Matthew 2:1-12 · The Visit of the Magi
The Glow of a Star
Matthew 2:1-12
Sermon
by King Duncan
Loading...

A young man sitting in church one day made a startling discovery. He was a pre‑med student, only nineteen years of age. The sermon that day was probably a dull one. There are such things I understand, dull sermons. Of course, you wouldn’t know about such things.

Anyway, instead of listening to the sermon, this young man’s attention was drawn to the altar lantern swaying back and forth, back and forth, back and forth. [“You are getting very sleepy . . .” If I could hypnotize all of you, I could stop now and go home.] This young man, however, did not get sleepy. Instead, he started timing the swings of the lantern, using his own pulse as a clock. And he made a discovery, a discovery that changed his life, and to a certain extent, changed our world. For, after this experience, this young man dropped the study of medicine and began studying mathematics and physics. His name, of course, was Galileo. According to Stephen Hawking, Galileo probably bears more of the responsibility for the birth of modern science than anybody who has ever lived. In fact, Albert Einstein called Galileo the father of modern science.

Galileo revolutionized how people kept time. At the time of Galileo’s discovery the very best clocks in the world easily lost‑‑or gained‑‑fifteen minutes a day. A few decades later, after Galileo, all the best clocks were using pendulums and they were losing or gaining only ten seconds a day! No doubt hundreds of people had sat in that church watching that lantern sway‑‑back and forth, back and forth‑‑but Galileo saw much more. Whereas others simply saw an old oily lantern swaying back and forth, Galileo thought, Aha! There’s more here than meets the eye. (1)

When was the last time you had an Aha! experience? There’s a word for an Aha! experience, of course. It is epiphany. When we have an epiphany, we discover something new, something exciting. As we begin this New Year in worship we hope to have some Aha! experiences regarding our understanding of God. Impossible, you say? You believe you already know as much about God as you’re ever going to know? How sad.

It reminds me of a Calvin & Hobbes cartoon years ago in which Hobbes, Calvin’s stuffed tiger, asks, “Did you make any resolutions for the New Year?”

Calvin becomes highly indignant and shouts, “NO! I’m fine just the way I am! Why should I change? In fact, I think it’s high time the world started to change to suit ME! I don’t see why I should do all the changing around here. If the New Year requires resolutions, I say it’s up to everybody else, not me! I don’t need to improve! Everyone ELSE does!” After he finishes his tirade Calvin asks, “How about you? Did you make any resolutions?”

Hobbes says, “Well, I had resolved to be less offended by human nature, but I think I blew it already.” (2)

It’s true. Some of us think we have arrived, that we don’t have any more growing to do. And we think we know everything about God we’re ever going to know. That would be our loss if it turns out to be true.

At the beginning of each New Year, Howard Thurman, a professor at Boston University, would write down his understanding of God’s nature. Each year, he compared last year’s journal entry about the nature of God with that current year’s description. And if there was no real change in his understanding of God’s nature, then Professor Thurman was disappointed. He expected to grow in his knowledge and understanding of God, and if he didn’t notice any spiritual growth in himself, then he considered that past year to have been wasted. (3)

Thurman, a professor of theology, didn’t think he knew everything he needed to know about God. To paraphrase the popular song, “He wanted to see God more clearly, love God more dearly.” How about you? Is that the sincere desire of your heart?

Famed Bible teacher J. Vernon McGee once asked, “What is your ambition in life today? Is it to get rich? Is it to make a name for yourself? Is it even to do some wonderful thing for God? Listen to me, beloved. The highest desire that can possess any human heart is a longing to see God.” (4)

That is the meaning of Epiphany. That is the desire that drove the wise men to Bethlehem. Epiphany is the twelfth day after Christmas. According to tradition this is the day we celebrate the arrival of the wise men to worship the one who was born to be King of the Jews. The wise men followed a star until it came to the place where the young child lay. On coming to the house, they saw the child with his mother Mary, and they bowed down and worshiped him. Then they opened their treasures and presented him with gifts of gold, frankincense and myrrh. It is a wonderful story, one of the best known stories of our faith.

The prophet Isaiah anticipated the coming of those wise men hundreds of years before. He wrote, “Arise, shine, for your light has come, and the glory of the Lord rises upon you. See, darkness covers the earth and thick darkness is over the peoples, but the Lord rises upon you and his glory appears over you. Nations will come to your light, and kings to the brightness of your dawn . . . Herds of camels will cover your land . . . And all from Sheba will come, bearing gold and incense and proclaiming the praise of the Lord.”

