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| Monday, January 07, 2008 |
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Thoughts About Epiphany
By @ 3:57 PM :: 660 Views ::
0 Comments :: :: Devotional, Doctrinal, Biblical
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On the calendar of the Church Year, January 6th, Epiphany, is the day set aside to celebrate the arrival of the wise men (magi) from the East, who brought gifts of "gold, frankincense, and myrrh," hailing Jesus as the world's Savior.
Historically, Epiphany was the day on which many Christians exchanged gifts, something we've now pushed back to Christmas Day on December 25.
The word epiphany is a transliteration of a word appearing in the original Greek of the New Testament. Epiphane means to shine upon.
(To transliterate a word means to take it over into a new language, largely unchanged, maintaining the same meaning.)
On the first Epiphany, a star shone upon the place where the Christ Child was living, guiding the magi to Him. Matthew is the only one of the four Gospel accounts of Jesus' life, death, and resurrection to recount this event.
It's interesting to note that the first Epiphany occurred some time after the first Christmas, in spite of our penchant for collapsing the two events into one crowded night at a Bethlehem barn. According to Matthew, after Jesus' birth, Joseph and Mary and the baby took up residence in Bethlehem for awhile. Matthew tells us that the wise men found the child not in a barn, but living, along with his parents, in a house.
Another indication that some time passed between Jesus' birth and the events of the first Epiphany is the order given by Herod after the wise men revealed the nature of their mission in Judea. He ordered the killing of all males two years of age and younger. It was apparently thought that the birth could have happened quite a bit before Herod personally spoke with the visiting magi.
On the church calendar, Epiphany comes at the end of the traditional, Twelve Days of Christmas. As the song of the same name reminds us, there was another tradition, particularly among Christians in the British Isles, of giving small gifts throughout this twelve-day period.
January 6th kicks off an entire season of the Church Year known as Epiphany. It runs until the beginning of the Lenten season. During Epiphany, the Gospel lessons recount the early manifestations of Jesus as God-in-the-flesh. In other words, they look at key moments when Jesus was shown to be "the Light of the world." Through Jesus, the pure, undefiled Light of God shines on the human race.
The Sundays that fall within the Epiphany Season are bracketed by two events in which the light of heaven shines in particularly notable ways:
The Gospel lesson for the first Sunday of the Epiphany season is about the Baptism of Our Lord. This marked the beginning of his ministry. Present at his Baptism was the Holy Spirit (a dove) and the Father (the voice from heaven saying, "This is my Son.").
On the last Sunday of the Epiphany Season, we will celebrate the Transfiguration of Our Lord. This remembers the time when Jesus, accompanied by His key disciples, Peter, James, and John, went up on a mountain and was transfigured before them, His appearance being dazzlingly pure, and Jesus was seen speaking with two Old Testament figures from centuries before, Moses and Elijah.
Epiphany is a great set-up for the Lenten Season. Lent, a time of spiritual renewal and preparation for Easter, ends with Maundy Thursday and Good Friday, commemorations that remember, respectively, the day on which Jesus instituted the Lord’s Supper and the day on which he died. before rising on Easter Sunday morning.
Epiphany explains why the world spurned and killed Jesus. It does so by explaining who Jesus is. We human beings are presumptuous. Adam and Eve were lured into sin wanting to "be like God." Jesus wasn't killed because people didn't know He was God. He was killed precisely because he claimed he was God.
The events recounted in the Gospel lessons of the Epiphany Season make clear the legitimacy of Jesus' claim to be God, the very claim that caused the religious leaders of first-century Judea, the political leadership of the Roman Empire, represented by the governor, Pontius Pilate, and the masses from throughout the Mediterranean Basin gathered in Jerusalem on that fateful Passover weekend to want Him dead.
C.S. Lewis says that in the manifestations of His God-ness and the claims of Deity that Jesus makes about Himself, we are left with three choices: 1. We may decide that He's a liar. 2. We may conclude that He's a madman. 3. We may decide that He's telling the truth.
Epiphany presses us to accept the third choice. If that's the case, then we have little alternative but to join Thomas, the disciple who doubted Jesus, and fall down before Jesus and worship Him as our "Lord and God."
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