Matthew 2:1-12 · The Visit of the Magi
Just Follow The Signs
Matthew 2:1-12
Sermon
by Daniel G. Mueller
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"God so loved the world ..." begins one of our best-known scripture verses. God loved the world! He didn’t love only one small corner of the world. He didn’t love only one little race, one tiny tribe in the world. God loved the world! He loved Jews and Gentiles alike. He loved a man and a woman named Joseph and Mary. He loved some shepherds. He loved some Wise Men living way off in the East someplace, nobody knows exactly where. God loved the world, even nasty, murderous, old King Herod, who tried to kill his only-begotten, just-born Son. "God so loved the world that he gave his only-begotten Son that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life" (John 3:16). God loved you and me.

God’s love for the world expresses itself chiefly in his strong desire for the salvation of the world. Because God loved the world he sent his Son to be the Savior of the world. "God wants all people to be saved and to come to know the truth," Saint Paul wrote (1 Timothy 2:4). To that end, God is active in our lives, in all people’s lives, in a personal, intimate, and individual way.

God has a number of ways of working in our lives. One way in which he is active is through wonderful signs that he gives us to draw us to himself. Some signs are more majestic than others. Some signs are very hard to see, to be aware of. But in each life there are signs - signs that, when followed, lead to the only true God and Jesus Christ whom he sent. "The grace of God that brings salvation," Paul wrote, "has appeared to all people ..." (Titus 2:11). One way that grace appears is through signs.

Look at the sign that God worked in the lives of the Wise Men: The Star! When the Lord Jesus was born, God announced the birth of his Son with a once-in-forever Star in the Sky. God didn’t send out cute little hospital cards with a picture of a wrinkled-prune-looking baby on it. God put a brilliant Star in the sky to announce the birth of his Son. Nobody knows what star this was. Many have speculated about it, some thinking it was a constellation of some sort. It would have been great to be able to see it. It was a special Star that God created to announce the most wonderful news ever: the birth of his only Son, the Savior of the world. It was a Star that God brought into being for the specific purpose of bringing the Wise Men to know him. It may well have been a Star that will never again be seen.

The Star was not the only sign given in our text, however. The Star was the sign God gave to the Wise Men. The Wise Men were the sign God gave to King Herod. Think about it: When these strangers dropped in from nowhere asking Herod about the new King of the Jews, that must have gotten Herod’s attention much as the Star got the Wise Men’s attention. When the Wise Men came to Herod asking about Jesus, that was God’s action in Herod’s life calling him to come worship the Savior also. The Wise Men really did not have to ask Herod where Jesus was. The Star had already brought them so close to the Lord that, had they followed it a little farther, it would have led them right to Jesus. It was there, right over the house where Jesus was! The Wise Men went out of their way to get to the palace. Their detour was God’s way of getting the word about Jesus to Herod. It was God’s sign in Herod’s life.

Just as the Wise Men were a sign to Herod, Herod, in turn, became a sign to the chief priests and the scribes. When the Wise Men asked the King, "Where is he who has been born King of the Jews?" Herod didn’t know the answer. He turned the question over to the priests and the scribes. These men were actually given two signs by God: Herod was the first; the record of the Holy Scriptures was the second.

Here, then, were three separate signs from God, each given because of his love, because of his desire to save all people. God loved the Wise Men, and Herod, and the priests, and the scribes. He wanted to save them all. To that end, he gave signs in their lives to lead them to the Savior. God was faithful, but the people were not always so. Each sign was greeted with a different reaction.

The Wise Men (good for them!) followed the sign of the Star. They saw the Star in the East and immediately answered its call. They searched for the newborn King. They wanted to worship him, to bring him gifts. Their search ended when they knelt, in exceedingly great joy, before the Baby Jesus and adored him. The Star, God’s sign for them, had led them to their salvation.