These were words of prophecy. However, even Isaiah did not understand the full import of what would happen when his prophecy was fulfilled. He only prophesied what God laid on his heart. “Arise, shine, for your light has come . . .”

What do those words mean to you your light has come? For the magi, these words represented the birth of a king. What do they mean for you?

Doesn’t the coming of light imply that the world was in darkness? “Arise, shine, for your light has come, and the glory of the Lord rises upon you. See, darkness covers the earth and thick darkness is over the peoples . . .”

Isaiah first spoke these words to the people of Jerusalem during a time of great travail for the nation. They were a captive people. Their homes and fields were ravaged and abandoned, laid desolate by the power of the Babylonian empire. But God would not abandon His people forever, counseled Isaiah. God would act in their behalf.

Darkness is a powerful metaphor. Pastor Thomas Hilton tells about a significant event that took place on July 11, 1991 a total eclipse of the sun. Though not visible in the northern United States, on this date more than twenty years ago several major cities, including Mexico City were plunged for a few moments into total darkness in the middle of the day. It was an eerie experience according to those who were there. And tens of thousands of people were there. Some of them traveled thousands of miles in order to personally experience this once-in-a-lifetime event. (5)

Darkness, however, usually signifies all the things we most dread. Criminals are more likely to prefer the dark than the light. Fear is more prevalent. Ignorance is associated with darkness. But here’s what’s disturbing. There will come a time, says the Bible, when people will love the darkness more than the light. Is that time closer than we think?

There was an article in Time magazine a few years back about a new trend in fine dining that was appearing in which people really did prefer the dark. This trend was termed, “dinners in the dark.” It explained that some restaurants had begun turning out all the lights and serving meals in the dark. The diners were not told what they were eating. This practice of eating in the dark was supposed to allow the diner to focus on the flavor of the food. Waiters in these restaurants wore night-vision goggles so as to minimize the risk of trips or spills. The story by Lisa McLaughlin was titled, “The Ultimate Blind Date.” (6)

Well, if you were a rather plain looking person on a date or if you had offensive eating habits, dining in the dark could have its advantages. Usually when we think of darkness, however, it has negative connotations.

A rabbi tells of hearing a ten-year-old boy who was studying the events that are recorded in the book of Exodus. He was perplexed by the third plague which God sent—darkness over all the land. Why, this child wanted to know, didn’t the Egyptians simply light lamps so that they could see? After all, we must assume this is what they normally did each evening when darkness fell. They simply lit their lamps. Why, he wondered, when it became dark over all the land, didn’t the Egyptians simply light their lamps?

The teacher explained to the youth that the darkness in Egypt didn’t affect the eyes. It affected the heart. Physically the Egyptians could see, but in their hearts they didn’t recognize the misery that their intolerance and persecution were causing other people. The Egyptians were blind to the suffering of others. That is what is meant by the plague of darkness. (7)

No one wants to be kept “in the dark” unless they are doing evil. Darkness hides our misdeeds; light reveals our misdeeds in all their ugliness.

King Herod lived in perpetual darkness. He was ruthless: murdering his wife, his three sons, his mother-in-law, brother-in-law, uncle, and many others. His crowning cruelty of course was the murder of the infant boys in Bethlehem of Judea in a vain attempt to slaughter the newborn King of the Jews.

The philosopher Plato once wrote, “We can easily forgive a child who is afraid of the dark: the real tragedy of life is when [adults] are afraid of the light.” Herod was afraid of the light. And so he sought to slaughter the one about whom John would say, “In him was life, and that life was the light of all humankind. The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it” (1:2-4).

The world was in darkness. Ignorance and evil were both ascendant, as they are even today. But darkness will never have the last word. That is the message of Epiphany. Light has come into our world.

A student, asked to summarize all the gospel in a few words, responded like this: “In the Bible, it gets dark, then it gets very, very dark, then Jesus shows up.”

That says it all. The world was in darkness, deep darkness, but Jesus showed up.

