Matthew 2:1-12 · The Visit of the Magi
Seeing the Light
Matthew 2:1-12
Sermon
by Mike Ripski
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Two of the four Gospels tell of Jesus’ birth: Luke and Matthew. The other two begin with Jesus’ adult ministry, around age 30.

We read Luke’s version on Christmas Eve. It tells of Mary and Joseph’s trip from Nazareth down to Bethlehem to register for the Roman census. While there, Jesus is born, wrapped in swaddling cloths, and laid in a manger. The heavenly chorus sings and an angel tells some shepherds on the hillside outside Bethlehem where to find the infant savior.

I. Matthew’s version

Matthew begins his gospel with Joseph’s quandary: the woman to whom he is betrothed is pregnant. Since their marriage has not been consummated, he knows the child isn’t his. He assumes Mary has been unfaithful. The law gives him the right to terminate their relationship. Because he is a righteous man, he decides to do it without drawing attention to Mary, for the community would punish her.

But before Joseph divorces her, he has a dream. An angel tells him that Mary has not been unfaithful to him. Rather, she has been faithful to God. The baby’s father is the Heavenly Father. Joseph will be the baby’s earthly father. As Mary says yes to God’s call in Luke’s Gospel, Joseph says yes to God’s call in Matthew’s.

The poor, the common, the invisible, the lowly, those who do society’s dirty work acknowledge the birth of the Holy Child in Luke’s account. In Matthew’s account it is the well-to-do, the learned, the highly regarded, who visit the child. They’ve been called kings, though that’s largely due to the Christmas carol.

They’ve been called Wise Men, though their wisdom was akin to that of the daily horoscope, which you can find in The Tennessean next to the comics. Their “wisdom,” their status as learned men, comes from their presumed ability to interpret the stars in the heavens, which were presumed to dictate life on earth. Tell them your sign and they would tell you what you should or should not do today.

And I’ve got some swamp land in Florida I want to sell you.

These were Persian magi, as in magic, David Copperfield. For Matthew, what is more suspect than their profession is their race, nationality, religion. They are pagan Gentiles. They are not God’s Chosen People, Israel. They are not Jews.

II. Matthew’s Epiphany

Jesus was for Luke an epiphany, an appearance of God. In Jesus Luke saw the Light. For him it meant being sure that everyone knows that what God is doing in Jesus is include and bless the poor, the disabled, the lowly, women, “the least, the last, and the lost.” I do not know why the church chose to focus on Matthew’s epiphany rather than Luke’s for Epiphany Sunday.

Jesus was for Matthew an epiphany, an appearance of God that enabled him to see the Light, to see what God is doing. And what Matthew saw in Jesus was God’s wrapping his arms around the whole world, around all races, nationalities, ethnic groups, religions. There is no one outside God’s family. Every person is a child of God.

Matthew’s recording of the visit of the magi at the beginning of his story about Jesus signals how he is going to conclude it. It ends with what has come to be known as The Great Commission. The Risen Jesus commissions his church then and his church now: “Go, therefore, and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And remember, I am with you always, to the end of the age” (28:19-20).

This was Matthew’s “Epiphany.” He has seen Heaven’s Light in Jesus and that Light draws everyone to it. Even Persian magicians.

III. Matthew’s Radical Epiphany

We are so familiar with the story that it’s easy for us to miss how radical Matthew’s witness is. To relate, go back to the late ‘60s, when churches refused to allow African-American persons to attend worship.

I recall the Saturday morning at the first church I served. We were doing some long-range planning. Members were telling the church’s story. A man confessed that the church’s leadership had decided to sit any black persons who came for worship, but the pastor was not to issue an invitation to membership. I was preaching the Sunday morning when the first black person joined the church.

Matthew wanted for his church the same epiphany he had through Jesus. He wanted them to see the Light that would open the doors of the church to all people.

One of the ways our sinful condition expresses itself is in the ways we allow our worlds to be shrunk. It happens without our being conscious of it. Have you ever noticed that the winner of the Miss Universe Pageant always come from earth? And the winner of the Baseball World Series is always won by a team from the U.S.? Our theological worlds, political worlds, even our worship and musical worlds shrink the same way.

The result is prejudice. We make judgments about others based on what we believe is true, because we believe it.

Matthew tells the good news of Jesus in such a way that it can’t help but be heard as bad news by those who believe they know the truth about Gentile astrologers.

In Matthew’s telling of Jesus’ birth, it is Herod, who is kin to Jesus, who seeks to kill Jesus. It is Persian magi, who seek to throw Jesus a baby shower. It’s Persian magi, who follow a star to pay homage to a king, who is unlike any king they’ve ever known. It is Herod, who is kin to Jesus, who obeys his fears. It is Persian magi, who obey a dream, and don’t report back to Herod but go back home a different way.

IV. The Wise Men and Their Gifts

These Wise Men are wiser than they know. They bring gifts that are loaded with meaning of which they can’t be aware.

They bring gold, a gift fit for a king, for one who will govern, will rule. The king in the manger will rule by love, not by might, coercion, or terror.

They bring frankincense, a gift fit for a priest, one who swings the smoking censor, the one who stands between heaven and earth, between God and people, presenting each to the other.

They bring myrrh, a gift fit for a prophet, one who speaks and lives God’s truth, though at a cost, that may entail death. The prophet sacrifices his life. Myrrh was used as a kind of embalming ointment.

V. Their Gifts and Our Worship

Now let me help you remember these three gifts and how they shed light, how they manifest the truth about who this baby is and will be.

Gold, the gift fit for a king, corresponds to the Communion rail, where we kneel in humble submission to the King Jesus’ rule.

Frankincense, incense, the smoking presence of the Holy Mystery, is swung by the priest, who is a mediator of heaven’s gifts to God’s children on earth. Think of the Table upon which earthly bread and fruit of the vine contain the grace of heaven, the Holy Presence with us and in us.

Myrrh points to the prophet’s sacrifice on the altar of obedience. See the Altar upon which each Sunday we place beauty to remind us that God’s promise is to bring life out of death, resurrection out of crucifixion. (I’m indebted to James Alison, Christian Century, 12/25/07, p. 16, for his correlation of the magi’s gifts will the roles Jesus will play.)

January 6, today, is Epiphany. The visit of the magi preceded Christmas as a holy day on the Christian calendar. We begin a new year being reminded that in the darkness of Sin a Light shines and that Light draws all to it in order to reveal more than we have seen or can imagine.

As we journey with Christ during 2008, what will the Light show us? What will Christ show us God is doing and invites us to join God in doing? Will we be someone’s star, guiding them to Jesus? Will we allow the Light to shine through us, through our church, as it shined through Jesus?

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by Mike Ripski