1/04/2023

Let's follow them!

 

   
    
 If we follow the news we will hear about corruption, injustice, violence and wars, too many of these all the world over. We hear about people risking their lives, many of them dying in their effort to cross the Mediterranean in search of a better life. We can then agree that the past years were dominated by extreme darkness not because of lack of electricity, but of genuine light in people’s minds and hearts. However, there is a desire for better days expressed by greetings for a ‘Happy New Year’.

Today the Church invites us to celebrate the feast of Epiphany and to remember the journey of the Wise Men coming from the East in the hope of finding the new-born king. Theirs is an example we should follow, if we want to help bring about a change of lifestyle that favours love, that brings peace, justice, solidarity and happiness to all peoples.

We normally centre our attention on the three Wise Men and we stress the fact that through them Jesus is presented to the non-Jewish peoples. However, I would like to include other manifestations of Jesus, starting from His birth, the visit of the shepherds, the visit of the Wise Men, and including Jesus’ baptism.

My first thoughts go to Joseph and Mary who were unable to find a decent place where Mary could give birth to her firstborn son, so she laid him in a manger. Surely they had hoped for a better place where to welcome their Son, who “will be called Son of God” (Lk 1, 35), as Gabriel the angel told Mary.

Then I think about the shepherds who were “keeping watch over their flock by night when an angel of the Lord stood before them … and they were terrified. “Do not be afraid” the angel told them, “for see, I am bringing you good news of great joy for all the people:” (Lk 2, 8-10).

And then I think of the Magi, wise men they were, who studied the stars by night and who had some knowledge of Jewish messianic expectations. When they saw a different star in the sky they knew that they had to go to Jerusalem, where kings lived.

So there were these three groups to whom the Saviour’s birth was announced. All of them were somehow surrounded by darkness: there was no place for Joseph and Mary in the inn, the shepherds were keeping watch over their flock by night, the Magi studied the skies by night.

In truth there was another group of people who received the news of a new-born king of the Jews. It was King Herod who when he received the news, was frightened, and all Jerusalem with him (Mt 2, 8).

What did the first three groups do, when they received the news of the birth of the Child? Each one of them started on a journey to meet Him. Joseph and Mary went to Bethlehem and they had to search for a humble place where Mary could give birth to her son. There they welcomed the Son of God into our human history. The shepherds said to one another, “Let us go now to Bethlehem and see this thing that has taken place which the Lord has made known to us”, and there they spoke about what had been told them about this Child. Mary treasured all these words and pondered them in her heart, and the shepherds glorified and praised God for all they had heard and seen. The Wise Men went to Jerusalem asking King Herod about the Child king of the Jews, “For we observed his star at its rising, and have come to pay him homage”. Then they followed the star that led them to the house where the child was. They saw the Child with his mother. They knelt down and paid Him homage, and they offered Him gifts of gold, frankincense, and myrrh”.

What did Herod do? He heard the news about the birth of the Child king and remained in his palace thinking of a way to get rid of the Child, who, he thought would threaten his power. When Herod saw that the wise men had returned to their own country by another road, he was infuriated and he ordered the killing of all the boys in and around Bethlehem who were two years old or younger.

What does all this teach us?

We know that we are living a dark night of wars, violence, corruption and egotism. We wished one another a New Year as it started. This means that we have to do our part and search for a light that can guide us and answer our questions. Isaiah brings us the words of the Lord, “I am about to do a new thing; now it springs forth, do you not perceive it?” (Is 43, 19).

We have to ask ourselves, are we ready to learn about and accept the new way of life offered us by Jesus, our Redeemer, like Mary, Joseph, the Shepherds and the Wise Men did, and set out on our journey to meet Him and love Him, or do we prefer Herod’s ways and somehow  support our modern-day Herods? Our answer will make all the difference if we want to find true newness in our lives and in that of all those who inhabit our small and troubled world.

Finally I remember Jesus’ manifestation at His baptism, when the voice from heaven said: “This is my Son, the Beloved, with whom I am well pleased”. Jesus is the Son of God and the Son of Man. He is the true light, for “in Him was life, and the life was the light of all people. The light shines in the darkness” (Jn 1, 4-5).

Let us ask Him to teach us how to love Him. He said: “Those who love me will keep my word, and my Father will love them, and we will come to them and make our home with them” (Jn 14, 23). Are we ready to open our heart and let Him in when He knocks on our door?