admiral was brought aboard Nelson’s flagship and on to Nelson’s quarter-deck. Knowing Nelson’s reputation for courtesy, and thinking to trade upon it, he advanced across the quarter-deck with hand outstretched as if he was advancing to shake hands with an equal. Nelson’s hand remained by his side. “Your sword first,” he said, “and then your hand.” Before we must be friends with Christ, we must submit to Christ.
Frankincense is the gift for a priest. It was in the Temple worship and at the Temple sacrifices that the sweet perfume of frankincense was used. The function of a priest is to open the way to God for people. The Latin word for priest is pontifex, which means a bridge-builder. The priest is the man who builds a bridge between people and God. That is what Jesus did. He opened the way to God; he made it possible for people to enter into the very presence of God.
Myrrh is the gift for one who is to die. Myrrh was used to embalm the bodies of the dead.
Jesus came into the world to die. Holman Hunt has a famous picture of Jesus. It shows Jesus at the door of the carpenter’s shop in Nazareth. He is still only a boy and has come to the door to stretch his limbs which had grown cramped over the bench. He stands there in the doorway with arms outstretched, and behind him, on the wall, the setting sun throws his shadow, and it is the shadow of a cross. In the background there stands Mary, and as she sees that shadow there is the fear of coming tragedy in her eyes. Jesus came into the world to live for people, and in the end, to die for them. He came to give people his life and his death. Gold for a king, frankincense for a priest, myrrh for on who was to die—these were the gifts of the wise men and, even at the cradle of Christ, they foretold that he was to be the true King, the perfect High Priest, and in the end the supreme Savior of people.
When Two Wisdoms Collide
The following reflection on today’s feast is by Fr. Denis McBride, C.S.s.R.:
Matthew shows how the two wisdoms collide: the wisdom of the religious institution and the wisdom of the pagan strangers. Writing at a time when many non-Jews, Gentiles, were entering the Christian community, while many Jews had rejected the message of the Gospel, Matthew demonstrates in the story of the magi that Jesus comes not only for the Jewish race, but for the human race. In the second reading, Paul proclaims the universal appeal of God’s revelation in Jesus; “it means that pagans now share the same inheritance, that they are parts of the same body, and that the same promise has been made to them, in Christ Jesus, through the Gospel.”
Called to be a Light to the World.
This third piece was written by Patricia Sanchez.
With the feast of the Epiphany of the Lord, the reality and significance of Christmas have come full circle. The birth that we celebrated just an octave ago is now being universally acclaimed, and the repercussions of that great moment in time must also be universally experienced. In a sermon on today’s feast, Baptist minister, educator and author Peter J. Gomes (Sermons, Biblical Wisdom For Daily Living) compared what he refers to as “epiphany business” to a stone that is dropped into the water; there it produces a series of concentric ripples that grow larger and wider until the entire surface imperceptible is witness to the initial movement of that stone.
What began on the very private annunciation of an angel messenger to Mary and what was made manifest to the shepherds will be made increasingly clear to an ever-expanding audience of witnesses. Slowly but surely, the concentric circles of “epiphany business” reach out to touch and embrace more and more witnesses, until all are included and illumined. From now through Easter Sunday, every aspect of the Christ-event should be understood as an epiphany of Jesus that engages not only our attention but also our faith and our hope. Through these manifestations, we will grow in that knowledge of Christ that invites us to deeper, fuller and firmer commitment.
To put it another way, Epiphany is at once a celebration of Christ and a challenge for the church. By virtue of the reality of Christ, manifested as light and life for the world, we who belong to Christ are to live lives that are similar manifestations of light and life. Moreover, the challenge of Epiphany also requires that we be willing to see, hear, touch and attend to the presence of God made manifest in predictable places and people as well as in those people and places where it is least expected. The concentric circles of ‘epiphany business” reminds us all of us together, with our differences and diversities, our various languages, cultures, customs and traditions are to bring a multi-faceted luminosity to a world darkened by human sin.