Matthew 2:1-12 · The Visit of the Magi
A Light for All Nations
Isaiah 60:1-6, Matthew 2:1-12
Sermon
by King Duncan
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As far as our society is concerned, the Christmas season has long been over. The lights and the tinsel have been put away. For most of us Christmas is only a pleasant memory. In the Church year, however, Christmas begins on December 25 and extends for 12 days.

You remember the silly little song that starts off, “On the first day of Christmas my true love gave to me a partridge in a pear tree . . . .”  It details an array of gifts that a young woman received from her lover over a period of 12 days.

Her true love must have broken the bank at Monte Carlo, however, as he proceeds to give her two turtle doves, three French hens, four calling birds, five golden rings, six geese laying, seven swans swimming, eight maids milking, nine ladies dancing, ten lords leaping, eleven pipers piping and twelve drummers drumming. The song is a delightful way to celebrate the twelve days of Christmas. 

The idea of the twelve days of Christmas is based on the tradition that the wise men, or magi as they are also called, arrived to worship the Christ child twelve days after his birth. You will remember that in Matthew’s telling of the Christmas story, the wise men are said to “go into a house where the young child was.” There is no mention of an inn or a stable. Thus many churches celebrate today, January 6, as the day the magi came to offer their gifts of gold, frankincense and myrrh. This special day is celebrated as Epiphany.

The special theme of Epiphany is that God has revealed himself to all people everywhere.  This is an important truth. God is the God of all people and all nations.

Isn’t interesting that the first people to bow down and worship Jesus besides the lowly shepherds were not Christians or even Jews? They were men from the East. The Bible, of course, doesn’t say that there were three of them. We simply infer that because three gifts were offered: gold, frankincense and myrrh. Look to the East from Bethlehem on a modern map and speculate where they were from: Iraq or Iran, perhaps, or Syria, or Saudi Arabia. Of course, the geographical names have changed since Jesus’ time, as have the religions. Mohammad had not even been born, so we could not say they were Moslems, but their faith was most certainly different from ours. In this day of religious and ethnic and racial enmity, it’s important to acknowledge that all people are ultimately God’s children. 

Those of you who are Sound of Music fans remember Maria (“How do you solve a problem like Maria?”), the key character in this much-loved musical. The Sound of Music of course was based on a true story of the musical von Trapp family who fled Austria and persecution from the Nazis. Maria, hired as a governess for the family married the father who was a widower.

What you may not know is that Ms. Von Trapp is quite a student of the Bible.

In her book, Yesterday, Today and Forever she tells us a beautiful tradition concerning the magi. According to this tradition the three wise men were residents of three different parts of the world and they were of three different races. This is to say that in Ethiopia, Persia and far away in the Caucasus there were three individual wise men who were all watching the sky at the same time. They each beheld the star and each decided on his own to follow the star to find the new-born King of Kings. After traveling many months through sometimes treacherous territory from three different directions they were brought together by the star. Since they were on the same mission, they decided to continue the journey together.

There were still many miles to travel, but final the star led them to the Holy City of Jerusalem and their encounter with the brutal monarch, Herod. It is not surprising given her own background that Maria von Trapp compares Herod to Adolf Hitler.

When the wise men left Herod’s court they once again followed the star until it came to rest over the stable of Bethlehem. There before the Christ child these three men of differing races and nationalities bowed down and opened their gifts. (1)

It is only a legend, of course, but it is a reminder to us that Epiphany is about the revelation of God to all peoples. We are all God’s children. We are all one family.  Nevertheless, prejudices against religion, nationalities and races are as old as human nature. For example, we are told that at one time it was standard practice for some West Indies nationals to conspicuously hold their noses whenever they passed an American. How’s that for prejudice?

Hatred and bigotry are everywhere. It’s like a man from the Mid-west who was visiting New York City for the first time. Someone asked him if he would be visiting the United Nations building. He answered, “Heavens no. Confidentially, I understand that the place is just crawling with foreigners.”

Prejudice is deeply rooted in human nature. It does not die easily. Nevertheless, the book of Genesis makes it plain. There is but one race--the human race. We all have the same original parents. God is no respecter of persons or of nations. 

