CHAPTER XIV. The Star and the Wise Men
The birth of Jesus created a new center
for the world and set heaven and earth revolving around
his cradle. All things began to gravitate towards
him as by a new and more powerful attraction.
Angels sang, shepherds wondered, a new star glittered
upon the blazing curtain of the night, and wise men
came from afar to worship him. These wise men
were Persian priests, scholars, scientists, astrologers,
students of the stars. Rumors of a coming King
or Saviour were widespread in the ancient world and
doubtless had reached these worshipers of the sun to
whom the stars were embodiments of deity. A new
star in their sky, whatever it may have been, would
instantly attract their attention and receive from
them a religious interpretation. The celestial
messenger was a fulfillment of their hope and a guide
to their feet. They were obedient to the heavenly
vision, and across long burning stretches of desert
sand they came and appeared in Jerusalem with their
inquiry concerning the new-born King of the Jews.
They were therefore broad-minded men
whose horizon was wider than their own deserts, or
they never would have overleaped their national piety
and patriotism and prejudice into search and reverence
for a Jewish king. But something told them that
the new King, though born a Jew, was of universal
interest and was more than human; they forefelt his
divinity. Therefore they were come to the King,
not to gratify their curiosity, not to speculate and
debate and frame a new creed, but to worship him.
There was no war between the science and the theology
of these wise men. Their science did not kill
their religion, and their religion did not strangle
their science. The stars, according to their
simple-minded way of thinking, did not crowd God out
of his universe. Knowledge and reverence made
one music in their minds as both science and faith
grew from more to more.
A religion that could not stand the
most searching and pitiless light of scholarship could
not live. Science kills pagan faiths as with a
stroke of lightning. But the gospel lives, because
wise men go to Bethlehem and find there, not fiction,
but fact. It welcomes and inspires the profoundest
science and philosophy. God in his Word is not
afraid of God in his works. The tallest intellects
in all these centuries have bowed at the side of this
manger.