Showing posts with label Magi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Magi. Show all posts

Sunday, January 6, 2019

1st Epiphany 2019, The World's Ills



Egbert Codex
1st Epiphany
Matthew 2: 1-12 (adapted from RSV)


When Jesus was born in Bethlehem in Judea—during the time of King Herod—behold: wise priest-kings from the east arrived in Jerusalem, saying,
           
“Where is the one born here King of the Jews? We have seen his star rise in the east and have come to worship him.”
           
When King Herod heard this, he was deeply disturbed, and all Jerusalem with him. And he assembled all the high priests and scribes of the people and inquired of them in what place the Christ was to be born.

And they said to him, “In Bethlehem of Judea, for thus it was written by the prophet:

And you Bethlehem, in the land of Judah,
Are by no means the least among the rulers of Judah;
For out of you shall come forth the ruler
Who will be shepherd over my people, the true Israel.”

Leyendecker
Then Herod, secretly calling the Magi together again, inquired from them the exact time when the star had appeared. He directed them to Bethlehem and said, “Go there and search carefully for the child, and when you find him, report to me, that I too may go and bow down before him.”

After they had heard the King, they went on their way, and behold, the star that they had seen rising went before them, and led them in its course over the cities until it stood over the place where the child was.

Seeing the star, they were filled with [there awakened in them] an exceedingly great and holy joy.

Entering the house, they saw the child with Mary his mother; they fell down before him and worshipped him. Then they opened their treasures and offered him their gifts: gold and frankincense and myrrh.

And having been warned in a dream not to return to Herod, they departed to their country by another way.

Epiphany
January 6, 2019
Matthew 2:1-12

Cogniet, Slaughter of the Innocents
Evil seeks to destroy. Herod tries to destroy the Child and cuts a wide swath. Although the bodies of the innocent children had died, their souls and spirits form a living crown of supportive life. They form a living sacrificial crown around this one Child who will one day sacrifice himself in service.

Today Christ wants to be born and operate within every human being. He wants to be seen working in the world. And today, evil still seeks to destroy the innocent. Recent deaths of innocent people are a prompt to us. They prompt us to fulfill the conditions within ourselves that allow Christ’s work to be seen and experienced in the world.

Those innocent souls want to encourage our open reverence before the mysteries of the world.

They want to encourage our empathy and compassion for all who suffer,
Christ as Good Samaritan, Codex Rossanensis
including those caught up in evil through their own illness.

They want to stimulate our conscience, that is, our knowing and acting on our part to play in the remedying of the world’s ills, starting with ourselves.

The world cries out for redemption. It needs men and women of selfless selfhood, men and women of good will so that Christ can work His salvation through them. Only thus can His Being of Love operate on the earth.


Sunday, January 10, 2016

1st Epiphany 2016, First Ancestor

1st Epiphany
Matthew 2: 1-12


Herod and the Magi, Tissot (Brooklyn Museum)
When Jesus was born in Bethlehem in Judea—during the time of King Herod—behold: wise priest-kings from the east arrived in Jerusalem, saying,
               
“Where is the one born here King of the Jews? We have seen his star rise in the east and have come to worship him.”
               
When King Herod heard this, he was deeply disturbed, and all Jerusalem with him. And he assembled all the high priests and scribes of the people and inquired of them in what place the Christ was to be born.

And they said to him, “In Bethlehem of Judea, for thus it was written by the prophet:

And you Bethlehem, in the land of Judah,
Are by no means the least among the rulers of Judah;
For out of you shall come forth the ruler
Who will be shepherd over my people, the true Israel.”

Then Herod, secretly calling the Magi together again, inquired from them the exact time when the star had appeared. He directed them to Bethlehem and said, “Go there and search carefully for the child, and when you find him, report to me, that I too may go and bow down before him.”

After they had heard the King, they went on their way, and behold, the star that they had seen rising went before them, and led them in its course over the cities until it stood over the place where the child was.
Tapestry by Burne-Jones

Seeing the star, they were filled with [there awakened in them] an exceedingly great and holy joy.

Entering the house, they saw the child with Mary his mother; they fell down before him and worshipped him. Then they opened their treasures and offered him their gifts: gold and frankincense and myrrh.

And having been warned in a dream not to return to Herod, they departed to their country by another way.



1st Epiphany
January 10, 2016
Matthew 2: 1-12

To be a king means to rule over a place with a boundary. The king administers, defends, and maintains it. In ancient times kings were souls pre-ordained by the spiritual world, who were sent into a particular bloodline, a bloodline that offered the kingly soul the necessary attributes.

King Herod was no divinely appointed king; he was a political appointee. When emissaries from other lands come looking for the great soul born into the hereditary bloodline, Herod becomes anxious to maintain his position. But the emissaries, priest-kings themselves, are led by the higher guidance of the soul-star. It leads them to the child who will become, not a ruler, but a ‘shepherd of all nations.’

Later Herod’s son Antipas will also be a King Herod curious about this man of whom he has heard so much. He will play his part in the deaths of both John the Baptist, the old Adam, and Jesus, the New Adam. The irony is that neither Herod actually had anything to fear from Jesus, for although he was born into the kingly line, he was not destined to become an earthly ruler. His kingdom would be the whole earth, conquered by the shedding of his own blood, a kingdom beyond time.

Something of eternal nature of Christ’s kingship wafts through the encounter with the priest-kings. They make the child offerings symbolizing their wisdom, their devotion, their forces of healing.

They laid their offerings at his feet:
The gold was their tribute to a King,
The frankincense, with its odor sweet,
Was for the Priest, the Paraclete,
The myrrh for the body's burying.*

The child they worship in joy will die a sacrificial death. But Christ will make possible the healing of humankind and of the earth. He will rise as the first ancestor of a new bloodline, the line of the Christened humans.


*Longfellow, “The Three Kings”