The Epiphany is a season especially
set apart for adoring the glory of Christ. The
word may be taken to mean the manifestation of His
glory, and leads us to the contemplation of Him as
a King upon His throne in the midst of His court,
with His servants around Him, and His guards in attendance.
At Christmas we commemorate His grace; and in Lent
His temptation; and on Good Friday His sufferings
and death; and on Easter Day His victory; and on Holy
Thursday His return to the Father; and in Advent we
anticipate His second coming. And in all of these
seasons He does something, or suffers something:
but in the Epiphany and the weeks after it, we celebrate
Him, not as on His field of battle, or in His solitary
retreat, but as an august and glorious King; we view
Him as the Object of our worship. Then only,
during His whole earthly history, did He fulfil the
type of Solomon, and held (as I may say) a court,
and received the homage of His subjects; viz.
when He was an infant. His throne was His undefiled
Mother’s arms; His chamber of state was a cottage
or a cave; the worshippers were the wise men of the
East, and they brought presents, gold, frankincense,
and myrrh. All around and about Him seemed of
earth, except to the eye of faith; one note alone
had He of Divinity. As great men of this world
are often plainly dressed, and look like other men,
all but as having some one costly ornament on their
breast or on their brow; so the Son of Mary in His
lowly dwelling, and in an infant’s form, was
declared to be the Son of God Most High, the Father
of Ages, and the Prince of Peace, by His star; a wonderful
appearance which had guided the wise men all the way
from the East, even unto Bethlehem.
This being the character of this Sacred
Season, our services throughout it, as far as they
are proper to it, are full of the image of a king in
his royal court, of a sovereign surrounded by subjects,
of a glorious prince upon a throne. There is
no thought of war, or of strife, or of suffering,
or of triumph, or of vengeance connected with the Epiphany,
but of august majesty, of power, of prosperity, of
splendour, of serenity, of benignity. Now, if
at any time, it is fit to say, “The Lord is
in His holy temple, let all the earth keep silence
before Him.” “The Lord sitteth
above the waterflood, and the Lord remaineth a king
for ever.” “The Lord of Hosts is
with us; the God of Jacob is our refuge.”
“O come, let us worship, and fall down, and kneel
before the Lord our Maker.” “O magnify
the Lord our God, and fall down before His footstool,
for He is Holy.” “O worship the Lord
in the beauty of holiness; bring presents, and come
into His courts.”
I said that at this time of year the
portions of our services which are proper to the season
are of a character to remind us of a king on his throne,
receiving the devotion of his subjects. Such
is the narrative itself, already referred to, of the
coming of the wise men, who sought Him with their
gifts from a place afar off, and fell down and worshipped
Him. Such too, is the account of His baptism,
which forms the Second Lesson of the feast of the
Epiphany, when the Holy Ghost descended on Him, and
a Voice from heaven acknowledged Him to be the Son
of God. And if we look at the Gospels read throughout
the season, we shall find them all containing some
kingly action of Christ, the Mediator between God
and man. Thus in the Gospel for the First Sunday,
He manifests His glory in the temple at the age of
twelve years, sitting among the doctors, and astonishing
them with His wisdom. In the Gospel for the
Second Sunday He manifests His glory at the wedding
feast, when He turned the water into wine, a miracle
not of necessity or urgency, but especially an august
and bountiful act the act of a King, who
out of His abundance gave a gift to His own, therewith
to make merry with their friends. In the Third
Sunday, the leper worships Christ, who thereupon heals
him; the centurion, again, reminds Him of His Angels
and ministers, and He speaks the word, and his servant
is restored forthwith. In the Fourth, a storm
arises on the lake, while He is peacefully sleeping,
without care or sorrow, on a pillow; then He rises
and rebukes the winds and the sea, and a calm follows,
deep as that of His own soul, and the beholders worship
Him. And next He casts out Legion, after the
man possessed with it had also “run and worshipped
Him.” In the Fifth, we hear of His kingdom
on earth, and of the enemy sowing tares amid
the good seed. And in the Sixth, of His second
Epiphany from heaven, “with power and great glory.”
Such is the series of manifestations
which the Sundays after the Epiphany bring before
us. When He is with the doctors in the temple.
He is manifested as a prophet in turning
the water into wine, as a priest in His
miracles of healing, as a bounteous Lord, giving out
of His abundance in His rebuking the sea,
as a Sovereign, whose word is law in the
parable of the wheat and tares, as a guardian
and ruler in His second coming, as a lawgiver
and judge.
