Sermon for the Epiphany of Our Lord

Sermon for the Epiphany of Our Lord

[Machine transcription]

In the name of Jesus, amen.
Dear saints, a blessed epiphany to you as we celebrate how the Lord Jesus reveals himself
also to the Gentiles.
And we remember tonight how the Lord sent the wise men from the east to find the child
Jesus in the home in Bethlehem and fall down and worship him.
Now, this story, this biblical history, has always, to me, created more questions than
it’s answered.
It’s going to be one of the joys of the resurrection to sit with the wise men and ask them to fill
in some of the details.
For example, how many of you actually were there?
Three?
Here’s my best guess.
We say three because there’s three gifts, and you would hate to be the fourth wise man
who, like, didn’t bring anything.
My guess is that there were three of these wise men and kings, but they would have been
accompanied by a great host.
I mean, you wouldn’t travel across the desert without having security guards there, a little
band of soldiers, servants who would pitch the tent and cook and go along with you as
you traveled.
In fact, the prophecy from Isaiah says that they filled Jerusalem with their camels, and
And the gospel text tells us that not only was Herod afraid, but that the whole city
was afraid.
So, while there might have been three of these wise men, they came with this big, huge group
looking for the king.
Or I want to ask him, how did you know that the star that appeared indicated that the
king of the Jews was born?
How did they have any indication?
They’re from Babylon as best we can figure, and our best guess to that, you know, maybe
Maybe they’ll tell us and we’ll be like, ah, that’s what I thought, is that Daniel,
the prophet, had this prophecy that the star indicated the birth of the Messiah.
And he established a little university there in Babylon, and generation after generation
they studied the Scriptures, and they were looking forward to this promise being fulfilled.
And then one day they saw it, and they packed up all their stuff and went to see the child
Jesus?
Or I’d love to ask him, because it seems like the star, how it went with the star, because
it seems like the star kind of indicated they should go to the east, but they went to Jerusalem,
and then the star appeared again.
What happened there?
Because at first when they follow the star, they end up in Jerusalem, right, the capital
of Israel.
It didn’t seem like the star had more precision, but it seems like then in the text after they’ve
heard the promise of Micah that the star goes to rest right over the house where Jesus was.
I’d love to hear about that.
Or I’d love to ask him about this.
When they asked Herod where the one who was born King of the Jews is, did they know what
they were saying?
Herod, remember, had that title.
It was given to him by the Roman Caesar, the King of the Jews.
You can imagine walking up to the one who has on his, you know, embroidered on
his royal throne, king of the Jews, and saying, hey where’s the new king of the
Jews? It doesn’t seem like they were, and this is maybe another question that I’d
like to ask. Did they really think that Herod also wanted to worship him? It
It seems like it.
You know, Herod pulls them aside after he’s going to send them to Bethlehem and he says,
hey, when you guys find him, come back and get me and I’ll come and worship him also
with a sword.
It seems like the wise men believed Herod, which is a little indication of how wily Herod
was, how tricky he was.
He was an utterly wicked man, but he had a large amount of earthly wisdom.
He reshaped the whole countryside.
He was bloodthirsty, but he seemed pretty savvy.
And maybe they were tricked.
The angel had to tell them in a dream, don’t go back to Jerusalem, go home another way.
I would love to know all these details.
I’d love to know, and this I think we can figure out, maybe we should ask Pastor Mitwoody
who was over in Bethlehem last week I think, someone told me that there’s a place that
you can stand in the city of Jerusalem and see Bethlehem.
You just look down from the palace of Herod, he could look down and see the little village
there.
It was very close, it was only six miles away, and it’s an amazing thing to think that there
Where was the child, the Messiah?
But Herod and especially the Pharisees just couldn’t be bothered to go down there.
They could see it from where they were standing, but they couldn’t be troubled to go and check
it out themselves.
Now, God be praised, they didn’t, but the wise men did.
And the wise men had this divine inspiration, not only from the star, but also from the
scriptures, the prophetic scriptures, that this child who was born was more than what
he appeared, that this child who they found in the lap of the Virgin Mary was God in the
flesh.
