We Have Seen God
Is
60:1-6; Eph 3:2-3a,5-6; Mt 2:1-12 (Epiphany C)
“let us go and seek him; let us offer him gifts: gold,
frankincense and myrrh’.
The Greek
word “Epiphania” means “Epiphany” meaning “manifestation” or “showing forth Jesus
as Messiah of Israel, Son of God and Savior of the world.” Historically several
moments in Christ’s early life and ministry have been celebrated as
“epiphanies,” including his birth in Bethlehem, the visit of the Magi, his
baptism by John, and his first miracle at Cana in Galilee (CCC 528).
John Chrysostom explains the significance of the star of Bethlehem. He writes that the star at Bethlehem was to manifest and illumine the lowly place until the magi or wise men had reached their destination at the manger. In their thirst for knowledge of God, the wise men from the East willingly left everything to seek the source of true knowledge Jesus Christ, the Light and Wisdom of God. When they found the newborn King, they humbly worshiped him and gave him gifts fitting for a king the Prince of Peace (Is 9:6), King of Kings (Rev 19:16), and Savior.
John the Evangelist states that when Jesus came into the world the world knew him not and his people received him not (Jn1:10-11). Apart from the Magi and some shepherds, the rest of the world remained in the dark. What happened to the elders of the Jews? But “We have seen God” (Judg. 13:22; Jn 14:9; Jn 1:14). Faith is an entire gift that God gives us. Through the help of the Holy Spirit, the heart opens the eyes of the mind to understand, accept, and believe the truth that God has revealed through his Son, Jesus Christ. In faith, the human will, and intellect cooperate with grace. Thomas Aquinas says, “Believing is an act of the intellect assenting to the divine truth by command of the will moved by God through grace”.
We
believe the meaning of the gifts of the Magi to be Christological. Gold is
presented as representative of Jesus’ kingship. Frankincense symbolizes divinity
because priests burned the substance in the Temple. Myrrh, which was used to
prepare the dead for burial, is offered in anticipation of Jesus’ death. What
do we wish to offer him? To know and to encounter Jesus Christ is to know God
personally. In the encounter of the wise men with Jesus, we see the plan of God
to give his only Son as King and Savior, not just for the Jewish people but for
all the nations as well. The Lord Jesus came that both Jew and Gentile might
find true and lasting peace with God. Bethlehem is a Hebrew name consisting of two
terms: Beth (house) and lehem (bread). Bethlehem means “House of
Bread”. Jesus who is born at Bethlehem is the “bread of Life”. Let us pray that
we and non-Christians might live in that “Bethlehem” towards union with God.
“We are in the true God, as we are in his Son, Jesus
Christ” (Divine Office)