THE MYSTERY OF GOD’S
PRESENCE
SERMON PREACHED BY FR. TONY NOBLE ON SUNDAY JANUARY 3rd
2010
Ephesians 3。3: "The mystery was made known to me by revelation "
& verses: 9-10:"The mystery hidden for ages in God who created
all things that through the Church the manifold wisdom of God might be made
known".
We have entered a new year,
and a new decade,and today we conclude our Christmas
celebrations with the Epiphany - a mysterious feast on many levels. The Magi, the Wise-Men, these kings, these
astrologers, were in the East last week,surrounding
the altar。 They crept down the church
during the week, and today we have carried them to the Christ Child,where
now they kneel and worship him.
During the week I was
explaining to a woman why the Church keeps the arrival of the wise-men after
Christmas - that is on the twelth day, the actual feast day of
the Epiphany
having by tradition been January 6th.
The woman was surprised. She, like most people, had assumed the wise-men
were part of the Christmas day event.
She had never connected the concept of the Epiphany with the carol, The twelve days of Christmas. One of the reasons that
carol is about the lover bringing a gift to the beloved is because it has to do with the kings
arriving twelve days after Christmas.
In actual fact they arrived
far later - up to two years according to the understanding of the Scripture. As our conversation continued, she, expressing
a typical
sense of humor, said: "If instead of wise-men it had been three wise-women they would
have brought sensible gifts, cleaned up the stable, and arrived on time"!!
The three wise-men and
their arrival is a mysterious edition to the Epiphany story, in the proper sense of
the word. And we all like a mystery don't we?
The whole journey was mysterious. We can only comprehend how
they traveled from wherever they came. Some say they came from
Persia, some say they came from Arabia, and in some traditions one is black and
one is Chinese - so the sense is that they have come a
long way over
two years.
In
following
that star for such a long time, they were obviously astrologers who saw in it some
meaning. These kings, these wise-men,
these astrologers arrive finally at a stable - of all places, having called in at the
palace in Jerusalem - and honor as a king this new born baby lying in a
manger.
The great Anglican writer
T. S. Elliott wrote a poem called "The Journey of the Magi".
In it he
writes of the difficultly they faced in their journey. The poem begins with one king saying: "a
cold coming we had of it", and describes a journey through the depths of
winter. It goes on to describe the difficulties of the journey, and it concludes, because
of the gift of myrrh, with the wise-men reflecting on death.
And of
course, the death of Christ - King, and God, and Sacrifice,
as we sing in the traditional carol.
But we don't think of the
journey and what it must have been like. We dwell on the star and
the gifts, and the arrival of the kings in all its mysteriousness. In fact the arrival is more significant than
the journey itself. This is perhaps a parable of our own lives,
as we journey
through life, hoping to arrive one day at our heavenly homeland.
So as we begin this year
of our Lord 2010 and leave last year behind, we are probably thinking about our
journey ahead. Also what we have left behind now that we have arrived
at this new year, this new decade. As we reflect we can say
that our journey through life is with both joy and sadness, with both
disappointment and pleasure.
Every year as we reflect,
we look forward in hope to a better year. In contrast, when we arrive at
something that seems significant we have new vision and new hope for what lies
ahead. The mystery of life we might
call it.
In his letter to the
Ephesians Saint Paul talks about mystery in a particular way. For him the
Nativity of Christ is arrival at the revelation of God's mystery, and the fulfillment of
the ancient mysteries. In a way, that's what the wise-men
represent - all those ancient mysteries and philosophies and religions now
arriving at the feet of the new-born Christ Child, who, Saint Paul says, is the
revelation of God's mystery through the ages.
And this is the particular
meaning of the feast. It is the arrival of all the ancient things at the feet of him
who is the
fulfillment
of the ancient mysteries. This revelation of God's mystery. Christmas is about the arrival of Christ our
Lord, not just the wise-men - and there is a sense of mystery in the arrival of
both Christ and the wise-men.
Their arrival today points
to a mysterious presence - the presence of God in that little manger. This is the mystery of all
mysteries, that God would lower himself and be in that squalor and humility as
the revelation of all the mysteries of God.
The presence of God in the
manger. In my sermon on Christmas day I spoke of presence as a reality and adding
quality to our lives.
Presence. The presence in our lives
of those we love, and the presence of God in life. Many people think that the Christian
religion is about action and activity and preaching. Indeed, as the year unwinds we'll
be exhorted to be active, to do things.
These things
- action and
activity - are surely just the result of what is really at the heart of
Christianity. For at the heart of Christianity is not the activity, but the presence of
Christ amongst us. The quiet humble presence that we acknowledge today,
and the mysterious presence through the year, through our lives. That is the heart of the
Christian religion…..the presence of Christ.
That is why the Eucharist
is the center of our lives as Christians. For here we encounter the
presence of Jesus, and receive that presence into our very selves. Here the presence of God in
all its mysteriousness becomes real and alive within us, so that somehow we
might be the presence of Christ in the world.
As these three kings
kneel, worship, and adore, we are surely drawn by them to the presence of God
in the manger.
God's relationship with
the world has come to this point in time.
God created the world. God formed his own people Israel, and he sent
prophets to them. Now he comes to his world in a personal
presence. These three kings recognizing
this fact kneel and adore - and this is how it must be.
As I said on Christmas day, in our lives we cannot
bear to leave friendship and love at a distance. It is the same with God. He does not want to be at a
distance from us, he wants to be a presence in our lives. And his personal presence
is not beyond our grasp. It is within kneeling distance -
as these
three kings show us.
Later on in the Mass we will reach out
our hands for that same presence of God. And again we will be just
within kneeling distance of his presence. And like them, we will not be
disappointed.
The mystery of the Epiphany
is also the mystery of Holy Communion. For the personal presence
of Christ is not left at the manger, but is offered wherever
God's people celebrate the Eucharist. And so with these three
kings we come today to adore, and to acknowledge both the mystery of that
presence, and the presence of that mystery.