Readings and Reflections for Tuesday 15 January 2019: Epiphany

Daily Office Readings

AM Psalm 5, 6; PM Psalm 10, 11
Isa. 40:25-31; Eph. 1:15-23; Mark 1:14-28 

Ephesians:

“I pray that the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of glory, may give you a spirit of wisdom and revelation as you come to know him, so that, with the eyes of your heart enlightened, you may know what is the hope to which he has called you, what are the riches of his glorious inheritance among the saints, and what is the immeasurable greatness of his power for us who believe, according to the working of his great power.” (Ephesians 1:17 – 19 NRSV)

St Paul prays that God gives us the spirit of wisdom and revelation as we come to know God.  We really need to ponder theses words.  We can study God all we want but until God decides to share wisdom with us we will not have it.  The same goes for revelation.  We are made aware of divine things when God shares the same.  I think the only way we can participate in this sharing is that we first believe and await God’s pleasure.  For it we choose not to believe, there is no place in us for God to put this greatness of God’s glory which contains the hope to which we have been called. We must learn to listen with the ears of our heart and see with the eyes of our heart.  I hope St Paul appreciates my explanation.

Let us hear what the Spirit is saying to and through God’s people.

Readings and Reflections for Monday 14 January 2019: Epiphany

Daily Office Readings

AM Psalm 1, 2, 3; PM Psalm 4, 7   
Isa. 40:12-23; Eph. 1:1-14; Mark 1:1-13 

Ephesians:

“In Christ we have also obtained an inheritance,having been destined according to the purpose of him who accomplishes all things according to his counsel and will, so that we, who were the first to set our hope on Christ, might live for the praise of his glory.” (Ephesians 1:11 – 12 NRSV)

After studying this sentence that runs through two verses in English, from various English translations, we have the words “destined” or “predestined” and the word “might” in the same sentence. I believe God has blessed humanity with free will.  I also believe God has set a path for us in Christ Jesus to be those of God’s creation who gives praise back to God.  We don’t have to, but we ought to. We have been wired for praise. I love the doxology that sings, “Praise God from whom all blessings flow, Praise him all creatures here below. Praise Him above Ye heavenly host, Praise Father, Son and Holy Ghost.” 

Many people avoid the Book of Revelation (to John from Jesus Christ).  However, a close examination of this book will reveal a regular round of singing praise to God from the heavenly host.  I don’t think it’s even a matter of singing ability; it’s just a matter of the heart. I don’t have any memories of my childhood as a church family but I can distinctly remember my mother singing Gospel hymns as she did our laundry. She would sing, “When I woke up this morning children, I didn’t have no doubt….”  I meet people all the time who have never heard that hymn.  But I love it.  One day I will try to find a copy of it.  I think this is who God wants us to be – God “wants” us to be, not “makes” us to be.  All we have to do is have no doubt.

So, “we who have also obtained an inheritance, having been destined according to the purpose of him who accomplishes all things according to his counsel and will, so that we, who were the first to set our hope on Christ, might live for the praise of his glory.” Let us practice singing praises to God regardless of what we might think of our ability to sing.  I’ve heard it said over and over again, God just wants a joyful noise. Our praising God now is practice for our eternal presence with God in glory everlasting.

 Let us hear what the Spirit is saying to and through God’s people.

Readings and Reflections for Sunday 13 January 2019: Epiphany

Eucharistic Readings

Isaiah 43:1-7 Acts 8:14-17 Luke 3:15-17, 21-22 Psalm 29

Luke

“When all the people were being baptized, Jesus was baptized too. And as he was praying, heaven was opened” (Luke 3:21 NRSV)

Often missed in the Gospel is how much Jesus prayed.  This version of Jesus’ Baptism suggests that the Baptism was over and then Jesus begin to pray and at that point the heavens opened and the Son of God pronouncement came.

Prayer, in particular prayer of thanksgiving, is so important.  Nobody likes to be taken for granted, including God.  For what ever reason most of us have learned to pray for a future event.  We are not able to see far into the future of how things will turn out.  Our short future prayers include a prayer as simple as grace before a meal or a good night’s sleep.  More distant prayers are said for the healing of someone or for help for us in a serious situation.

