Intro
The Magi went to the most-reasonable place to discover the newborn, Jewish 
King.  After all, where else would He be but in Jerusalem?  That’s the capital 
city!  That’s where you would find God’s Temple.  That was God’s city. 

But when they arrive to join the party, all dressed up and on time, no one is 
celebrating.  Excitement has not taken over the city.  Those in Jerusalem are 
going about their daily routines: They are eating, drinking, marrying and being 
given in marriage.  And so the overwhelmingly ordinary living of everyday life 
leaves these men perplexed, these men from the east.  

They ask, “Where is He who has been born King of the Jews?”  To the astonished 
faces around them, they add: “For we have seen His star in the East and have 
come to worship him.” 

Main Body
Word reaches old King Herod that rich visitors from the Eastern lands had 
arrived in Jerusalem.  They were sitting on his doorstep, asking about the 
birth of the new King of the Jews, the Messiah.  That troubled Herod.  And not 
only him, but all Jerusalem with him.  For when Herod was troubled, the rest of 
Jerusalem quaked in fear. 

But that’s how it is.  The birth of Jesus, even He who is the Prince of Peace, 
often brings about trouble.  He’s trouble for those who want to be a king over 
God.  He’s trouble for those who want to have the final say over their lives, 
over what they do, and how they live.  For Jesus comes, not merely as a human, 
but also as the King.  

Jesus is the King to whom we owe obedience.  Of the Messiah, the Patriarch 
Jacob prophesied long ago: “To Him, the peoples’ obedience belongs” (Genesis 
49:10).  For no one may call Him Lord if he does whatever he pleases with his 
life.  On the Last Day, Jesus will ask all such false disciples: “Why did you 
call me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ but didn’t do what I said?” (Luke 6:46). 

So the news of Easterners looking for the King of the Jews troubled Herod.  But 
even as despicable and bloodthirsty that Herod was, he still knew where to 
turn.  He called on the chief priests and scribes.  He asked them where the 
Messiah would be born.  Scripture gave the answer: In Bethlehem of Judea.  
Herod turned to the Church and to the Scriptures.  Even from such a despicable 
king, we can learn where we, even today, still find Jesus: in the Church and 
the Scriptures. 

The prophet Micah had foretold that Bethlehem would be the place of the 
Messiah’s birth.  Bethlehem was an insignificant, little town whose only claim 
to fame was that it was the birthplace of King David--and that a thousand years 
before!  Yet, Bethlehem was the place. 

We should not let it escape us that these Magi needed more than a star to find 
Jesus.  They needed the Word of God.  And it’s the same with us.  We do not 
find God for us in the beauty of nature.  He’s not in the evening sunsets and 
mountain peaks.  We do not find the Lord Christ in such places.  For although 
these are all His and declare His glory, the place to find the Lord Jesus is in 
the words that He gave.  You find the Word Himself, Jesus, in the Scriptures 
preached, taught, and read. 

But how marvelous is the grace of God!  For after giving the Magi the Word that 
pointed them directly to where the Christ was, He again added the star.  This 
time the star did not fail them.  It came to stand right over the place where 
the Child was.  

And how they needed that little extra sign from God!  For when they got there, 
they found a teenage mother with a baby living in poverty.  They saw an 
ordinary baby boy.  Silken garments and the finery of kings did not enrobe this 
child.  Instead, they found a little boy dressed in working-class clothes.  
There, they saw the long-promised King of the Jews.  

Did the Magi feel let down or disappointed?  After all, the King they had 
sought for so long, from such distant lands, looked to be as ordinary as any 
other child.  Was this King just the child of a peasant? 

But look what they do!  They don’t say: “He can’t be the One.  He’s no King.”  
What do they do?  They close their eyes to what they see and fasten before 
their eyes the Word of God.  They believe, contrary to all that they see.  They 
believe that what God has said is true, even when their eyes and feelings tell 
them otherwise.  

