In
Eastern Christianity and in Spanish speaking countries the Feast of the Epiphany
is still celebrated on 6 January with more outstanding liturgies and dazzling church
services than Christmas.
It
is only in recent years that the Epiphany was again included in the
celebrations and seasons of some branches of the Western Church, including some
of the Protestant churches.
Epiphany
celebrates that with the visit of the Wise Men from the East, the Messiah was
revealed to the Gentiles, while Christmas, the birthday, is celebrated as the
day when Jewish believers, such as the shepherds, worshipped the new born King.
This
is why Gentiles in the East took
ownership of a Gospel moment, the visit of the Magi, where they, as non-Jews,
were enlightened and received the revelation of the coming of Christ to our
world and our lives.
What
makes the Eastern Feast important is the understanding that enlightenment
about Jesus as Messiah and the revelation of his light and glory is only
possible when our thinking and prayers go beyond the Christmas story!
The glory of the Son of God, as it was
revealed to his followers through his miracles, parables and teachings should
help us understand who the King is that came to reconcile both Jew and Gentile
with God!
And the
radical, complete and final epiphany of the glory of Christ can only be
understood when we consider the meaning
of his eventual suffering, and his glorious resurrection and exultation.
An
epiphany of who the Son of God really is, requires a new path in life for followers
of the King that was born on Christmas day.
In
the end, God is the ultimate actor. God has moved ahead of the church to
embrace the entire world. Indeed it is
God's initiative that sets the apostles of biblical times and the church of every
century to the monumental enlightenment where we clearly see that the true
Messiah is not only the Saviour of a few Jewish believers – but equally so, the
Redeemer of the entire world.
The
wise men from the east have no other message to tell, than the Gospel that we
should embrace the Jewish Messiah as our own Christ, our Lord and our
Saviour.