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Daily Prayer, Spirituality and Worship in the Roman Catholic Tradition
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| Morning Coffee by George Mendoza |
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| Epiphany by Janet McKenzie |
They departed for their country by another way…
Almost a throwaway line at the end of the story of the Magi.
After their long journey from the east… after following the star… after inquiring all over Jerusalem… after a private audience with King Herod… after searching some more and finally finding the Child and his Mother… after offering him their gifts… and after a good night's sleep (including a mysterious dream) - they went home by another way…
You'll notice that the scripture here mentions only two kings, not three. In fact, the gospel doesn't even tell us how many Magi there were. But there were two kings in the story we just heard: Jesus, the the newborn king of the Jews; and Herod, appointed king of Judea by the Roman senate.
Having met both kings, the Magi take a pass on the one who lived in a palace, the one with power and prestige, the one sitting in the house of government - and they favor the infant king: powerless, and poor, living in a peasant's dwelling, the one who couldn't speak a word, but who somehow spoke to their hearts.
The Magi preferred Mary's simple home to Herod's royal court - so they went home by another way.
The Magi preferred to give their treasures to the child king rather than claim a reward, a bounty from Herod - so they went home by another way.
They didn't do what Herod had commanded them to d0 but rather followed a warning that came to them in a dream - so they went home by another way.
For us, you and me, Christmas is just behind us: the feast when we, like the Magi, pay a visit to the child Jesus. How about us? Have we already returned to business as usual? Have we picked up right where we left off before Christmas, before we stopped to celebrate the birth of Jesus?
Or have we chosen to go another way?
What difference, what change, if any, has meeting the child Jesus at Christmas made in our daily lives? What difference, what change does our faith make? What impact does it have on how we live our lives as Christians, as Catholics, as Americans? Does our faith ever direct and change the route we're traveling and the goals we're pursuing - so much that we find ourselves going another way.
Just hearing that the Christ had come, literally uprooted the Magi's lives. They left home on account of it and traveled far.
Searching for the Christ brought the Magi face to face with the politically and strategically powerful.
And meeting the Christ child, was enough to turn them away from the seduction of the influence and the prestige of the royal court - and to set them out on a brand new path, heading back home by another way.
I have to make a confession here.
The Magi put me to shame and give me reason to ask: “How has my annual visit to the Christ child altered my direction, influenced the path I choose to walk, caused me to take another look at how I evaluate and relate to the politically powerful and seductive influences that bear down on my daily life?
Has my faith experience this Christmas - how does my faith experience - map the route I'm taking? map the route my life is pursuing? Or reroute my direction when I realize I'm heading the wrong way? Or determine to what king, to what authority, to what power and influence do I pledge my allegiance - as a Christian, as a Catholic, as an American.
To put it in the vocabulary of today's gospel, what star guides my way? Do I follow any star beyond the light of my own choices and desires, my own mind and my own will
And where is the star I follow leading me? More importantly, more tellingly, what star, whose star do I follow?
Again, in the terms of the Gospel story, what gifts do I bring to offer? Do I offer the best of what I have for others - or only what I feel I can most comfortably afford to give away. Do I keep the best of what I have for myself - and give others only some of what's left over from my excess?
Does my encounter with Jesus influence my response when I'm tempted by prestige, wealth and power?
Has my encounter with the Christ child given me a hunger, a thirst, a desire for what's simple, what's true, what's fair, what's pure, what's just?
Has my visit with Jesus this Christmas in any way, recharted my journey, the journey I'm on - or am I already back in Herod's royal court?
Is my visit with Jesus safely tucked away for another year - boxed up with the Christmas lights, the decorations, and the figures in the nativity sets.
As I said, the Magi put me to shame. But they do that every year! And they do it at just the right time! We celebrate Epiphany right after New Year's - our annual time for taking stock of what has been and our looking forward to improve, to grow, to make changes in the year ahead.
Even perhaps to discover: “You know what? I need to go home by another way!”
What we celebrate in the Christmas mystery is how God changed his root and came to visit us, in Jesus - came to dwell among us, came to dwell within us. God came to live another way: the way of human existence, suffering, and even death.
The Lord came this way, our way to show us another way: his way to live our lives. A way that leads not to palace life but to the humble royal home that is the heart of Jesus.
A taste of the royal feast to which we are invited is provided for us here at the Lord's table, at the altar, where Jesus, born of Mary, offers us a gift: the gift of his life for us in the Bread and the Cup of the Eucharist.
May the Sacrament we receive here, in which we meet and visit with Jesus, the Christ (not just on Christmas and Epiphany, but every Sunday) - may his a gift nourish and strengthen us all - to go home by another way...
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| Photo by MS |
This prayer connects a photo of a simple street scene in Brookline, MA with the star in today's gospel, guiding the magi to the Christ Child...
A friend took this photo 18 years ago: a night shot wherein the darkness reveals more than daylight might have shown. A street light glowing like a star, a humble dwelling's greater light spilling out its doorway into the darkness: Epiphany!
I love this photo! (Click on the image for a larger version)
Although I'm out of touch with my photographer friend, I hope that she might see this post and know that her work is still inspiring believers following that Star of wonder, star so bright...
O Magi - were you confused?
Did you wonder if you'd taken a left for a right
or misread the bright star's GPS?
On Epiphany I often include James Taylor's Home By Another Way in one of my posts - as I did this year for today's Pause for Prayer.
But now I've found another "another way home" song - it's Take Us Home By Another Way, composed by Christoopher Grundy for the first anniversary of the January 6 insurrection. (If a video doesn't appear below, click here!)
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| Image source |
Home By Another Way by James Taylor
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-James Taylor
Pause for Prayer