Text: Matthew 2.1-12
The trouble
with the first Sunday of a new year is that everyone arrives carrying invisible
luggage. Not suitcases — far worse. Resolutions! Expectations. Grand plans already wobbling
slightly at the knees. January is full of brave intentions and new beginnings. “I’m
going join that gym”. “I’m going to cut
down on the wine”. “I’m definitely doing
that diet”. But, if your resolutions are anything like mine, they are always
subject to the golden rule of resolutions:
“I’ll start again tomorrow!”.
The Church,
as ever, responds by doing something rather different to what the world would
have us do. Instead of “new
beginnings”, we get Epiphany. Instead of resolutions, we get revelation.
Instead of asking what we are going to do this year, the Church asks a
more unsettling question: what might God choose to show us? What might the light
to lighten the gentiles reveal?
The
Epiphany story begins, not with insiders, but with travellers. The wise men are
not Jewish. They are not local. They are astrologers — which already puts them
in the category of ‘a bit odd’. And yet they are the ones who notice that
something new is happening.
They see a
star at its rising. Not a static beacon, not a fixed theological statement, but
something that is in motion…something that suggests direction rather than
certainty. And so they set off…to find out what’s going on.
And here’s the
first revelation of Epiphany: despite
not knowing everything, wise men go anyway.
They commit to the journey,
even though they don’t know how it will end.
When they
arrive in Jerusalem, the wise men do what sensible people do when looking for a
king. They go to the palace. They assume powerful Herod will welcome the new
power of the Messiah. Which turns out to
be wildly optimistic. Herod is deeply
alarmed. Not curious. Not reflective. Revelation, for him, is not good news but
competition. He is the kind of ruler who likes the world exactly as it is —
with himself firmly at the centre. Any new light feels like an accusation.
That’s the
second revelation of Epiphany: light reveals what we cling to. Herod consults Scripture, summons
experts, deploys religious language — and remains completely unchanged. It is
possible, Epiphany reminds us, to know all the right answers,
theologically-speaking, and still miss the point entirely.
The Magi,
meanwhile, leave the palace and follow the star again. And this time it does
not lead them to somewhere impressive. It stops over a house. Not a court. Not
a temple. A home. A child.
Matthew
says they are “overwhelmed with joy”. Not because everything suddenly makes
sense, but because it finally makes contact. God is no longer abstract;
no longer a theory in dusty manuscripts. God is not safely distant. No…he is
close enough to kneel before. He is here.
In a child.
That’s the
third revelation of Epiphany: God chooses smallness.
And then
come the gifts. Gold, frankincense, and myrrh — which sounds very romantic
until you imagine the reaction you’d get by turning up to a baby shower with
embalming fluid. These are not polite, practical presents. They are symbolic.
They acknowledge kingship, divinity, and mortality. In other words, they
recognise that this child is going to change everything — including suffering. The fourth revelation is that Epiphany is not
sentimental. The light that shines also
casts shadows. God arrives in
fragility, with the reality of death and suffering baked in.
And then,
finally, comes the most easily overlooked line in the story: having been warned
in a dream, the Wise Men return home by another road. No speeches. No fanfare.
Just a quiet decision not to go back the way they came.
That is the
final revelation of Epiphany: that encounter leads to change. Not necessarily dramatic. Not instantly
visible. But real.
And that
brings us, rather neatly, to the beginning of our new year. Epiphany does not ask us to reinvent
ourselves. It does not demand heroic resolutions or flawless spiritual
performance. It simply invites attentiveness. To notice where light appears. To
recognise when our assumptions — about God, about power, about success, about
ourselves — might need adjusting.
The star
does not show the Magi the whole route in advance. It gives them enough light
for the next step. Which is probably just as well. If God showed us the entire
year in January, most of us would politely decline and run away!
Very soon,
our PCC is going to ask us to think and pray about what the next five years of
our journey together might look like.
And that’s good, its healthy. We
need to follow a star. But, rather than
a definite, final route-map, the Epiphany story offers us trust; trust that God
is already on the move; that revelation is not something we manufacture, but
something we receive. Epiphany reminds us that we are not required to have
everything worked out before setting off.
As a good example, our last five year plan, drawn up in 2019, contained
no inkling of the covid pandemic, which ended up reshaping many of the ideas
and desires we had written down in our naivety.
How does the old saying go? ‘If
you want to make God laugh, tell him your plans!’
The liturgical
prayers in our service today keep circling the same theme: God is a light that
guides rather than blinds. His light draws rather than drives. His light meets
us in ordinary places — houses, streets, tables, bread and wine — and sometimes
quietly changes direction.
So as this
year unfolds — with its hopes and its fears, its routines and its interruptions,
and yes with its new mission plan — perhaps the Epiphany invitation is simply
this: stay curious. Stay open. Pay attention to what unsettles you and what
gives you joy. And be prepared, when the
time comes, and if God asks, to take another road. Not because we’ve failed.
But because we’ve encountered something true.
The star’s light has revealed a new direction.
And that, for
the first Sunday of a new year, is more than enough to be going on with. Amen.



