Sunday, January 07, 2024

Sermon for 1/7/24: Epiphany of Our Lord


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Gifts
Matthew 2:1-12

Grace to you and peace from God our Father, and from our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. Amen.

 

The Magi went to the logical place, don’t you think? Where else would they go but Jerusalem, the royal city? But they arrived at the party all dressed up and on time, only to find that there was no party. No one seemed to know about this newborn King. So the Magi were confused. “Where is He who has been born King of the Jews?” And to the astonished faces around them, they added: “For we have seen His star in the East and have come to worship Him.”

When word reached Herod that important visitors had come from Eastern lands, asking about the birth of a new King of the Jews, he was understandably troubled. And he was not alone, we are told. All Jerusalem was troubled with him. And some things never change, for the coming of Jesus in human flesh and blood is a troubling thing for those who want to be their own kings, who want to have the say over what they do and how they live. Jesus comes as King. The patriarch Jacob had prophesied of Him long before: “To Him shall be the obedience of the people.” None may call Him Lord and then do as they like without consequence.

Herod was troubled, and Jerusalem with him. But Herod knew where to turn. He called in the chief priests and scribes to ask them where the Christ was to be born. Scripture gave the answer: in Bethlehem of Judea, that insignificant little village whose only claim to fame was that it was the birth place of King David, as the prophet Micah had foretold hundreds of years earlier.

It is significant that the star alone did not lead the Magi to Christ. In the end, they needed the Word of God to tell them where to look. And the same is true for us, too: we do not find Christ in beautiful sunsets or mountain peaks shimmering with snow. Yes, those are all His, to be sure, and they declare His glory. But He will only be found in the Word that He has given: in the Holy Scriptures His Spirit has inspired, and in the Gospel Sacraments where His gifts of life and salvation are delivered.

And how magnificent the grace of God is! After giving them the Word that pointed directly to where the Child was, He added the star again. This time it came and stood right over the place where the Child would be found. And considering what they found, they needed this confirmation. When they got there, they found the poorest of circumstances: a teenage mother with a little baby wrapped not in the silk and velvet of royalty, but in the simplest and most common of materials. Here was the long-promised King of the Jews. Were they disappointed that this King they had sought from so far should be an utterly wretched and ordinary peasant baby?

No. They closed their eyes to what they saw, so that the eyes of their hearts might be fastened on what God’s Word said. They believed, contrary to what they saw. They believed that what God had said was true, that the star had not led them astray, that here was the Babe whose goings forth were from ancient days, even from eternity. They believed that this was the promised King who had come to be the Savior of all people. They believed and placed their hope and confidence in Him. And so they fell down on their knees before the holy Child and worshiped Him! They brought out their gifts and offered them to Him. Gold confessed His kingship, His divine magnificence and glory. Incense confessed that He Is true God, the One who hears the prayers of His people as they rise to Him like incense. And myrrh confessed that He would die as the sacrifice for the sins of all. His whole life was set out before Him in these gifts!

Here is the One who was given for us, to be the bearer of our sin, the sacrifice of atonement for us, so that we might stand before the Father without stain or blemish, a people eternally loved by Him. He came to give us all. And so we desire to give to Him. But what can we really give Him? An old Christmas hymn says, “Ah, dearest Jesus, holy Child, make Thee a bed, soft, undefiled, within my heart, that it may be a quiet chamber kept for Thee.” Such is the prayer of those who renounce their own rights over their lives and entrust everything to Him. And with Him is the way it must be. There can be no half-hearted or compromised discipleship. We are all either “wise men” who fall down in worship before the Christ, or we are Herod, out to do away with the King, so that we might retain control over our lives.

Epiphany is the day of gifts! And this Epiphany, to you is given again the gift of forgiveness for all those times you have played the part of Herod and have killed in your heart the voice of Him who calls you away from sin to live under His kingship. He says to you: “Come, My child, and be my own and live under Me in My kingdom in everlasting righteousness, innocence, and blessedness. Receive the gifts I have won for you at the cross.” And what will you say to that kind invitation of your King? May your answer be, “Lord, let Your light rise to shine on me, and I will be yours forever.” Then you, too, will truly be filled with exceedingly great joy. In the name of the Father and of the Son (+) and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.

 

The peace of God which passes all understanding will keep your hearts and minds in Christ Jesus always. Amen.

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