There, before them was the Babe whose origins were from of old, from the days 
of eternity.  They believe that He is the promised King come to be King, not 
only of the Jews, but of all people.  He is the King of all who rest their 
final hope and confidence in Him.  And so they fall on their knees--even on 
their faces--before the holy Child to worship the One on His mother’s lap. 

They did not stumble at His poverty and lowly appearance.  Instead, they 
brought out their gifts and offered them to Him.  They brought Jesus gold.  
Gold confessed that He was a king.  They brought him their treasures of earthly 
wealth, just as we do, confessing that Jesus is also our King, the One who owns 
all we have.  In the gold, they even confessed that Jesus was God.  They were 
simply returning to Him a portion of what He had given to them.  But the gifts 
do not stop there. 

They also bring Jesus frankincense.  That was the incense used in worship to 
the one, true God, the incense that symbolized the prayers of the faithful 
rising to heaven as a sweet savor in the nostrils of God.  That was the incense 
used in the Temple, which also testified to the true presence of God being 
there with His forgiveness.  And so it is today.  The Church still uses incense 
to symbolize our prayers rising to heaven and to testify to the true presence 
of Jesus on the Altar, who comes to bring us His forgiveness.  But the gifts do 
not stop there. 

They bring to Jesus myrrh.  Of all gifts available in creation, why would they 
bring an aromatic resin used for burial for One so recently born?  They were 
confessing that this Child came to die as the sacrifice for the sins of all.  
And is it still not true for us?  Although we worship a risen-and-resurrected 
Lord, we in the Church heed the words of the Apostle Paul: “I decided to know 
nothing among you except Jesus Christ and him crucified” (1 Corinthians 2:2).  

And so, here we are today as Christians, wanting to give to Jesus as the Magi 
did of old.  For here is the One whom God the Father has given for us, to be 
Himself the bearer of our sin, the sacrifice of atonement for us.  Why?  So we 
might stand before God without stain, wrinkle, or blemish, a people beloved.  

Jesus came to give us His all.  And so we wish to give back to Him.  But, in 
the end, what can we give to Him but ourselves?  When we do that, we throw open 
the doors of our lives and say, “O Jesus, live within me and be my Lord.”  
That’s the prayer of those who renounce the rights over their own lives and 
surrender fully to Him.  

And with Jesus, our Lord, that is the way it is to be.  For the Holy Spirit 
doesn’t call us to half-hearted and weak-willed discipleship.  For we are 
either the Magi or Herod.  If we are the Magi, then we fall in worship before 
the Christ, giving Him our own gifts of gold, frankincense, and myrrh.  If we 
are Herod, we stomp our feet and do whatever it takes to get our own way.  

This Epiphany, God gives to you again His gift of forgiveness.  God pours out 
His forgiveness, even for those times when you’ve played the part of Herod, 
when you’ve killed the voice of the One who called you away from sin to live 
under His kingly rule and reign.  

Conclusion
To you, He says: “Come, my child.  Be my own and live under me in my Kingdom in 
everlasting righteousness, innocence, and blessedness.  Follow my Word to where 
I give you my forgiveness.  It’s not in Bethlehem, but here.  It’s here in the 
bread and wine.  Here is my Body and my Blood, for you, for forgiveness.  Here, 
I give to you what was won at Calvary’s cross, so you may know that I am your 
King forever.” 

And what will you say to the kind invitation of Your King?  May your answer be: 
“Lord, may your Light rise and shine on me, so I may be yours forever.”  Then 
you, too, will be filled with eternal joys beyond knowing.  Amen. 


 --
Rich Futrell, Pastor
Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church, Kimberling City, MO
http://sothl.com 

Where we receive and confess the faith of the Church (in and with the Augsburg 
Confession): The faith once delivered to the saints, the faith of Christ Jesus, 
His Word of the Gospel, His full forgiveness of sins, His flesh and blood given 
and poured out for us, and His gracious gift of life for body, soul, and 
spirit.  

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