Then we wait and in God’s time help will come only in the way God wants it to. We may not recognize it as an act of God but it is.  I remember the old story told long ago.  It goes like this: A little town was being flooded and everybody evacuated except for the town preacher.  As the water level rose the preacher’s church began to take on water.  The old preacher finally climbed to the top of the steeple.  At last a man in a boat came to his rescue.  But the preacher denied the assistance proclaiming that God was going to save him.  Later, another man in a boat came but the preacher would not get into the boat saying that God was going to save him.  Lastly a helicopter came but the old preacher still refused. He was finally overcome and drowned.  He was taken to the pearly gates and standing before God almighty. He asked, “Good Lord, I have preached in Your Church for over 47 years.  Why did you not save me?  God said, I sent you two boats and a helicopter, why did you not let yourself be saved?

For most of us when we receive blessings we are very much aware that we have been so blessed. What we need to think about is thanking God for that blessing. I like to let loose a “Thank You Jesus” when I know a blessing just happened.  I knew a service member that I served with who had the strange habit of saying the grace before and after the meal. Most of us just say grace before the meal.  This man said that he looks back and is thankful for what he has just received. 

In our church tradition we give thanks and specific prayers for events that just happened.  For example; after baptism there is the “we receive you into the household of God…” prayer.  And after, communion there is the Post communion prayer.  Prayer should be like a hard-cover book.  A hard-cover book is opened, read and then closed.  Our prayers should open for the asking, the blessing received, and then closed with thanks giving.

Let us not take God for granted,  When God has done something or just been present with you in your life and you know it to be so, pause and give thanks, and you too will realize that the heavens are opened to you.

Let us hear what the Spirit is saying to and through God’s people.

Readings and Reflections for Saturday 12 January 2019: Epiphany

AM Psalm 98, 99, [100] Isa. 66:1-2, 22-23; Rev. 3:14-22; John 9:1-12, 35-38

John

“As long as I am in the world, I am the light of the world.” (John 9:5)

I have deceased family, my cousin Rip and my Dad, other family members and some close friends that have passed who I keep alive through mimicking their words and behaviors.  It delights me to do this.  They literally become a part of who I am.  And I like showing them off. People that didn’t know them just consider what they see in me as part of who I am, and they are correct, now.

In the same way the loving light of Jesus is with us in this world wherever and whenever we model His love in all situations. He is present when we sit with the lonely, visit the sick, give a ride to those who have no transportation, or buy a meal for the hungry.  All of these acts shine as the bright light of Christ. And soon enough, these aspects of Jesus truly become who we are. These are the acts that keep Jesus with us and lights up this otherwise dark world.  Thank you Jesus for your light shining in us and we becoming who you are.

Let us hear what the Spirit is saying to and through God’s people.

Aelred of RievaulxAbbot (12 JANUARY 1167)

Psalm 36:5-10 Philippians 2:1-4 John 15:9–17

“O continue your steadfast love to those who know you,
   and your salvation to the upright of heart!” (Psalm 36: 10)

What I’m getting and sharing with you comes from James Keifer a noted writer of Anglican personalities.  About Aelred he shares that Aelred left his work as Master of the Household of the King of Scotland and joined the Cistercian monastery at Rievaulx in Yorkshire under the supervision of Bernard of Clairvaux in 1133 when Aelred was 24 years old.

The Cistercian Abby of which he was a member of forbid personal preference friendships.  They insisted on ever changing pairs of twos.  The Abby wanted its monks to see Christ in all persons. They were just as insistent about not having a preference about certain foods.

Against this view, Aelred wrote that it is compatible with the highest degree of Christian perfection to take special pleasure in the company of particular friends. He points out that we are told that Jesus loved John, and Mary, and Martha, and Lazarus, and that this probably means that he found their company congenial. 

I know that for myself, my friends have changed over the years; perhaps because I’ve changed over the years.  When I was a teenager I had some friends my dad did not approve of.  His words to me were, “Water seeks its own level.”  This has stayed with me for more than 50 years now.  I don’t think I knew what he meant when he first told me, but I soon figured out that “I am my friends.”  And, as we evolve, those we most want to identify with must also be where we are. This often means new friends. 

Water does seek its own level.  We are our friends.  Having preferred friends does not mean we do not love others.  We are made to be able to love all  people but there is still a close circle of what I like to call “frimly” or friends who are as close as family.  Jesus had John, Martha, Mary, and Lazarus.  He loved everybody but he had an inner circle of comfort.  And so should we.  And from time to time those people might change.  And I think that’s okay.

Let us hear what the Spirit is saying to and through God’s people.

