The Manifestation of the Lord: Epiphany

A Venerable Feast

Yes, it is still the Christmas Season: the season officially ends next Sunday with the celebration of the Baptism of the Lord.  Today is the traditional date on which we celebrate the Great Feast of Epiphany. In the United States the liturgical celebration is always on a Sunday, so yesterday was officially Epiphany. I’ll withhold comment on whether I think it a good thing or not to move it from its ancient date of January 6th. That, of course, is when generations of our ancestors celebrated this venerable feast. Many Christians throughout the world still do.     

Adoration of the Magi, by Claude Vignon, 1624

Epiphany is somewhat unique among Christian observances. Over the centuries it has commemorated a number of different things. Today in the Western Church Epiphany focuses on the visit of the Magi, whom we often call “The Three Kings,” Balthasar, Melchior, and Gaspar.  Scripture, however, neither crowns, nor numbers, nor names them, but simply describes them as “wise men from the East.” (Matthew 2:1

The Manifestation of The Lord

The word Epiphany means “a manifestation” or “a revealing.”  In this context the name of the Feast refers to the fact that the gifts and adoration of the Magi make manifest that Jesus is the Messiah and the Son of God.  This truly ancient feast (which Christians were celebrating even before there was a formal observance of Christmas) has celebrated a number of different, if related, things over the centuries. At times it has focused on the Nativity, the Baptism of Jesus, and other manifestations of his Divinity.

     These are not the only “epiphanies” that our Lord has presented to us. It is interesting how many epiphanies of “God with Us” can be found in Scripture, how many different ways he reveals himself. The examples above barely scratch the surface. And yet it’s still so hard for us to accept that the infinite, omnipotent Lord of the Universe has seen fit to reveal anything to us at all, much less lowered himself to take on human flesh, to come among us “in the form of a slave” as Saint Paul put it (Philippians 2:7).

Hard to Believe

This strange reluctance on our part to fully believe the manifest action of God is a theme I touched on in my post on the Solemnity of Mary as well. Even Mary and Joseph themselves, after visits from Angels, and after what they knew full well was a Virgin Birth, “marveled at what was said about him” (Luke 2:33) when they heard the old man Simeon prophesy over Jesus as he was presented in the Temple. And that’s not the end of it. A full dozen years after the birth of their Divine Son, they still seem to have a hard time taking it all in:

After three days they found him in the temple, sitting among the teachers, listening to them and asking them questions; and all who heard him were amazed at his understanding and his answers. And when they saw him they were astonished; and his mother said to him, “Son, why have you treated us so? Behold, your father and I have been looking for you anxiously.” And he said to them, “How is it that you sought me? Did you not know that I must be in my Father’s house?” And they did not understand the saying which he spoke to them.  (Luke 2:46-50)

The Finding of the Saviour in the Temple, by William Holman Hunt, 1860

Faith Seeking Understanding

It is so very difficult for all of us to grasp the reality of the Incarnation that even the human parents of The Lord seem to struggle with it. And who could hope to have faith equal to theirs?  

     But even here, as always, the Blessed Mother is the model disciple. “His mother”, the Evangelist tells us, “kept all these things in her heart” (Luke 2:51).  She doesn’t let her initial human reactions have the last word but patiently waits for the meaning of all these events to become manifest.  One might even say that she demonstrates the classic definition of theology: faith seeking understanding.

Music for Christmas:

Adoration of the Shepherds, by Agnolo Bronzino, 1539-1540

The obvious choice for a Christmas clip here would be “We Three Kings.” It’s very hard to find an appropriate version of the song on a platform other than YouTube.  When I started this blog several years ago I founded it on an explicit rejection of Google and all its works and promises, and YouTube is a satrapy in Google’s Evil Empire. When I wanted music for a post, I’ve either found what I wanted on Vimeo or created my own video . . . or gave up and looked for something else.  In the case of “We Three Kings,” I eventually created my own video for Vimeo, which I attached to yesterday’s post on the 12th day of Christmas.

     As it happens, there is a good second choice for today’s post.  With words by Charles Wesley and George Whitefield, set to the joyful music of Felix Mendelssohn, I give you “Hark the Herald Angels Sing.”  The clip below features a rousing rendition by the choir of St. Andrews Anglican Cathedral in Sydney, Australia.

The Christmas Tree Points to Christ: 12th Day of Christmas

The Christmas Season

Who doesn’t love a Christmas Tree? By the way, Merry Christmas on this, the 12th Day of Christmas! Today is the last of my daily “Twelve Days of Christmas” posts. It’s not the end of the season yet, however, more on that below. Also, in many places today is the liturgical celebration of Epiphany. I’ll post about Epiphany tomorrow on the 6th of January, the traditional date of this most ancient of feasts. In the meanwhile, please take a look at my post about the beloved Epiphany song “We Three Kings“:

While today doesn’t mark the end of the Official Christmas Season®, we are nearing its end.  In an earlier post I described the season as a series of ripples emanating from Christmas Day with decreasing intensity over time. A helpful reader pointed out Advent works the same way, with our observances gaining in intensity as Christmas approaches.  The Octave of Christmas ended with the Solemnity of Mary this past Wednesday. Today, then, is the last of the traditional Twelve Days of Christmas. Tomorrow, January 6th, is the traditional date of the great feast of Epiphany.  The Official Christmas Season ends next Sunday with the celebration of the Baptism of Our Lord. Unofficially (but traditionally and logically), the Christmas Season continues until the Feast of the Presentation of the Lord on February 2nd.