In his book The Gulag Archipelago, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn tells a story about how, as a political prisoner in a labor camp in the USSR, he was forced to live in a cell without any lights, and with windows that were painted so he couldn’t see outside. But one day a little fleck of paint fell off the window, and in the darkness Aleksandr saw a tiny ray of sunlight shine its beam of hope in to his dark cell. This light is what gave him strength to continue on, the light to know that he was still alive and a part of the created order. It was enough for him to know that the world was still progressing. (8)

More than two thousand years ago a tiny babe was born in Bethlehem of Judea. It may have seemed that it, too, was a tiny ray of light in a dark world, but that tiny ray of light was exactly what the world needed. And even today that light is still lighting people’s lives, helping them to move out of the darkness.

A man named Jim Birchfield once gave a powerful illustration of a person moving from darkness into the light. He told about Father Greg Boyle, a Jesuit priest who works with gang members in East Los Angeles.

Father Boyle has put together a team of physicians trained in tattoo removal using laser technology. The team is part of a program that removes the tattoos of ex-gang members and wipes the slate clean. For many, it is as crucial a service as it is merciful.

To a former gang member, the gang tattoo fosters the attitude that the gang’s claim on that person’s life is permanent. It is a mark of ownership as much as identity. The process of tattoo removal is extremely painful. Patients describe the laser procedure as feeling like hot grease on their skin. Yet the waiting list grows of those who will put up with whatever pain it takes to receive a new identity. (9)

“Arise, your light has come.” What does that mean to you? Biblically it means that without Christ, the world is a dark and lonely place. It is a world of conflict and injustice. It is a world of ignorance and fear. But that is not the end of the story. “It gets dark, then it gets very, very dark, then Jesus shows up.”

But there’s one thing more to be said. If the darkness of this world is going to be pushed back any further, you and i will need to let our little lights shine. Christ is the light of the world, but we who are followers of Christ are called to reflect in our lives that we have been in his presence. We do that by continuing to shine the light of his love into our dark world.

Henry Van Dyke wrote one of the most famous fictional accounts of the coming of the magi to Bethlehem which he called The Story of the Other Wise Man. In this story Van Dyke speaks of a fourth wise man who searched for years for the Christ child, but was never able to catch up with the others. This wise man had three jewels, a gift of great wealth which he intended to give to the newborn king. But in his journey to find the newborn king he came across people who had great needs. He could not pass them by without trying to help. He ended up using the three jewels he had intended to offer the Christ child to care for the needs of these persons he found in want.

This fourth magi searched for Jesus for the rest of his life, only to realize at the end of his life that he had both found him and worshipped him each time he gave himself and his gift to one who was in need. Through his compassion this fourth wise man pushed back some of the world’s darkness. And that is our task as well. We are to live in the presence of Christ so that with time we will be able to reflect his light through the service we give to others.

A traveling man bought his wife a little souvenir a phosphorescent match box which was supposed to glow in the dark. However, when he turned out the light to demonstrate its use, there was not even the faintest glow. Disgustedly, he concluded that he had been cheated.

The next day his wife examined the box more closely, and found an inscription in tiny letters, “If you want me to shine in the night, keep me in the sunlight through the day.” She did as directed; and that night after dinner it was a pleasant surprise for her husband when she turned out the light and the match box shone with a brilliant glow. (10)

What was true of that match box is true of us. Any light we shine in this dark world is but reflected light. It is the light of Christ’s love. When we live in his presence and seek to show his love to our neighbors, then the darkness is pushed back—until the day comes when we all live in his love and eternal light.


1. Mikey’s Funnies. To subscribe: http://www.mikeysFunnies.com/sub/.

2. Don Friesen, http://www.ottawamennonite.ca/sermons/aha.htm.

3. Martha Graybeal Rowlett, Responding to God (Nashville: Upper Room Books, 1996), pp. 30-31.

4. “Feasting on the Word,” Christianity Today, Vol. 37, no. 7.

5. The Clergy Journal, March 1995, p. 26.

6. Time, April 7, 2003.

7. Rabbi Emeritus Arthur Rulnick, http://www.thewjc.org/sermons/tolerance.htm.

8. http://matthewmoore.wordpress.com/2009/06/14/sermon-mark-426/.

9. John A. Huffman Jr., http://www.preaching.com/sermons/11600669/page-4/.

10. Arthur P. Ciaramicoli, and Katherine Ketcham, The Power of Empathy (New York: Penguin Putnam Inc., 2000).

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Dynamic Preaching First Quarter 2013, by King Duncan