Matthew 2:1-12 · The Visit of the Magi
Sealed and Sanctified
Matthew 2:1-12, Genesis 14:1-24
Sermon
by Lori Wagner
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“And grieve not the Holy Spirit of God, by whom you were sealed for the day of redemption.” (Ephesians 4:30)

“When you believed in Christ, you were marked in Him with a seal, the promised Holy Spirit.” (Ephesians 1:13)

You’ve heard it said: “the eyes are the windows to the soul.” You’ve also probably heard it said “the ears are the portals to the soul.” Or maybe “if the eyes are the windows to the soul, your feet are the doorway to your body.” Or is that toes?

Today we’re going to go with the eyes. If your eyes are the windows to the soul, your smile is the front door. So smile everyone. It’s the first Sunday of the New Year 2019. Let’s bring it in with a smile.

We love to see smiling faces, eyes shining. A smile compels us like nothing else! And guides us to look into one’s eyes! A smile is an invitation to gaze upon the face of another, isn’t it? An invitation to know that person in a more intimate, personal way.

There’s something about looking at someone’s eyes and face and smile that allows us to see them and know them in a way that we can’t by any other means. Whether it’s our expressions, body language, a softening of the smile, a twinkle in one’s eyes, when we are face to face with someone, we connect. And we feel connected. God hardwired us for that kind of connectedness.

There’s an intimacy involved with looking at someone face to face. It’s no different in our relationship with God. To be intimate with God means to be “face to face” with God, to stand revealed before God in all of our brokenness and imperfection, and to allow ourselves to be gaze-bathed in God’s light and mercy.

God is a face-time God. God’s greatest desire is to shine God’s glory upon us! Listen to what we call the Aaronic blessing:

The Lord bless you and keep you.
The Lord make his face shine on you and be gracious to you.
The Lord turn His face toward you and radiate upon you His peace.

When we stand face to face with God, we marinate in God’s grace-filled gaze. We stand transfixed in God’s life-giving light. And as long as we stand face to face with God, we are protected and sealed by God’s signature identity. In the God Gaze, God makes us God’s own. We belong to God. We are signed, sealed, and delivered into the realm of God’s heavenly Kingdom registration book!

It’s no wonder that the word for repentance, the Hebrew PNH or paniym, means a turning to face, gazing into the face [of God].* When we repent of our sin and separation from God, we “turn and face” God. We “face” our selves without trying to “save face,” and we “face up” to who and what we really are. When we do that, we can approach God face to face!

Then, as we stare into the face of the Holy God of love, we are “anointed” and “sealed” by the image of Christ, held fixed by the Holy Spirit’s power, so that we cannot fall away.

“He transforms us into the image of the Lord as we behold as in a mirror the glory of Christ” (2 Corinthians 3:18).

The idea of “facing” God was in the Hebrew tradition a priestly ritual. The sons of Aaron had the responsibility on the Day of Atonement to enter into the inner chamber of the Tabernacle in order to stand face to face with God. To “face” God meant to serve as an advocate for God’s holy people, so that the sins of the people might be forgiven. In a sense, they served as a symbol of the repentance (turning toward the face of God) for all of Israel.**

Epiphany literally means to “shine forth.” On Epiphany Sunday we turn towards the shining face of Jesus. We come before Him face to face, just as the Magi did those years ago at His own birth as they followed the Epiphany star and stood in the light shining upon the face of the Christ child, kneeling before Him transfixed by His power and glory.

For us today, when we enter into relationship with Jesus, when we come before His holy face, as we are, and lift our eyes to Him, asking him to help us be what we can be, we see His image reflected in our own eyes. The moment we bear the image of Christ, we are sealed with His holy love and grace. We are sanctified by the power of the Holy Spirit, our advocate before God.

All we need to do is “repent” –turn our face toward Christ Jesus and allow His Light to sear and seal His image upon us!

Many of you probably have seen a seal. [Bring one to show if you can]. I’m talking now about the kind made of wax, melted down and affixed with a stamped symbol. That symbol identifies the image with the Image Bearer, the one who owns the stamp. A seal is an identity marker, a tribal status marker, and a covenant symbol. It denotes a pledge, an earnest of the future. It is meant to be unbroken until the time comes to open the scroll or letter to which it has been affixed. In a sense, it binds tightly and securely that which it has marked.

The Greek word for seal, sphragis, or to seal, sphragizo, also denotes a mark of ownership. God’s seal of holiness upon us is like wearing God’s “signature” upon God’s own creation. When we bear the mark of Christ upon us, when we are sealed with the power of the Holy Spirit, we enter into an unbreakable bond with God, protected by the Holy Spirit, for as long as we do not breach it. For as Paul tells us, that seal will not be opened until the Day of Redemption, when the Lamb will break all seals and welcome us into God’s holy kingdom.

Paul talked often in his letters about being “sealed” in Christ, about sanctification by the Holy Spirit, being sealed by the blood of Jesus. Paul knew the sealing power of our advocate, the Holy Spirit, to keep us face to face with Jesus, even until our day of glory.

John Wesley called it “living in holiness.” To live in holiness meant to walk continuously in relationship with God, honestly and unabashedly, to allow the Holy Spirit to seal us in a Spirit baptism that will sear Christ’s image upon our hearts and visage. Once “sealed” we must continue to live in sanctified relationship with God as closely as possible, so as to remain sealed for the day of redemption. We identify as God’s children, all of us, Jews and Gentiles, all who follow Jesus.

Today, I invite you to the altar to receive a “seal” of anointing. Today, you will be anointed with the oil of frankincense and myrrh, to signify the Light that was born into the world, God with us “face to face.” And as you receive the mark of Christ upon your forehead, and smell the fragrance of Christ’s presence, I invite you to stand before Him, to repent of your sins, and to invite Him to sear His holy image upon the flesh of your heart. For when He lives in you, and you in Him, no earthly power can break that bond.

“Lord, may we marinate in your holy Light. May we live in Your eternal grace and glory.”


*Strongs #6440

**messiahsmandate.org

Based on the Story Lectionary

Major Text

The Visit of the Magi to Bethlehem (Matthew 2)

The Priest of God Most High Melchizedek (Genesis 14)

Minor Text

Joseph is Given Asenath Daughter of Potiphera the Egyptian Priest of On to be His Wife (Genesis 41:41-52) and They Bear Ephraim and Manasseh

Moses Marries Ziporah the Daughter of Midian Priest Jethro (Exodus 2 and 3)

The Prophecy of Balaam Son of Beor (Numbers 24)

Psalm 2: The Lord Has Raised Up His Anointed

Psalm 110: The Lord Extends His Scepter to His Chosen Priest

The Psalms of Solomon: The Proclamation of the Priestly Messiah

The Coming of the Messiah (Isaiah 52)

The Lord of the Nations (Isaiah 60)

Daniel Chief of the Magi in Nebuchadnezzar’s Court Interprets the Writing on the Wall (Daniel 5)

Daniel’s Prayer from Medes (in the Reign of Xerxes) (Daniel 9)

The Priestly Order of Melchizedek (Hebrews 7)

Jews and Gentiles All Citizens of God’s Kingdom (Ephesians 2)

Image Exegesis: Melchizedek

For image exegesis on Melchizedek, Hebrew priesthood, and the Hebrew betrothal metaphor in these scriptures, see the Story Sermon “She Waits” (13 May 2018).

For image exegesis on the meaning of the Magi, see the Story Sermon “The Order of the Magi” (8 January 2017)

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., by Lori Wagner