Wednesday, December 20, 2017

January 6--Feast of the Epiphany



"We three kings of Orient are/Bearing gifts we traverse afar...." The feast of the Epiphany used to be celebrated on January 6, twelve days after Christmas. It is the day we celebrate the manifestation, or "epiphany" of the King of Kings to the world. It is proclaimed in Matthew's Gospel, which ties in with his theme of Jesus as being the fulfillment of the prophecies of the Old Testament. The first reading, from Isaiah, tells of how gifts fit for a king are brought to Jerusalem. Psalm 72 is about how kings from far off lands will honor and serve the king of Israel. Matthew's story of the magi shows how Gentiles honor and adore Jesus as the new king of Israel, but Matthew intends more than that. He knows that Jesus is God and that all peoples will come to adore him.

How do we honor and adore Jesus in our lives? Do we give him precedence above all else? Do we acknowledge his role as savior? Do we live as his disciples? Do we spread the Good News of his love? Christmas is a time of celebrating with gifts, but the greatest gift we can offer Jesus is ourselves. We do that when we love as he loved us. We offer ourselves when we love our families, our friends, our colleagues, and those we meet, even, and especially, when they annoy and burden us. May this feast day, when we remember the gifts of gold, frankincense, and myrrh borne by the three wise men, remind us to bear the gift of love that Jesus has given to us to all in our lives.

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