Readings and Reflections for Friday 11 January 2019: Epiphany

AM Psalm 148, 150; PM Psalm 91, 92 Isa. 65:13-16; Rev. 3:7-13; John 6:15-27

From Psalm 148:1,2 and 10

1 Hallelujah!
Praise the Lord from the heavens; *
praise him in the heights.

2 Praise him, all you angels of his; *
praise him, all his host.

10 Wild beasts and all cattle, *
creeping things and winged birds;

We have a parishioner in our parish who is in touch with the natural order of life all around us.  She cares about all kinds of insects and other creatures that too many of us ignore but she cares about.  Once when some of us were discussing times when we were “ridding” ourselves of pesky snakes, she boldly interrupted and declared “Don’t Kill Snakes!” She spoke with such authority that I, for one, decided maybe our minds have been poisoned by the stories of the serpent in the Garden of Eden.

Our parishioner and people like the late Steve Erwin (Crocodile Hunter) cared about all God’s creatures especially reptiles.  And of course, God cares for them as I have come to realize.  So Psalm 148 also reminds us that all creatures great and small praise God.  And, except for the necessary use as a food source, all animals should go on living if only for that reason. For the Psalmist says that all praise the Lord, wild beasts and all cattle, creeping things [even snakes] and winged birds.

Let us hear what the Spirit is saying to and through God’s people.

From Isaiah:

“Then whoever invokes a blessing in the land shall bless by the God of faithfulness, and whoever takes an oath in the land shall swear by the God of faithfulness; because the former troubles are forgotten and are hidden from my sight.” (Isaiah 65:16)

In this verse in Isaiah 65 God is mentioned twice as “the God of faithfulness.”  It only stands to reason then that if we are created in God’s Image, then we are intended, by God, to be people of faith.  This particularly applies to blessings and oaths.

Often when I gather with family or friends around a meal I get anxious about saying the blessing.  It is always my hope that someone will at least suggest a blessing.  The reality is that when I see the first person reach for his or her fork I interrupt with “Let us pray.” And so it is a blessing in the land (albeit at the table) and I do bless the food by the God of faithfulness.  We often, maybe too often, think of faith as something we are suppose to have, not God. 

God does have faith, faith in us.  And even though we fail God often, God never gives up on us.  I’m glad that God is always faithful and forgiving.  I need forgiveness all the time.  I wish my faith was more like God’s faith.  I now think that in order to have faith like God’s faith I too must be more forgiving.  God always “restarts” with us.  May I can learn to restart with others, even when they forget to say their prayers.  As we say in the South, “God bless ‘em.”  

Let us hear what the Spirit is saying to and through God’s people.

From John 6

“Then they wanted to take him into the boat, and immediately the boat reached the land towards which they were going.” (John 6:21 NRSV)

I think it is perhaps only in the NSRV translation and maybe a few others, that if we read closely we see that it was the desire of the people in the boat that got them through the storm. We never read that Jesus actually got into the boat.  It is assumed that he did (and I believe he did) and then they all got to where they were going.

Also, unlike the other Gospels, the storm is not made to stop, but their desire, or will, for Jesus to be with them got them through their troubled situation.  This is very important.  Our storms may not end.  But our desire for the presence of Jesus is what gets us through the storms of our lives.  We just need to “want” to take Jesus into our boat, and we get there. I love it!

Let us hear what the Spirit is saying to and through God’s people.

Readings and Reflections for Thursday 10 January 2019: Epiphany

Daily Office Readings

AM Psalm 138, 139:1-17(18-23); PM Psalm 147
Isa. 65:1-9; Rev. 3:1-6; John 6:1-14

From Psalm 139: 3

“Indeed, there is not a word on my lips, but you, O Lord, know it altogether.”

Psalm 139 is another one of my favorite Psalms.  Its thrust is about how much God knows us and is acquainted with all our ways.  This first verse however kind of grabs me because it seems to suggest that God can, and does, go deeper than the word being formed in my mouth.

I am reminded that before I say it, I think it.  And God is there also. We have a prayer in the Episcopal Church that we say at the start of each service.  It is called the Collect for Purity and in part asks God to “cleanse the thoughts or our hearts by the inspiration of God’s Holy Spirit….”  I remind my listeners that we, in and of ourselves, are not able to cleanse our own hearts, we just can’t do it.  We must ask for God’s assistance.

We must ask for God’s assistance to stop thinking that jokes against another race, another gender, another sex, another nationality, another religion, another political party, is funny. But first folks, we must want it.  God knows the heart.  We can’t fool God.  We must ask in all sincerity. We must prayerfully craft words that really express our deepest desires.  And then use words that speak to God honestly. And please remember, “Indeed, there is not a word on my lips, but you, O Lord, know it altogether.”

