In the mystery of our Lord’s incarnation there were clear indications of his eternal Godhead. Yet the great events we celebrate today disclose and reveal in different ways the fact that God himself took a human body. Mortal man, enshrouded always in darkness, must not be left in ignorance, and so be deprived of what he can understand and retain only by grace. In choosing to be born for us, God chose to be known by us. He therefore reveals himself in this way, in order that this great sacrament of his love may not be an occasion for us of great misunderstanding.
Today the Magi find, crying in
a manger, the one they have followed as he shone in the sky. Today the Magi see
clearly, in swaddling clothes, the one they have long awaited as he lay hidden
among the stars.
Today the Magi gaze in deep wonder at what they see: heaven on earth, earth in heaven, man in God, God in man, one whom the whole universe cannot contain now enclosed in a tiny body. As they look, they believe and do not question, as their symbolic gifts bear witness: incense for God, gold for a king, myrrh for one who is to die. So the Gentiles, who were the last, become the first: the faith of the Magi is the first fruits of the belief of the Gentiles.
Today Christ enters the Jordan
to wash away the sin of the world. John himself testifies that this is why he
has come: Behold the Lamb of God, behold him who takes away the sins of the
world. Today a servant lays his hand on the Lord, a man lays his hand on God,
John lays his hand on Christ, not to forgive but to receive forgiveness.
Today, as the psalmist
prophesied: The voice of the Lord is heard above the waters. What does the
voice say? This is my beloved son, in whom I am well pleased.
Today the Holy Spirit hovers
over the waters in the likeness of a dove. A dove announced to Noah that the
flood had disappeared from the earth; so now a dove is to reveal that the
world’s shipwreck is at an end for ever. The sign is no longer an olive-shoot
of the old stock: instead, the Spirit pours out on Christ’s head the full
richness of a new anointing by the Father, to fulfil what the psalmist had
prophesied: Therefore God, your God, has anointed you with the oil of gladness
above your fellows.
Today Christ works the first of his signs from heaven by turning water into wine. But water has still to be changed into the sacrament of his blood, so that Christ may offer spiritual drink from the chalice of his body, to fulfil the psalmist’s prophecy: How excellent is my chalice, warming my spirit.
From a sermon by St. Peter Chrysologus,