The Rev’d Stephen E. Stults
First Sunday after the Epiphany
St. Paul’s Anglican Church
First Sunday after the Epiphany
St. Paul’s Anglican Church
January 10, 2016
“In
the Name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost….”
I bid you God’s Peace on this 2012 celebration of the
first Sunday after the Epiphany, also known as the Manifestation of Jesus
Christ to the Gentiles. Let’s consider
the word epiphaneia –
from the Greek, meaning “an appearance”; or the
English derivative, Epiphany. It means “an appearance or
manifestation especially of a divine being (1) : a usually sudden
manifestation or perception of the essential nature or meaning of something (2)
: an intuitive grasp of reality through something (as an event) usually
simple and striking (3) : an illuminating discovery, realization, or
disclosure .”
Today, let us focus just a
bit on the last definition, that of an “an illuminating discovery, realization,
or disclosure.” What does that means in
our lives, and more importantly, what does it means to our growth in Christ?
The realization for today
comes from our Epistle selection from today. St. Paul. In this illuminating instruction from St.
Paul, we are told three things that are vital to our life in Christ.
The first instruction tells
us “to present your bodies a living
and holy sacrifice, acceptable to God, which is your spiritual service
of worship.” If we examine this
statement, it correlates exactly with what the Prayer Book tells us to do. We no longer need the various ritual
sacrifices prescribed in the Old Testament.
Instead, the sacrifice we are called to give is our “sacrifice of praise
and thanksgiving.”
What does this exactly mean? When St. Paul says,
“Present your bodies a living and holy sacrifice, acceptable to God, which is
your spiritual service of worship”, does he mean a literal sacrifice? No, and this is one of the glories of the New
Testament. We are not called upon to
sacrifice animals for our sins, nor are we required to shed any blood. Instead, we are to remember the “one, holy
and perfect sacrifice, oblation and satisfaction”, that was offered for
us. Then, in remembrance, we are to
offer our own sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving.
Again, what does mean, literally? It means that we should, without reservation,
present ourselves to the Lord. What this means is that we allow the light of
Christ to peer into every aspect of our lives, without reservation. How easy this sounds and yet how difficult it
is, if we are still holding on to something selfish, something secret, or
something hidden that we don’t want God to see.
Of course, how vain and how foolish this attitude is! Nothing is hid from God, despite our best
efforts to convince ourselves that it is so.
Many a time when younger, I heard preachers talk about this, how that we
all hold our secret sins close to us, with the deluded conception that God
doesn’t see. How vain, how utterly vain
this is!
Yet, when we present ourselves as a sacrifice
wholly acceptable to God, which is our spiritual service, something wonderful
happens. Our God, our loving Heavenly
Father, sees us only as filtered through the Son. This makes our “spiritual service” worthwhile
and good, despite our actual condition.
This does not mean that we just sin and sin, confess, then repent and
sin again, willfully. That is, we cannot test the patience of God without
regard to true contrition. To do so is similar to battering on the very gates
of Hells itself, while praying that they don’t open. St. Paul addressed this very issue in the
early church, and it was the cause of several early heresies. The point is we
must be willing to let God’s light come into us and illuminate us, in
spite of our sinfulness. When we do
this, our desire to be godly takes on a real and almost tangible aspect.
What allows this to happen is the second
instruction from St. Paul, as he tells to “be transformed by the renewing of
your mind, that you may prove what the will of God is, that which is good and
acceptable and perfect.” As we allow the
Holy Ghost to illuminate our mind, we will be transformed in a new and
wonderful way. That way is the renewing
of our mind in Jesus Christ.
Once again, what does this actually mean? Simply this:
we Christians have a light within us that cannot be quenched. Not misfortune, or persecution, or torture,
or death can put it out. Why is this? It
stems from the fact that our strength does not lie in this life. Instead, it stems from the eternal, absolute
Life that is God. In short, it extends
past our feeble earthly years into an existence that cannot be numbered or
counted.
Our light
and our joy pertains to this life as well, lest one think that the benefits of
Christianity are only future-based. Right now, in this life, is something that
is not available to those who are not of the household of God: joy. This joy is the result of light
inexpressible, irrefutable, and bright without measure, peeking around the
edges of our souls. There is something different, in a good way, about a
Christian. That “something” is the light
that makes it way through the darkness of this world, to be seen by men. As our Lord said in Matthew 5:16: ”Let
your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works, and glorify
your Father which is in heaven.”
The last point St. Paul makes our epistle is simply
this: Romans 12:3: “For I say, through the
grace given unto me, to every man that is among you, not to think of himself
more highly than he ought to think; but to think soberly, according as God
hath dealt to every man the measure of faith
Does this mean that we Christians aren’t to have
joy in Christ and in our redeemed state? Can’t we feel that we Christians are a
called people, special to God? Yes, we
freely acknowledge this, but our special relationship to God through Christ can
never be a source of pride in ourselves, but only in Him. That is, there may be a temptation to think
that because we are Christians, chosen and called by God to receive His eternal
inheritance, somehow we have merited this by something that we are or have
done.
Beloved, nothing could be farther from the truth. We are called, not because of our deserts,
but precisely the opposite. God, through His mercy, saved mankind form eternal
darkness and death for one reason: out
of love. He chose this, despite the fact that we deserve nothing but the
harshest condemnation, due to our fallen nature. Despite the seeming harshness of this
statement, it is true. Man, left to his own devices, without the renewing
effect of the Holy Ghost, will always descend into an increasing maelstrom of
lust, envy, murder and violence. Man
without God is a dark creature, indeed.
Yet beloved, that is not the message for
today. Instead, it is the fact that all
of us, without exception, can enjoy the renewing of our minds through the
wonderful influence of the Holy Ghost in our lives. We too, with simple desire,
fervent repentance, and earnest expectation, receive new life in ourselves.
We too, through Christ, can “present our bodies a
living and holy sacrifice, acceptable to God.” It is this “illuminating
discovery, realization, or disclosure” that all of us can grasp this Epiphany
season. Once we realize this, our lives
will never be same, for our lives will have taken on a new measure and a new
dimension in holiness. As we draw near
to God, He will draw near to us. As
the Psalmist says, in Psalm 73: “But it is good for me to draw near to God: I have put my trust in
the Lord GOD, that I may declare all thy works.”
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