SEEING THE MYSTERY
January 8, 2006
Calum I. MacLeod
Associate Pastor,
Fourth Presbyterian Church
Isaiah 60:1–6
Ephesians 3:1–12
Matthew 2:1–12
“. . . to make everyone see what is the plan
of the mystery hidden for ages . . .”
Ephesians 3:9 (NRSV)
Every action and passage that manifests
Christ to us is his birth,
for Epiphany is manifestation. Every manifestation of Christ
to the world,
to the Church, to a particular soul is an Epiphany, a Christmas
day.
John Donne
Still Christmas here at Fourth
Presbyterian Church as you can see—we’re holding on to
the season as long as we can. The foliage is still in
the chancel, and our Christmas banners are still waving.
Everyone else has moved on, and I’m sure the shops
are all storing—I don’t know what’s
next—Valentine’s Day cards or something
like that. But it is still Christmas here. And that’s
good, because it is a recognition that Christmas is
not a day but a season, a season that begins in the
church’s year on Christmas Day and in many senses
culminates at what we call “The Feast of the Epiphany”—epiphany,
a Greek word, meaning manifestation or appearance and
referring today particularly to the story of the visit
of the wise men to the newborn child in Bethlehem.
I have my favorite e-mail of the week to share with
you. It was sent to me as a link to an Anglican website.
This is “Ideas for Celebrating Epiphany” and
comes from an Anglican church in Australia. Here’s
one suggestion: “Picking up on the connection
of Epiphany with the baptism of our Lord, we always
eat lots of seafood at our epiphany parties.” I
don’t know where they get the seafood piece from.
Then they say, “If we hold the party where there’s
a swimming pool, we have swimming contests culminating
in the traditional Greek contest of the ‘Recovery
of the Cross.’” You couldn’t make
this stuff up. It’s amazing. This is what happens: “The
senior ecclesiastic present”—don’t
you love Anglicans—“The senior ecclesiastic
present throws a cross into a pool and the contestants
all go in and see who can retrieve it and return it
to the senior cleric.” For older or adult people
it’s a metal cross, so you dive in to get it,
but for younger contestants it’s wooden so you
just swim towards it and get it. And when you come back, “the
winners are crowned and treated like kings”—so
you get the kings in there. And then this Anglican minister
goes on to say, “I should mention that we also
bless the water, pray for all that make their livings
from the waters and thank God for our baptisms.” So
there you go: you get it all at once—those Anglicans
in Australia!
Actually I thought it would be a great idea to start
that tradition here, and rather like Easter morning,
we could all go down to Oak Street Beach together on
Epiphany and have cold shrimp and frozen crosses for
Jesus. However, wisely the writer of this piece on the
website has a caveat at the end: “It occurs to
me that it would be difficult to do all of this in places
where outdoor water is frozen at this time of year.” So
at least he was thinking about us up here in the frozen
north.
We don’t really have many traditions around Epiphany
because as Presbyterians we are people who are only
recently discovering many of the ancient traditions
of the church. In our house, the only tradition is an
occasional rendering of
We
three kings of Orient are;
tried to smoke a rubber cigar.
It was loaded, we exploded;
now there are only two of us left.
I
spent a little time in Europe a few weeks ago, and in many
parts of Europe
where the Catholic church was
strong and continues to be strong and where there
were also Eastern Christian influences, the stories around Epiphany are very
important. There’s a great tradition in some parts for children to dress
up and go around their town or their village and, almost like on our Halloween,
they collect candies and chocolates and goodies. Where they receive hospitality,
they will chalk up on the door or on the wall 20 C+M+B 06—the numbers
standing for the year; the letters standing for Caspar, Melchior and Balthazar,
the names
tradition gave to the wise men in the story. The chalk stands as a kind of
a good luck charm or a blessing on the house, and even throughout the year
you’ll
find those letters still up. People don’t wash them off or anything like
that.
I think for us in the Western European tradition, it has been more through
art and poetry that the Epiphany story has been told. Every art gallery worth
its
salt has a smattering of paintings by old European masters entitled “Homage
of the Kings” or “Adoration of the Magi.” For some reason it
seems that for many modern twentieth-century poets this story had a particular
meaning around it.
Sylvia Plath wrote a darkly funny poem called “Magi” in which
she says, “They mistake their star, these papery godfolk.” A
number of you, I’m sure, will know T.S. Eliot’s haunting poem
about conversion, about his conversion to Christianity, in which the journey
of the Magi is described
in the voice of one of the wise men:
A
cold coming we had of it
just the worst time of the year
for a journey and such a long journey:
the ways deep and the weather sharp,
the very dead of winter.
And
an extraordinary poem, ‘The
Three Magi,’ which I came across
recently by Stanislaw Baranczak, a Polish poet who was writing about
the communist years in Poland, years of totalitarianism
and
oppression. In his poem, the three
magi represent secret policemen who come to arrest the person whose voice
is the poet:
The
star of an ID
will flash before your eyes . . .
the gold of their watches will glitter . . .
the smoke from their cigarettes
will fill the room with a fragrance like incense .