And we know that they thought that because when they go into the house, they fell down
and worshiped Him.
Now of all the things that we don’t know about the text, of all the things that are
very mysterious about this account, this is not, this is clear, and this is the point
that we want to have, that the wise men worship the child Jesus just like you and me, or maybe
to say it another way, we worship the child Jesus just like the wise men.
Now I can’t, every year I mention this sermon from Luther, I just can’t escape it, it’s
stuck in my mind because Luther imagines
how it would have been on that night in Bethlehem,
January 6th or whenever it was,
if you were just out walking your dog in Bethlehem
and you turn around the corner and you get to the street
and it’s so crowded with all these camels, you know?
You know like sometimes you go home
and there’s all these cars in the street
and you’re like, oh, a neighbor’s having a party,
I wonder whose house it is.
What are all these camels doing here?
And so you go and you go to track it down,
on what’s all the hubbub, and you find all these servants
kind of milling around with all these soldiers
out in the street, and you’re like,
what’s going on in there?
And so you go and you look in the window,
and there you see this astonishing sight.
You see three wise men, kings from the east,
and they’re down on their face on the ground
in front of this little baby.
And Luther, as he imagines it, says,
as you’re walking by, you would say,
what great fools these men are to fall down and worship a baby. Don’t they know
that we worship God in the temple? Don’t they know that we worship God in
majesty and glory? Don’t they know that we worship God in Jerusalem? What
great fools! And this is also the same for us. If someone were to walk by the
church and kind of, I don’t know, prop themselves up and look through the
stained-glass window and and see you and about 20 minutes from now they’re gonna
see you down on your knees in front of this altar taking a little piece of
bread and drinking a little sip of wine with such great piety and fervor in your
hearts and in your minds and they would say, what are those people doing? They’re
kooks. They’re nutty. What great fools. It’s Friday night. Don’t they know there’s
better things to be doing than this? But this is the wisdom, dear saints, this is
the wisdom of God. That we worship Jesus in humility, in poverty, in lowliness,
knowing that this is our God and Savior. Now there’s a part of this that I just
cannot escape especially today thinking about it. So I don’t know how this has
been for you but I’ve talked to a number of you even just before the service and
it occurs to me it just it seems to me it feels to me like a very heavy time
that a lot of you are suffering that a lot of you are praying for people that a
lot of you are feeling the weight and the burden of this life of sin, that a lot of
you are weary, that a lot of you are crying out to God, that a lot of you are wondering
what the Lord is up to.
And it seems to me, as I was thinking about this text and I was thinking about all these
things today, that the Lord always takes many more risks than we ever would.
It seems to me like if it was me planning this whole thing that I would have made sure
that Jesus was born a lot farther away from Herod than He was.
Six miles is not enough marginal.
It seems to me like I would have made sure, not just an impression in a dream that the
wise men didn’t go back, but I would have caused some sort of earthquake to make sure
that the road back to Jerusalem was blocked.
It seems to me like I would have made Jesus a little safer so that the swords
of Herod’s soldiers couldn’t have pierced him through. But the Lord is
always willing to to go right up next to the edge in all his workings and
dealings with us. Now I don’t know why. I don’t know why He does it this way, but I
I know that if you are feeling like you’re on the edge,
that you just can’t possibly see
how things are gonna work out,
you can’t imagine what the Lord is doing,
that you should remember Jesus in the hands of Mary,
wrapped up against the cold by Joseph
as they flee to Egypt,
and to know that no matter how tenuous things seem,
the Lord is working, and his will is done.
He would escape Herod, he would grow up growing in favor with God and man, he’d
be baptized by John in the Jordan River, and he would at the right time be nailed
to the cross for you. So we rejoice in the wisdom of the wise men to worship
Jesus, but even more we rejoice in the wisdom of God to accomplish in this
child, in this man, in this Jesus our Savior, to accomplish our rescue,
deliverance, and eternal life. May God grant us this comfort and this peace. In
the name of Jesus, Amen. The peace of God which passes all
understanding guard your hearts and minds through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.