Let us hear what the Spirit is saying to God’s people.

From a Revelation of Jesus Christ to John:

“If you conquer, you will be clothed like them in white robes, and I will not blot your name out of the book of life; I will confess your name before my Father and before his angels. Let anyone who has an ear listen to what the Spirit is saying to the churches.” (Rev.3:5 – 6)

I read this as an invitation to be like those faithful ones who have gone before us who held on tightly to their Christian principles no matter what.  Then, if we do this, we too will be honored in heaven. It seems God already has our names, our Christened names and the promise is that our names will not be blotted out.  In fact, they will be reported out among the host of heaven of the new arrivals when our time comes!  I pray I have the ear to listen to what the Spirit is saying to me.

Let us hear what the Spirit is saying to God’s people.

From John 6

“After this Jesus went to the other side of the Sea of Galilee, also called the Sea of Tiberias.” (John 6:1)

There is nothing of great import here in the first verse of chapter six.  However when I read it I was reminded of my Holy Land visit in February of 2018.  We went out on a boat on the lake (so called Sea of Galilee) and it is from that boat that I took the picture posted at the top of my blogs.  It was a tranquil moment – a Holy Spirit moment.  From my vista I could see the three years of Jesus’ ministry.  We could see Nazareth, Magdala, Cana, and most important for me was Capernaum. This is also the water that Jesus was reported to have walked on.  Interestingly enough, this body of water is the lowest level of fresh water on the planet.  And this is where God decided to start the Christian ministry and story. I ponder what was God thinking and what else is special about this particular part of this biblically historic place?

Let us hear what the Spirit is saying to God’s people.

Today we remember William Laud Archbishop of Canterbury

Psalm 73:24-29) Hebrews 12:5-14  Matthew 10:32-39

“Everyone therefore who acknowledges me before others, I also will acknowledge before my Father in heaven.”  (Matt. 10:32)

Archbishop of Canterbury William Laud

William Laud was Archbishop of Canterbury during a difficult time in our church’s history.  He was Archbishop of Canterbury from 1633 to 1645 in the days of King Charles I.  He intentionally did things that he knew would upset the Puritans, a literal sect of Christianity.  He wore vestments and used candles at the Altar which he knew was troubling for a people who took the position that if it was not in the Bible, then it should not be done.

Our early, and present church did retain liturgical customs and traditions from the Roman Catholic Church.  While Laud valued these ecclesiastical practices he left no room in his heart for working with non-Anglicans and the Puritan way of holding church.  They, the Puritans, were no better and these rivalries often lead to violent confrontations and even death, including Laud.

Perhaps one of the ways we should acknowledge Jesus before others is to be tolerant of difference. Today most mainline faiths seek ways in which we can find common ground and live together in harmony.  However, I am not so naïve as to ignore the violence and hatred that takes place in our country today.  We have had acts of violence against synagogues, mosques and even different Christian faiths like Seventh Day Adventist, and Historically Black Churches many perpetrated by people self-proclaiming to be Christians.  Where is the Jesus in that?

Let us hear what the Spirit is saying to God’s people.

Readings and Reflections for Wednesday 9 January 2019: Epiphany

Daily Office Readings 

Psalm 121 : 1
” I lift up my eyes to the hills; * from where is my help to come?”

Psalm 121 is the psalm we use in Women’s Bible Study every Tuesday.  We use the Service of Noon Day Prayers from our Book of Common Prayer to start our study.  Currently we are studying the Apocrypha. 

This Psalm is dear to me because every time it comes up in any church service I remember the wonderful women sitting around the table as they learn for themselves (and teach me) about what God has done, and is doing.  Over the last thirteen years we have come a long way. Not just through the scriptures, but also in our bonding and relationship.

So in my personal studies or any occasion when this psalm is read it brings sweet memories to me. We all should have some piece of scripture that causes us to reflect on the goodness that God is doing in our midst.

The words of the opening of this psalm invites us to know that our help in the world must come from a Source beyond ourselves. We often can’t fix our selves, and it is very okay to look out over the horizons in your life, over the landscape of your troubles and say “I lift up my eyes to the hills; from where is my help to come?”  Because the Psalmist goes on to say, “My help comes from the Lord, the maker of heaven and earth.”