. .
“All
that’s missing is myrrh,” says the poet, until at the end as
he’s being taken away in the black Fiat car: he realizes that the myrrh
is the suffering he will undergo at the hands of the state. It’s almost
as if the artists and poets act like the wise men of our story in that they are
helplessly drawn to this Epiphany story as we are, like the wise men searching,
seeking for meaning in the midst of mystery.
Of course it is important as we reflect on some of these artistic
and poetic accretions to the story that we don’t lose sight of the text. One important
piece is to remind ourselves what’s not there in Matthew’s story:
there’s no manger or stable or shepherds or heavenly hosts singing. That’s
in Luke’s story. Nor are the journeying gift-bringers kings. They’re
wise men, magi in the Greek, what the poet U.A. Fanthorpe calls “members
of an obscure Persian sect.” And for that matter, we are not told how many
of them there are in the text, only that the three gifts were given, and in tradition
that moved to there being three gift bringers.
Matthew’s story is a complex drama, which culminates in the tragic outcome
of the massacre of the innocent children of Bethlehem by Herod as he seeks to
get rid of this possible usurper. That may help us as a way into the story.
The story of Epiphany is not about three kings but about two kings
and two kingdoms: the corrupt, murderous, earthbound kingship of
Herod and
the humble,
loving,
world-changing, divine kingship of Jesus, the Christ, the anointed
One. Biblical scholar Eugene Boring puts it like this in his commentary: “Herod represents
the resistance of this world to the divine kingship represented by Jesus.” We
see that in the story as death is wrought by Herod. Boring goes on to maintain
that this conflict between the two kings dominates the whole of Matthew’s
Gospel; it’s a way of reading the whole of Matthew’s Gospel. I might
even go further and say that that conflict of the kings of the earth and the
king of heaven is a dominating theme of all our journeys to discipleship as we
seek faithfully to follow Christ. And the wise men are our exemplars in this,
because they are primarily seers: they see the star at its rising; they recognize,
they see the kingship of the little child born in this marginal town to a young
peasant woman. One of the eighteenth-century Hasidic Jewish rabbis, Nachman of
Breslov, once said, “For the true believer, believing is seeing.” Not
seeing as in just observing or looking, but that special insight that George
MacLeod of the Iona Community called “seeing with the eye of faith.”
A very helpful strong contemporary theologian named Tara Lennon,
a United Church of Christ minister and writer, talks about this new
way
of seeing
in the Epiphany
stories. She writes, “Our new awareness of ‘Emmanuel,’ of ‘God
with us,’ changes forever not just what we see but how we see.” And
that is part of that transformation, that gift of faith. She goes on: “Over
the long sweep of history there have been millions of us who have believed and
continue to believe that there is a God who never lets us go and wants us to
never let go. A God who doesn’t just share power but insists that we find—we
discover our own power in this stuff of our lives.”
I put a quotation on the front of your bulletin this morning for
reflection. It’s from John Donne, the great poet. This is from one of Donne’s
sermons for Epiphany: “Every manifestation of Christ to the world or to
the church or to a particular soul is an Epiphany, a Christmas Day.” There’s
an old rock song from the seventies that is played all the time in Britain around
Christmas, “I Wish It Could Be Christmas Everyday” by Slade—terrible
song but here is Donne saying it can be Christmas every day.
I’ve got a friend, a young man, who’s been having a hard time in
his life for a while. He has been struggling with many aspects of life and work,
at times finding himself in the depths of hopelessness. We were talking recently,
and he shared with me that something has changed in his life. He said, “I
was lying awake one night in the wee small hours unable to sleep, feeling hopeless,
and then I realized something, almost as if a voice had spoken to me that said, “There
is no hope except for the free grace and reconciling love of Jesus Christ.”
There is no hope except for the free grace and reconciling love of
Jesus Christ. That has led this man to a place of change and transformation
and hopefulness,
and that is “seeing the mystery,” an epiphany, a Christmas Day experience,
acknowledging and bowing to the kingship of Christ.
Christmas and Epiphany is a story not about three kings but about
two kings and our choice. Jürgen Moltmann writes:
“To
us a child is born, To us a son is given, the government
is upon his shoulders.” The
liberator becomes a pleading child in our world . . . and this
child will become the liberator for the new world of peace.
That is why his rule means life not
death, peace not war, freedom not oppression. This sovereignty
lies on the defenseless, innocent, and hopeful shoulders
of this child.
This
child, visited by those able to see the mystery. As Gian
Carlo
Menotti, well-known librettist, puts it in Amahl and the
Night Visitors:
The Child we seek
doesn’t need our gold.
On love, on love alone
he will build his kingdom.
His pierced hand will hold no scepter,
his haloed head will wear no crown;
his might will not be built
on your toil.
Swifter than lightning
he will soon walk among us.
He will bring us new life
and receive our death
and the keys to his city
belong to the poor.
Thanks be to God. Amen.