Monday, January 20, 2014

Is time with God ever really "Ordinary"?


The above poem by Malcolm Guite is a beautiful reflection on Epiphany. During January and February this year, we walk through the Sundays of Epiphany, an “Ordinary Time” in the language of our sister denominations. In the cold and gray days of winter, slogging through slush, slipping on ice, shoveling snow, and trying to stay warm, we may lose sight of the wonder of the Epiphany as we await the beginning of Lent in early March.

But as the poem reminds us, the story of the Epiphany might have been someone else’s story, except that it was not. No, this time, we were the chosen people, the ones destined to receive a new king. Although born in a filthy stable, a glorious incarnation is found in Jesus.

And we make pilgrimage together to seek the Lord where He may be found.

We don’t have actual video of the Magi arriving at the stable, but have you ever wondered what that moment must have looked like? Don’t you think at least one of these “kings” from the east would have asked, “Are we in the right place?” Do we think for a moment that they expected such a humble and smelly place in which to find a newborn King?

I believe that the experience of the Magi challenges us to seek the Lord in the surprising places, in the people we least expect to reflect the light of Christ, in the face of the stranger and the outcast, and yes, even in the life of the person next to you! 

For the next couple of months, green vestments signify an ordinary time in the church year.

But is there really anything “ordinary” about Epiphany?



Pastor Bill Barter

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