Trinity Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)

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Sermons

January 2002 (click here to return to "January 2002 Sermons" page)

Epiphany of the Lord (January 6, 2002)

“The Road to Bethlehem – and Back”    Dr. Julie Adkins

            Text: Matthew 12:1-12

 

SERMON

For centuries,

            we Christians have been fascinated

                        with the wise men.

I’m not quite sure what it is about them

            that we find so intriguing,

                        but almost since the time the gospels were written,

                        more and more story and legend has grown up

                                    around these wise men from the east.

For example,

            we sing about “we three kings,”

                        but nowhere in the story does it say that they are kings!

That assumption was made by very early Christians,

            reading the same Isaiah scripture we heard this morning,

                        the part about how “kings [shall come]

                        to the brightness of your dawn.”

So they might have been kings,

            but we don’t really know that.

We don’t even know how many there were!

Tradition says there were three,

            but Matthew doesn’t say.

We also don’t know that their names

            were Caspar, Melchior, and Balthazar,

                        though many of us were probably introduced to them that way

                                    in our childhood!

And we don’t know what racial or ethnic background they were,

            though in most nativity sets you see

                        two of them are white and one is black.

Scholars assume they were Persian,

            and perhaps of the Zoroastrian religion –

                        but again, it’s only an assumption.

  

All of these traditions have grown up

            since the time of the Bible,

            from Christians who were fascinated by

                        these unusual visitors from the east.

Even in the past century or so,

            they have inspired stories such as

                        Henry Van Dyke’s “The Other Wise Man,”

            and Gian Carlo Menotti’s opera

                        “Amahl and the Night Visitors.”

And all of that is real interesting.

But for me, the most fascinating things about the wise men

            are the things that Matthew did include in his gospel.

  

I find it amazing, for one thing,

            that these eastern sages chose to leave everything behind

                        to follow this star.

How did they know to follow it?

            They weren’t Jews …

Some speculate that they were probably astronomers,

            but even so, how did they know that the star

                        was a good sign and not a bad one?

What made them decide to bring gifts along?

And, perhaps the most curious thing to me,

            after they had seen Jesus, the child, the king,

                        how ever did they tear themselves away from that,

                                    and go back home again?

It seems to me that

            the natural human tendency is,

                        whenever we find anything good,

                                    to grab hold of it.

Not let it go, not leave it.

But hang on for all you’re worth.

  

How did the wise men tear themselves away?

They knew the child they saw was something special:

            a star had come to tell of his birth,

            they had brought him expensive gifts,

            they fell down and worshiped him.

And then, they turned around and went home … ?

It’s tempting for us to conclude

            that this means that the wise men

                        didn’t really understand or appreciate what they had seen.

That for them,

            the whole thing was kind of like

                        a fireworks display –

            beautiful, and quite moving,

                        but when it’s over, it’s over.

  

But in fact,

            I think that just the opposite is true.

The fact that the wise men

            did pick up and go home

                        after seeing the child Jesus

            suggests to me that they did understand what was going on

                        and what had happened to them

                        better than many of us who have been Christians all our lives

understand it.

Somehow they knew that to stay there,

            and simply keep this wonderful experience all to themselves,

                        would be dreadfully wrong.

The story had to be told.

Life had to change, now.

They were to go home and be a different kind of people

            because of what they had seen and heard.

Somehow the wise men knew

            what so many of us have forgotten:

            that Bethlehem is not the end point of our journey;

                        it is the turning point.

From there we must go back into the world we came out of,

            as people who have been transformed

                        by an encounter with the living Christ.

  

Now, the reason I say

            that we’ve forgotten a lot of this

            is that a lot of what passes for

                        Christian theology and Christian preaching today,

                        especially the “popular” stuff,

                                    has completely left out the return part of the journey.

The emphasis so often is only on

            seeking and finding Jesus,

                        not on what comes next.

Please don’t misunderstand;

            I don’t mean to suggest that it isn’t important

                        that we search for and find Christ.

It is very important,

            and sometimes it is very difficult;

                        we don’t have anything as obvious as

                                    a star sitting over the place where he is

                                    to point him out to us!

It’s absolutely important that we find Christ,

            but that’s not the end of the story.

We have to realize that our finding him

            doesn’t mean that we have a claim on him …

            it means that now we must allow him

                        to have a claim on us.

  

Do you remember, years ago now,

            those bright-yellow bumper stickers you used to see on cars,

                        proclaiming, “I found it!”  ?

Those always irritated me;

            made me want to holler back,

                        “I never lost it!”

But maybe a more appropriate response would be,

            “You found it?

                        That’s great; now what are you going to do with it?”

  

Like the wise men –

            once we have found Bethlehem,

            once we have seen and heard the good news,

                        we must go back to where we came from

                        and live as people who have found Christ.

That’s rarely ever easy,

            as we know, if we’ve tried it!

Because finding Christ is a turning point

            in our lives.

Christ’s presence turns things around,

            turns them upside-down,

            turns them on their head.

Nothing can ever be the way it was again.

Once we have found Christ,

            and allowed him to claim us,

                        every bit of our life is affected.

  

Christ’s presence

            affects how we use our money:

                        what we spend it for,

                        how much we spend,

                        how much we give.

Christ’s coming

            affects our relationships with other people:

                        how we treat our families,

                        how we deal with our friends and acquaintances,

                                    and strangers as well,

                        and even how we view our enemies.

Finding Christ

            influences how we spend our time and energy:

                        where we spend our time,

                        how we channel our energy,

                        and even how much time and energy we have.

  

Meeting Christ changes us.

It’s tempting sometimes

            to want simply to remain always in his presence,

                        basking in his love,

                        learning from his teachings,

                        sheltered from harm.

And we need to do that sometimes …

            that is what we’re doing when we come to church,

                        when we pray or meditate at home,

                        when we study our Bible.

These are ways in which,

            you might say we return to Bethlehem.

                        we see Christ again,

                        and hear his words for us,

                        and enjoy his presence.

We need this …

            but then,

            Christ needs us to turn around and go home.

To tell his story

            out in the world that we live in.

To live lives that have been

transformed and turned upside-down

            by meeting him.

To minister to others

            in his name.

  

It is not enough simply

            to make the journey to Bethlehem.

Like the wise men,

            we too must depart

                        and return to our own country.

To bring Christ out,

            so that all the world may know.

Thanks be to God for this two-way journey!

Amen.

© 2002 Julie Adkins (e-mail: Drjadkins@trinitypresdallas.org)