Herod (shame on him) responded to God’s sign in his life negatively. Instead of going with the Wise Men to worship Jesus, he made plans to kill his Savior. Our text tells us that Herod was bothered by the news of a new King. Herod didn’t understand who Jesus was at all. He thought the Baby was a threat to his throne. Herod was a wicked man. No matter how hard God tried to reach him, how clear a sign God gave him, he refused to follow, choosing instead to reject God and to die in his sins.

Saddest of all were the priests and the scribes. They understood all about the sign. They knew what the sign meant. They quoted God’s prophets in their response to Herod. They knew all the facts. But they did not go to worship Jesus. They understood, but they did not believe. This is the only thing that could be worse than regarding God a "bother" the way Herod did. Seeing his action in our life, understanding his work, but not doing anything about it, neither worshiping him nor believing in him nor rejecting him - that’s a colossal tragedy. Many people treat God just this way, however. They simply ignore him.

Perhaps we could try to defend Herod and the priests by saying that they didn’t have the same chance the Wise Men had. The signs given to them were not as impressive as the sign given to the Wise Men. Maybe if they had seen a Star they would have followed it also. After all, bigger and better signs make for bigger and better reactions, right? Not necessarily. Besides, who says they didn’t see the Star? The problem was not with their sign; the problem was with their reaction.

One gets the impression from reading this story that the Wise Men were the only ones who ever saw the Star. Nobody else came running to find out what it was all about, did they? The Gospels don’t tell us about a mob scene suddenly developing at the stable. Only the Wise Men came. Yet, if the Star was all that fantastic, as it certainly must have been, then surely other people saw it also, wouldn’t you think? Why didn’t they come running too? Because there’s a problem with the signs God gives to people. Most of the time people don’t notice them, or, if they notice, they don’t pay any attention. People tend to ignore the signs God gives.

Our Lord Jesus lamented, concerning many of the people of his day, that they could interpret the appearance of the sky, forecasting the weather by the color of the clouds, yet they could not interpret the signs of the times. They could see tomorrow’s weather, but they couldn’t see the Savior standing in their midst today (Matthew 16:3). The problem is that people rarely, if ever, stop to ask, "What is God trying to say to me?" Things happen around us and to us and we go on blissfully unaware of God, acting as if he has nothing to do with what is going on.

It’s sad to see this happen. God reaches out to people. He’s active in their lives in some special way. But all he ever becomes to them is what he was to Herod: a bother.

I’m thinking of a family I know. They are not members of this church. While they say they believe in God, they never worship him publicly. There is no visible evidence in their lives of faith. God has done many things for them, giving them many signs in their lives by filling their lives with wonderful things, but his call to them to live for him appears to be too much of a bother. We read in the Bible, "Don’t you know that the kindness of God is meant to lead you to repentance?" (Romans 2:4). We need to pray more for them.

God’s signs are all around us: in nature, like the Wise Men’s Star; and in people, the way he used the Wise Men as a sign to Herod. There is always the sign of his holy Word, the same sign he gave to the priests. Some of God’s signs are even a little spooky. For example - when a person is scheduled for a certain flight, misses the plane and learns later that the plane crashed. Do you think God might be trying to say something to that person?

The prophets of the Old Testament believed that all the politics of their day were signs from God and they tried to use those signs to call God’s people to repentance. Might the politics of our nation, the affairs of our world, be a sign from God calling us to repentance also? We need to ask ourselves regularly, "What is God trying to tell me?" because in his mercy, God is active in our lives, trying to tell us how much he loves us and how dearly he wants our salvation.

Thank God that in his grace he has made us alert to his signs in our life. We have seen God’s signs, signs that all Christians share, like Baptism, the Word and the Body and Blood of Jesus, and individual signs that belong to each of us uniquely. Through the Spirit we see the signs and follow them to Jesus, the Savior. We see the signs, we believe, and are saved. "Just follow the signs," people say when giving directions. Those are our directions for the Epiphany season ahead of us. That’s all we really have to do. Follow the signs God gives us, signs that lead to the Savior as surely as the star led the Wise Men to Bethlehem. Signs that lead us into life. Amen

CSS Publishing Co., Inc., Just Follow The Signs, by Daniel G. Mueller