Isaiah 60:1-6
Psalm 72:1-2, 7-8, 10-13
Ephesians 3:2-3, 5-6
Matthew 2:1-12
Everyone likes a good story. If
you think about it, much of our lives revolve around stories. We’re drawn into
stories as we watch movies and tv shows. We’re drawn into stories as we read
our books and articles. I guarantee you that right now half of my facebook
newsfeed is filled with stories: this inspiring story, that tragic one, this
one that’s sure to make you cry (as if that’s gonna make me click on it!), and
so on. Even our daily conversations are often simply telling stories to one
another about what happened recently or in the past. Stories have a magical
power that permits someone who is otherwise separate from a situation to have
access to it – to be able to enter into a situation vicariously and have
something of the same encounter.
The other day I was visiting with
a friend who is applying to the seminary and he was asking about what to
include in the biography and how long it had to be. I said ‘Just write your
story. Length and such doesn’t really matter.’ After the conversation I began
to reflect on my own journey in seminary and they many times that I was asked
to share my story. It seemed like the second vocation as a seminarian because
it seemed like every person I met or every group I encountered sooner or later
got around to the question ‘Can you tell me/us your story?’ Over time my story
would grow and evolve, not because the details were different, but because I
understood things differently or sometimes would emphasize something that was
specifically striking to me in that time or some knew insight I had recently
realized. But in the midst of it all there was the invitation to reflect with
others on the ways that God has shaped and guided my life to the point where I
was then as a seminarian and where I was heading.
As we listen to our Gospel today
we hear recounted to us the familiar story of the Magi, those three wise men
from the East who come in search of the newborn king. The gospel narratives are
necessarily short in this instance. This is because the writers were typically
working with expensive scrolls of a certain length and so they had to be
careful only to include what was most beneficial. But the vagueness of the
Scriptures does make us wonder a little bit about the Magi. A few weeks ago we
had our La Posada celebration as we went in search of the Holy Family, just
like the Magi. To prepare for the journey we watched a little animated video
narrated not from the perspective of Matthew, Mark, Luke, or John, but from
that of the Magi. They used a little creative license, but it got me thinking
about the ways God might have worked in their lives to bring them together. How
they may have been all in separate places and converged as they each separately
sought the Lord, a sign of unity in Christ. What were the things God used in their
lives to prepare them for that blessed day of finding the Christ child? What
were the stories of the things that happened along the way as they risked their
lives and livelihood on this journey chasing after a star?
It’s interesting to ponder all of
this, especially in light of the fact that the Church traditionally honors the
Magi as saints. We can see part of the reasoning in this at the conclusion of
today’s Gospel reading. It says that they received a message in a dream not to
return to Herod, but that they “departed by another way.” And as Fr. Robert
Barron has noted well: isn’t this always the case that when we meet Jesus, we
walk away changed, by a different route as it were. In every encounter our
heart is either softened like that of Peter or hardened like that of Judas. We
always leave by a different route.
And what about us? What about
you? If someone were to walk up to you today and ask you to tell them your
story of faith, what would you say? If someone said to you ‘tell me the story
of your vocation’ what would be the places that are significant? Where are the
places where God has invited you to make a journey of faith chasing after your
own star? Where are the places where you encountered the Lord and went off by a
different route? What is your story?
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