Hear what the Spirit is saying to God’s people.

g

From the Gospel of John

“One man was there who had been ill for thirty-eight years. When Jesus saw him lying there and knew that he had been there a long time, he said to him, ‘Do you want to be made well?’” (John 5: 5 – 6)

What a question to ask.    Does he want to be made well?  The obvious answer would be, “of course.”   But I have met many people who have grown comfortable with their discomfort. Many are struggling with addiction but often are not ready to do the work necessary for being clean.  It’s hard work and one has to be really committed to recovery and all the steps that come with it.

Some of my friends have physical disabilities that, with rehab, can achieve some degree of improvement.  Sometimes when I visit them in Rehab or in their homes there is much lamentation regarding physical therapist. “It’s too hard” or “it hurts” they cry.  It is at those times that I want to use Jesus’ words, “Do you want to be made well?”

Being well applies to more than just the observable sick. I have a very dear friend in Alabama who suffers from severe migraine headaches.  You can’t tell from looking at her that she is suffering horrible pain. It doesn’t show.  I also feel like our church’s next big challenge is that of fully including those who are psychologically disadvantaged or mentally ill.  They truly can be in a situation where they don’t know if they want to be made well.  But if we love them we want them to be made well.  We have many stories in the Gospel where Jesus healed on behalf of others who loved them, and from a distance.  The truth is, being made well has to be wanted and asked for either by the person, or by someone on his or her behalf.  Then Jesus does his work.

Hear what the Spirit is saying to God’s people.

Wednesday night Healing Service

JULIA CHESTER EMERY,

LAY LEADER AND MISSIONARY (9 JAN 1922)

Psalm 67;Romans 12:6-13 Mark 10:42-45 

From Romans

“Rejoice in hope, be patient in suffering, persevere in prayer. Contribute to the needs of the saints; extend hospitality to strangers.” (Rom. 12: 12, 13)

Julia Emery certainly heard the message of St Paul to the Romans. She certainly persevered in prayer and contributing to the needs of the needy.  We need more like her. She did more than just see the need, she felt the need. And then she did something about it.

Julia’s sister, Mary, was National Secretary of the Women’s Auxiliary of the Board of Missions for its first four years, from 1872 to 1876.  At this point, Julia took over, and was National Secretary of the Auxiliary for forty years, from 1876 to 1916. (James Keifer)

She visited every diocese in the United States (James Keifer).  Asking for money is not exactly my strong suit.  I admire her tenacity that took her across the country and the world.  She recognized her call to do what others dared to do for the sake of those who were in great need 

It was Julia who invented the United Thank Offering (UTO). This works (or used to work — my political instincts tell me that not everyone today would be comfortable with the original arrangement) by giving each woman a small box with a slit in the top (a cardboard piggy bank), and encouraging her to drop a small contribution into it whenever she feels thankful about something.    (James Keifer) 

I love those little blue boxes.  Sometimes they show up at our Diocesan Convention.  The Bishop has no objection to the “folding” kind of money going into those boxes. Let’s give God thanks for her dedicated work in fighting poverty.

Hear what the Spirit is saying to God’s people..


Readings and a Reflection for Tuesday 8 January 2019: Epiphany

Daily Office Readings

AM Psalm 117, 118; PM Psalm 112, 113  Isa. 59:15-21; Rev. 2:8-17; John 4:46-54 

“Jesus said to him, ‘Go; your son will live.’ The man believed the word that Jesus spoke to him and started on his way.” (John 4: 50)

This exchange between Jesus and the royal official really demonstrates how Jesus uses what we believe for our own good.  Jesus goes deeper than what we say we believe – Jesus goes straight to what’s in our hearts.  Jesus sees how we act – how we behave.  We must remember that to Jesus all hearts are open, all desires known and from him no secrets are hid.  (BCP p. 355)

We are a creedal people. God bless us!  We have what we say we believe, and we have what we really believe.  In our Nicene Creed we profess that we believe in God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Spirit. Within this declaration there is therein contained the history of Jesus’ birth from Mary and his death from Pontius Pilate. There is also the Easter message of “He rose again on the third day and ascended and will return to judge the living and the dead.”

So do we really believe that at some point we will indeed stand before the Judge?  What’s that going to look like?  What should we be doing now so as to make that time a pleasant experience? We must Go!  Just like the royal official, we must go on about our business and at the same time believing these three things: 1st God IS, always has been and always will be.  2nd God is good, always has been, always will be.  And lastly God loves us humans particularly.  This is made evident in God’s decision to come down to us as one of us.  God has placed in us the power of belief. We don’t use it near enough.