There is a second thing to be said, however. Sometimes God does choose individual persons or nations for a particular task. Israel was called to be a light to the nations. It was not that God loved Israel more than he loved the other nations--though Israel often interpreted God’s call in that way. Israel was to set an example of holiness for all the world. When Israel was not faithful to God’s call, God sent a light into the world that the darkness could not overcome. It was the light of Jesus Christ. Jesus in turn selected some men and women to carry on his work. This was to be the new light, the new salt, the new leaven. That is what being the church is all about. What an exciting opportunity God has given us--to bring light to a darkened world.

Dr. James Dobson once told about a friend of his who was piloting a small single-engine plane one evening just about dusk. He was headed toward a small country airport. Night fell more quickly than he anticipated, however, and by the time he reached the airport, it was impossible for him to distinguish the paved landing strip in the darkness. His little plane was not equipped with lights and no one seemed to be around the little airport to turn on any lights on the runway. He started circling the airport, uncertainly. For two hours he circled around in the darkness not knowing what to do and expecting at any moment he might run out of fuel and plunge to his death. 

What happened next had to be an answer to prayer. Someone on the ground heard the little plane circling the airport and guessed what the problem was. Immediately he jumped into his car and headed for the airport. Not knowing how to switch on any of the airport’s lights, he settled for driving his car up and down the runway with his lights on high beam showing the pilot the dimensions of the runway. Then he pulled his car off the one end of the runway with his headlights still beaming to guide the pilot to a safe landing. (2)

Wouldn’t you like to beam such a saving light into some person’s darkness? It may be a friend having family problems or battling an alcohol or drug addiction. It may be helping a child get into a Sunday School program where he or she will be loved and nurtured in the Christian faith. It may be involving yourself in the life of a resident of a nursing home who has no one to talk to or with whom to share God’s love. God does not love Christians any more than he loves anyone else, but he has chosen us to accomplish the most challenging and rewarding task in the world--to be His body in the world. 

This brings us to the final thing we need to say. Each time we bring light into someone else’s life we hasten the day when the entire world will walk in the glorious light of God’s presence. That has always been God’s will for his world and God will not be defeated! There will be a day when nations shall beat their swords into plowshares and their spears into pruning hooks. There will come a time when every knee shall bow and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord. God is at work in this world in the lives of His people. 

I like a story Dr. Eugene Brice once told that comes from a time when radio was our dominant form of mass media. A sheepherder in Montana wrote the NBC Symphony in New York, telling of a problem he had. He was an amateur musician, a violinist. He listened to the symphony each Sunday on his radio. But his violin had gotten badly out of tune, and in his isolation, he had no way to tune it. He needed a big favor.

And so on Sunday afternoon, June 18, 1938, at the beginning of the program of the NBC symphony, a loud and clear note was sent out across the air. It was a beautiful and clear A note and from that A note a sheepherder in Montana got his violin in tune.

Christ, of course, is God’s A note for this discordant world. And we are those whom he has called to sound that note in our time. We do that by modeling in our lives the unconditional love of God for all people. It matters not where they come from or what mistakes they may have made. All people are God’s children and are in need of God’s wondrous and complete love.

It is like a children’s story that author James Thurber once wrote titled, “The White Deer.” “The White Deer” is about a beautiful princess who had been transformed by a witch into a white deer. A king named King Clode and his three sons (Thag and Gallow, the hunters, and Jorn, the poet) are out hunting game and they come upon this white deer and they raise their bows to slay it. Just before they shoot, however, the deer is changed back into the princess.

King Clode and his sons take this beautiful princess home with them but she is unable to remember anything about her past including who she is. It is finally discovered that the only thing that will cause the princess to regain her memory is the unconditional love of a young man. In order to determine who this young man will be--Thag, Gallow and Jorn are each given perilous tasks to perform. It is Jorn the poet who ultimately wins the princess’ hand. He gives her the kind of love that allows her to remember where she came from and who she is.  (3)

My friends, is this not what God has called us to do for a fallen world? By His grace we are to show the world the unfailing love of God at work in our lives so that the world may truly see where it came from and why it exists. 

All people are God’s children. God is no respecter of persons. God, however, does select individual persons and groups of persons for particular tasks. That does not mean that God loves us more than He loves anyone else. It means simply that we are fortunate enough to be participants in the greatest adventure in this world. Our calling is to show the world the love of Jesus Christ in such a way that persons are drawn to him and find light for their lives. 


1. (Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott Co., 1952).

2. The Rev. Dr. Thomas Lane Butts, http://day1.org/2530-dr_thomas_lane_butts_this_little_light_of_mine.

3. Mariner Books, 1968.

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan