Monday
6th January will be for many the day they go back to school or work after the
Christmas break. Even if you are retired, and have nothing in particular to go
back to, it may still feel like a gearshift. The Christmas decorations are back
in the loft, and we turn our faces into the cold wind of a calendar month that seems
to last a full three-hundred-and sixty-five days. But the 6th of January is
also the Feast of the Epiphany. How might we keep the feast, wherever we find
ourselves?
An
epiphany is a revelation, and like a Christmas cracker, a revelation has two ends:
at one end, the one who is revealing something, and at the other end, the one
who therefore sees or hears something they did not know until now. At the Feast
of the Epiphany, God is holding one end of the cracker, and we are holding the
other. Here are three ways God might hold out an epiphany for us to grasp,
taken from Matthew 2.1-12.
Firstly,
God might speak to us through the wonder of the world around us, including the
night sky, and the stunning dawns we often get at this time of year. Perhaps
you might choose to get up early and get outside and look up. To take a deep
breath and feel the cold air wake your lungs to life. Perhaps there will be a
hard frost, that, during the night, spread fractals of ice across the windscreen
of your car. The beauty of creation, as vast as stars and as tiny as ice
crystals, can take our breath away. And open our eyes to the truth that we are
not the centre of the universe, we are very small, and yet we are held by the
love that holds everything there is together, which is a very secure place to
be. And when we respond in overflowing gratitude for the sheer gift of life, we
take hold of our end of the cracker and pull.
Secondly,
God might speak to us through the wisdom and – crucially – the hope of others.
The beauty of the Christian tradition and the resources of our scriptures,
history and practices, is that they spring from many different generations and
cultures. None of us has the full picture. God can speak to the young among us
through the elderly and speak to those who are older through the children. In
particular, I think that the older we get the more we need children to speak life
to the hope within us. My observation is that many of us lose our sense of hope
as we get older, and I think that is because the Baby Boomers became the most
affluent generation the world had seen, and affluence is a hope-killer. My advice
to those who are older is, stop consuming news, because human love and
faithfulness is not newsworthy, and the news will bombard you with exceptional
sorrow and despair. You do not need to be abreast of situations you can do
nothing about to pray that the world might know peace. My advice to those who
are younger is, restrict your consumption of social media, for it too holds out
a distorted reflection of the world that makes everything appear closer than it
is, such that we can think we are sitting in the same room as other people when
in fact we are miles away. But when we are present to one another – to whoever
is right in front of us – we take hold of our end of the cracker and pull.
Thirdly,
God might speak to us through our dreams. We take in a lot of information, more
than we need, so much that it becomes overwhelming. It is as if your wardrobe
is full of clothes on hangers, but you have many more clothes, piled on a chair
and strewn all over the floor. And you can’t find the thing you need. You are
sure you saw it somewhere, but where? And when we sleep, our subconscious acts
like a responsible adult, picking the clothes up, sniffing them, neatly folding
those that might be worn another day and dropping the ones that are a bit whiffy
in the laundry basket. Seeking to draw harmony out of chaos, which is how we
most deeply participate in the divine nature. At times, our subconscious is so hand-in-hand
with God, it is hard – and perhaps unnecessary – to tell them apart. But when
we quieten our souls enough to sleep deeply enough to dream, we take hold of
our end of the cracker and pull.
So
here are three ways God might hold out an epiphany for us to grasp: through the
wonder of the world around us; through the wisdom and – crucially – the hope of
others; and through our dreams. But any Christmas cracker worth its salt contains
a paper crown, a gift, and a riddle.
The
paper crown reminds us that we, like the three kings, are drawn into God’s
epiphany.
The
gift is that when we gaze upon the face of Jesus, we see God – whom we could
not see – made visible. Jesus is the revelation of God, of what God is like. What
we see in Jesus, we can say of God – and what we do not see in Jesus is not of
God. There is no violence in Jesus – no harm or oppression – and so any violence
attributed to God (by admirers and critics alike) is misattribution. Jesus
walks away from a fight, literally – evading those who sought to kill him – and
metaphorically – keeping silent under hostile questioning. Jesus attends to the
person directly in front of him, with compassion – even when he himself is
crucified. He absorbs suffering and returns love. He is the emptying of power
to be an infant dependent on others to show him the way he should go, and the
adult who hangs from the gallows. He is foolishness in the eyes of the world. He
sleeps soundly in the madness of a storm at sea. He thirsts. He is love.
The
riddle is that we become God’s epiphany to the world: the bearers of the greatest
gift, from which every other gift flows and to whom every gift returns: Jesus. This
bleak midwinter Monday, may you be a star in the darkness, a treasure-chest on
the journey, a child who sparks joy. May you be whatever God might choose to
make his Son known in the world. Amen.