And as in these Gospels we hear of
our Saviour’s greatness, so in the Epistles
and First Lessons we hear of the privileges and the
duties of the new people, whom He has formed to show
forth His praise. Christians are at once the
temple of Christ, and His worshippers and ministers
in the temple; they are the Bride of the Lamb
taken collectively, and taken individually, they are
the friends of the Bridegroom and the guests at the
marriage feast. In these various points of view
are they presented to us in the Services during these
weeks. In the Lessons from the prophet Isaiah
we read of the gifts and privileges, the characteristics,
the power, the fortunes of the Church how
widely spreading, even throughout all the Gentiles;
how awful and high, how miraculously endowed, how
revered, how powerful upon earth, how rich in temporal
goods, how holy, how pure in doctrine, how full of
the Spirit. And in the Epistles for the successive
Sundays, we hear of the duties and distinguishing marks
of her true members, principally as laid down in the
twelfth and thirteenth chapters of St. Paul to the
Romans; then as the same Apostle enjoins them upon
the Colossians; and then in St. John’s exhortations
in his General Epistle.
The Collects are of the same character,
as befit the supplications of subjects coming
before their King. The first is for knowledge
and power, the second is for peace, the third is for
strength in our infirmities, the fourth is for help
in temptation, the fifth is for protection, and the
sixth is for preparation and purification against
Christ’s second coming. There is none which
would suit a season of trial, or of repentance, or
of waiting, or of exultation they befit
a season of peace, thanksgiving, and adoration, when
Christ is not manifested in pain, conflict, or victory,
but in the tranquil possession of His kingdom.
It will be sufficient to make one
reflection, which suggests itself from what I have
been saying.
You will observe, then, that the only
display of royal greatness, the only season of majesty,
homage, and glory, which our Lord had on earth, was
in His infancy and youth. Gabriel’s message
to Mary was in its style and manner such as befitted
an Angel speaking to Christ’s Mother. Elisabeth,
too, saluted Mary, and the future Baptist his hidden
Lord, in the same honourable way. Angels announced
His birth, and the shepherds worshipped. A star
appeared, and the wise men rose from the East and
made Him offerings. He was brought to the temple,
and Simeon took Him in His arms, and returned thanks
for Him. He grew to twelve years old, and again
He appeared in the temple, and took His seat in the
midst of the doctors. But here His earthly majesty
had its end, or if seen afterwards, it was but now
and then, by glimpses and by sudden gleams, but with
no steady sustained light, and no diffused radiance.
We are told at the close of the last-mentioned narrative,
“And He went down with His parents, and came
to Nazareth, and was subjected, unto them.”
His subjection and servitude now began in fact.
He had come in the form of a servant, and now He
took on Him a servant’s office. How much
is contained in the idea of His subjection! and it
began, and His time of glory ended, when He was twelve
years old.
Solomon, the great type of the Prince
of Peace, reigned forty years, and his name and greatness
was known far and wide through the East. Joseph,
the much-loved son of Jacob, who in an earlier age
of the Church, was a type of Christ in His kingdom,
was in power and favour eighty years, twice as long
as Solomon. But Christ, the true Revealer of
secrets, and the Dispenser of the bread of life, the
true wisdom and majesty of the Father, manifested
His glory but in His early years, and then the Sun
of Righteousness was clouded. For He was not
to reign really, till He left the world. He
has reigned ever since; nay, reigned in the world,
though He is not in sensible presence in it the
invisible King of a visible kingdom for
He came on earth but to show what His reign would
be, after He had left it, and to submit to suffering
and dishonour, that He might reign.
It often happens, that when persons
are in serious illnesses, and in delirium in consequence,
or other disturbance of mind, they have some few minutes
of respite in the midst of it, when they are even more
than themselves, as if to show us what they really
are, and to interpret for us what else would be dreary.
And again, some have thought that the minds of children
have on them traces of something more than earthly,
which fade away as life goes on, but are the promise
of what is intended for them hereafter. And
somewhat in this way, if we may dare compare ourselves
with our gracious Lord, in a parallel though higher
way, Christ descends to the shadows of this world,
with the transitory tokens on Him of that future glory
into which He could not enter till He had suffered.
The star burned brightly over Him for awhile, though
it then faded away.
We see the same law, as it may be
called, of Divine Providence in other cases also.
Consider, for instance, how the prospect of our Lord’s
passion opens upon the Apostles in the sacred history.
