"And behold, the star that they had seen at its rising preceded them,
until it came and stopped over the place where the child was." Matthew 2:9
We must not forget that the Magi were non-Jews, pagans in fact. Jews
referred to non-Jews as Gentiles, a word in Jesusı day used for foreigners.
The Magi travel from the East. They come from afar to worship the King of
the Jews. What makes this event so exceptional is that they are Gentiles,
non-Jews. Yet, Jesus came first for the Jews. He makes this clear to his
disciples, when He sends them out on mission. "Do not go into pagan
territory. Go rather to the lost sheep of the house of Israel" (Matthew
10:5-6). So what is the significance of the visit of the Magi, given the
mission of Jesus? I think the star of Bethlehem offers an answer.
The ancient peoples of the East were much more aware of the presence of
stars than we are today. The celestial bodies represented for the ancients a
mysterious world completely different from their own. They observed that the
stars moved in cycles and sequences and concluded that they were independent
bodies. Hence, they frequently thought of them as gods.
Open up the Bible and this is not what you encounter. The Jews were unlike
anyone else in the world. They thought the stars and heavenly bodies were
not gods but rather the creation of the one God. Thus, the majestic words of
Genesis that read, "Then God said: Let there be lights in the dome of the
skyı" (Genesis 1:14). The psalms sing of Godıs goodness and love that has
created everything in the heavens. "Who made the great lights, Godıs love
endures forever; the sun to rule the day, Godıs love endures forever; the
moon and stars to rule the night, Godıs love endures forever" (Psalm
136:7-9). The Bible makes very clear that the stars are not gods. They are a
creation of the one God, just like everything else.
When a star leads the Magi to Christ in Bethlehem, the Scriptures are
telling us that Jesus is the God of everything that others think are gods.
The Magi say to King Herod, "We saw his star at its rising and have come to
do him homage" (Matthew 2:2). A star that would for a Gentile be a god,
takes the Magi by the hand, as it were, and leads them to the God of all
gods. "And behold, the star that they had seen at its rising preceded them,
until it came and stopped over the place where the child was" (Matthew 2:9).
What is being said is that the very stars that the Magi might have
worshipped bring the Magi to the true Creator God. Even the heavens, that
Gentiles think are gods, are really part of a creation that points to the
one and only Creator.
St. Paul expresses it this way. "In the same way we also, when we were not
of age, were enslaved to the elemental powers of the world. But when the
fullness of time had come, God sent his Son, born of a woman, born under the
law, to ransom those under the law, so that we might receive adoption"
(Galatians 4:3-5). There is no longer Greek or Jew, slave or free, male or
female, but all are one in Christ (Cf. Galatians 3:28). Christ has shown
everyone who the real God is. He is so perfectly the expression of God as
His true Son that even what the world considers a god points to Jesus.
We live in a world today that is filled with rival gods. It is no less pagan
than the times in which Jesus lived. We like to flatter ourselves and look
back on ancient times with great condescension. How quaint, we say, all of
these primitive people worshipping stars and moons. We are every so much
more enlightened. What we forget is that we have replaced the pagan gods of
celestial bodies with gods of our own. We worship our pleasures. This is
nothing new either. The ancient Romans called it epicurean, that is becoming
absorbed with oneıs own pleasures. Is it any different today? Many are
absolutely enslaved to on-line pornography. Businessmen tell me that one of
the biggest problems they fact with hiring young workers is that many of
them are unreliable because of drug use. Money is such a preoccupation with
workers that thievery is the rule rather than the exception. We may not burn
incense to pagan idols or dance to placate moon gods, but we might as well
be falling down to worship at altars built to money, drugs, and sex. The
gods may be different, but they demand our obedience that is in fact
enslavement.
More than every today, we need a star to lead us to Bethlehem. Today more
than ever, the Magi must show us the way to the one true God. The words of
Isaiah are as true now as when the prophet wrote them. "Raise your eyes and
look about" (Isaiah 60:4). In other words, wake up. Take note of what is
around you. Do not mistake the creation for the Creator. This the Magi did
not do. They recognized the God that had made them, and they brought Him
their most precious gifts.
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