In the words of Bishop Anselm (one time archbishop of Canterbury) speaking on what it means to believe.  He writes, “I do not seek to understand that I may believe, but I believe in order that I may understand.  For this, too, I believe, that unless I first believe, I shall not understand.”  (page 240 of Lesser Feast and Fast 2006)  Anselm informs us that there is a distinct difference between understanding something believing something.  There is a teaching in some Christian circles that suggests that we must first understand so that we will believe.  It tries to have us understand why all things happen so that we might believe.  This is not what Jesus or Anselm showed. The royal official was rewarded because he believed not because he understood, and so will we if we just believe.

Hear what the Spirit is saying to God’s people.

Readings and a Reflection for Monday 7 January 2019: Epiphany

Daily Office Readings emihidden0

AM Psalm 103; PM Psalm 114, 115 Isa. 52:3-6Rev. 2:1-7John 2:1-11

“When the wine gave out, the mother of Jesus said to him, ‘They have no wine.’ And Jesus said to her, ‘Woman, what concern is that to you and to me? My hour has not yet come.’  His mother said to the servants, ‘Do whatever he tells you.’    (John 2: 3 – 5)

Among other differences of John’s Gospel to that of Matthew, Mark, and Luke, is that John never mentions the mother of Jesus by name. But thanks to the synoptic Gospels we know who she is. She is Mary.  If this is the first sign or miracle that Jesus does, then Mary has a big part in it.  It is not the changing of water into wine, something we cannot do. But rather, it is doing whatever Jesus tells us to do, which is something we surly can do, and ought to do.

If we consider ourselves to be “servants of Jesus” then we are preached to by the Mother of Jesus who tells us to do whatever he tells us to do. Notice that while Jesus fusses about “My hour has not yet come” his Mother turns to the servants of Jesus (to us) and gives us this instruction to obey him.

Mary has lived with Jesus for thirty or more years and in all that time she has never gone without.  She has lived with God Incarnate!  She has lived with One who can multiply loaves and fishes and when desired, turn water into wine in the privacy of their own home.  So she is absolutely sure of his ability, and she is just as sure of His love for her. She has never been denied.  So she is not concerned about his humanness fussing about whether or not his hour has come. She has asked him to do something for the benefit of people dear to her and she has every confidence that he will make it happen.

Now Mary is looking beyond the pages of scripture directly into our eyes – the servants of Jesus and telling us to do whatever He tells us.  She doesn’t know how, but she knows that he will command it, and if we follow him, great things will happen.

This is true today!  Mary preached that very first sermon of obeying Jesus. Like Mary, we too must be sure that Jesus is both willing and able to do as we ask knowing that we are asking for the benefit of those we love, and great things will happen!

Hear What the Spirit is Saying to God’s People. “

Readings and Reflections for Sunday 6 January 2019: Epiphany

Eucharistic Readings

Isaiah 60:1-6   Ephesians 3:1-12  Matthew 2:1-12  Psalm 72:1-7,10-14

Matthew 2: 1 – 2

“In the time of King Herod, after Jesus was born in Bethlehem of Judea, wise men from the East came to Jerusalem, asking, “Where is the child who has been born king of the Jews? For we observed his star at its rising and have come to pay him homage.” (Matthew 2: 1 – 2)

I find it amazing that a non-Jewish people, albeit a studied group of ancient scientist, came to the realization that an astronomical power favored human existence and pointed the way through the means of their studies – the stars – to where this existence is taking place.  It should not surprise me however because the same thing happened with the shepherds.  In Luke’s Gospel, Shepherds tending their flocks were visited in their vocation by celestial beings and pointed to where God was at work in a baby. 

These wise men let go of any ethnic pride they might have had in order to see what God was doing.  This meant they had to go where their studies led them, in this case to Judea and specifically, to Bethlehem. If we are wise people today we must do like-wise.  God can appear in any people, anywhere at any time. Here’s the thing.  God always “points” to where God is.  And God often does this within the very way we make a living.  We just have to be aware and follow the clues no matter where they lead. The clues may lead to the incarcerated, the terminally ill, to non-English speakers or even to people we don’t particularly like. Moses was led back to Egypt where he was guilty of murder. But he followed the instructions of the burning bush that pointed him back to Egypt.

This ancient (clue-dropping) God loves us and is trying to add light to our lives.  This is the theme of Epiphany, the season of light.  As light is added to coming light let us follow God’s leading light wherever it may lead us as we too go in search of what God is doing for us today in this new 2019.

Blessings.