Where did they hear of it? “Moses and
Elias on the mountain appeared with Him in glory,
and spake of His decease, which He should accomplish
at Jerusalem.” That is, the season
of His bitter trial was preceded by a short gleam
of the glory which was to be, when He was suddenly
transfigured, “and the fashion of His countenance
was altered, and His raiment was white and glistering.”
And with this glory in prospect, our Lord abhorred
not to die: as it is written, “Who for the
joy that was set before Him, endured the Cross, despising
the shame.”
Again, He forewarned His Apostles
that they in like manner should be persecuted, for
righteousness’ sake, and be afflicted and delivered
up, and hated and killed. Such was to be their
life in this world, “that if in this world only
they had had hope in Christ, they had been of all
men most miserable.” Well then, observe,
their trial too was preceded by a season of peace
and pleasantness, in anticipation of their future
reward; for before the day of Pentecost, for forty
days Christ was with them, soothing, comforting, confirming
them, “and speaking of the things pertaining
unto the kingdom of God.” As Moses
stood on the mount and saw the promised land and all
its riches, and yet Joshua had to fight many battles
before he got possession, so did the Apostles, before
descending into the valley of the shadow of death,
whence nought of heaven was to be seen, stand upon
the heights, and look over that valley, which they
had to cross, to the city of the living God beyond
it.
And so again, St. Paul, after many
years of toil, refers back to a time when he had a
celestial vision, anticipatory of what was to be his
blessedness in the end. “I knew a man in
Christ,” he says, meaning himself, “about
fourteen years ago, caught up to the third heaven.
. . . And I knew such a man . . . how that he
was caught up into Paradise, and heard unspeakable
words, which it is not lawful for a man to utter.”
St. Paul then, as the twelve Apostles, and as our
Lord before him, had his brief season of repose and
consolation before the battle.
And lastly: the whole Church
also may be said to have had a similar mercy vouchsafed
to it at first, in anticipation of what is to be in
the end. We know, alas, too well, that, according
to our Lord’s account of it, tares are
to be with the wheat, fish of every kind in the net,
all through its sojourning on earth. But in the
end, “the saints shall stand before the throne
of God, and serve Him day and night in His temple:
and the Lamb shall feed them, and shall lead them
unto living fountains of waters,” and there shall
be no more “sorrow nor pain, nor any thing that
defileth or worketh abomination,” “for
without are dogs, and sorcerers, and whoremongers,
and murderers, and idolaters, and whosoever loveth
and maketh a lie.” Now was not this future
glory shadowed forth in that infancy of the Church,
when before the seal of the new dispensation was opened
and trial began, “there was silence in heaven
for half an hour;” and “the disciples continued
daily with one accord in the temple, and in prayers,
breaking bread from house to house, being of one heart,
and of one soul, eating their meat with gladness and
singleness of heart, praising God, and having favour
with all the people;” while hypocrites and
“liars,” like Ananias and Sapphira, were
struck dead, and “sorcerers,” like Simon,
were detected and denounced?
To conclude; let us thankfully cherish
all seasons of peace and joy which are vouchsafed
us here below. Let us beware of abusing them,
and of resting in them, of forgetting that they are
special privileges, of neglecting to look out for
trouble and trial, as our due and our portion.
Trial is our portion here we must not think
it strange when trial comes after peace. Still
God mercifully does grant a respite now and then;
and perhaps He grants it to us the more, the more careful
we are not to abuse it. For all seasons we must
thank Him, for time of sorrow and time of joy, time
of warfare and time of peace. And the more we
thank Him for the one, the more we shall be drawn to
thank Him for the other. Each has its own proper
fruit, and its own peculiar blessedness. Yet
our mortal flesh shrinks from the one, and of itself
prefers the other; it prefers rest to toil,
peace to war, joy to sorrow, health to pain and sickness.
When then Christ gives us what is pleasant, let us
take it as a refreshment by the way, that we may, when
God calls, go in the strength of that meat forty days
and forty nights unto Horeb, the mount of God.
Let us rejoice in Epiphany with trembling, that at
Septuagesima we may go into the vineyard with the
labourers with cheerfulness, and may sorrow in Lent
with thankfulness; let us rejoice now, not as if we
have attained, but in hope of attaining. Let
us take our present happiness, not as our true rest,
but, as what the land of Canaan was to the Israelites, a
type and shadow of it. If we now enjoy God’s
ordinances, let us not cease to pray that they may
prepare us for His presence hereafter. If we
enjoy the presence of friends, let them remind us
of the communion of saints before His throne.
Let us trust in nothing here, yet draw hope from
every thing that at length the Lord may
be our everlasting light, and the days of our mourning
may be ended.