The Christmas Tree

The family Christmas tree

      I once published a post at about this point in the season called “Don’t Touch That Tree!” It was a lament for all the Christmas trees unceremoniously cast out untimely and thrown to the curb at a time when the Christmas lights should still be burning bright.   In this post I’d like to look at the Christmas Tree itself as an institution, a beloved Christian symbol, and sacred tradition. Unfortunately, self-styled debunkers sometimes attack it (erroneously) as a pagan intrusion.  
     We Christians need not be swayed by such nonsense.  First of all, even if there were historical evidence of pagans using evergreen trees in worship, Christ can baptize all things for his use (for more on this point, see my post “Christ is King of All . . . Even the Holidays”).  Pagans prayed to their Zeus, Thor, and other such gods, for instance: should we avoid prayer for that reason?  Pagans offered sacrifice on their altars. Do any of us put the offerings on a similar altar in the Temple of Jerusalem in the same category, much less Christ’s Eucharistic Sacrifice on the altars of our churches?  Certainly not.  The same would apply to Christmas trees, if they had pagan origins.

Evergreens aren’t Oaks

     As it happens, however, evergreen trees did not serve as objects of worship among the Germanic and Baltic peoples of Europe. Their occasional use as symbols of eternity and the promise of Springtime rebirth is quite a different matter.  This rather obvious symbolism has turned up in other parts of the world as well.  The pre-Christians of the German forests directed their religious veneration, at least as it applied to trees (is dendrolatry a word?), toward the deciduous oak tree.

This oak-worship figures prominently in one popular story, in fact, about the origins of the Christmas Tree. This story only makes sense if we distinguish between the two different kinds of tree.  St. Boniface, who left his native England to evangelize the still pagan Germans of continental Europe in the 8th century, famously chopped down a holy oak. The local folks were offering a young boy to the tree in sacrifice. In one version of the story, after the mighty oak fell a young fir tree was visible behind its stump.  The Saint pointed to the evergreen, and told the onlookers (who were impressed that Wotan hadn’t zapped him out of existence) that they should henceforth direct their veneration to this tree, as a symbol of the True God in the Person of Jesus Christ.

Prince Albert’s Christmas Tree

Boniface did indeed cut down the oak, but the detail about the evergreen doesn’t appear anywhere else. Not for a long time, anyway. The first actual historical references to Christmas trees come in the sixteenth century. It seems very unlikely that almost eight centuries after the heathens of central Europe converted and gave up tree-worship their practices would somehow find their way into Christian homes.

Queen Victoria and family gather ’round the tree (Illustrated London News, 1848)

For most of the World Christmas trees are a fairly new tradition.  They were unknown beyond some (not even all) German speaking areas, along with Latvia and Estonia, until very recently.

  They are ubiquitous now, but Christmas trees were rarely, if ever, seen in the English speaking world until a little over a century and a half ago. Queen Victoria’s husband Prince Albert, who was German, introduced the custom to the British Royal family.  A print that first appeared in the Illustrated London News in 1848 depicting the Queen and family around their tree is generally credited with popularizing Christmas trees both in Britain and in North America.

Symbols of the Nativity

     Today one sees Christmas trees all over the world. In recent decades the popes have put up large and beautiful trees near the crèche in St. Peter’s Square.  Saint John Paul II explained some of the Christian symbolism of the tree in his Angelus address on December 19th, 2004:

The feast of Christmas, perhaps the most cherished by popular tradition, is full of symbols connected with the different cultures. Among all, the most important is surely the Nativity scene, as I had the opportunity to point out last Sunday.

Together with the Nativity scene, as is true here in St. Peter’s Square, we find the traditional “Christmas tree.” A very ancient custom, moreover, which exalts the value of life, as in winter the evergreen becomes a sign of undying life. In general, the tree is decorated and Christmas gifts are placed under it. The symbol is also eloquent from a typically Christian point of view: It reminds us of the “tree of life” (see Genesis 2:9), representation of Christ, God’s supreme gift to humanity.The message of the Christmas tree, therefore, is that life is “ever green” if one gives: not so much material things, but of oneself: in friendship and sincere affection, and fraternal help and forgiveness, in shared time and reciprocal listening.

St. Peter’s Square decorated for Christmas, 2001 (Lawrence Journal-World)

Splendor of Living Truth

Pope Benedict XVI elaborated on the same theme four years later:

 With its loftiness, its green [color] and the lights in its branches, the Christmas tree is a symbol of life that points to the mystery of Christmas Eve . . .

  Christ, the Son of God, brings to the dark, cold, unredeemed world in which he was born, a new hope and a new splendor . . .  

If man allows himself to be touched and enlightened by the splendor of the living truth that is Christ, he will experience an interior peace in his heart and will himself become an instrument of peace in a society that has so much nostalgia for reconciliation and redemption.

There you have it: don’t let the nay-sayers wear you down!  We still have some Christmas left this year, so be of good cheer . . . and don’t touch that tree just yet!

Music for Christmas:

How could I not wrap up this post with that most pre-eminent of Christmas tree songs, THE Christmas tree song, “O Tannenbaum”? The clip below features the classic recording by Nat King Cole.

Featured photo top of page by Garson Canci (downloaded from newstalk1280.com (https://newstalk1280.com/newburgh-tree-lighting-free-holiday-movie-night-this-saturday/)

We Three Kings: Music for Epiphany

We Three Kings

“We Three Kings of Orient Are . . .”  Is there anyone out there who doesn’t know this song? It’s easily the most familiar hymn associated with Epiphany, at least as we celebrate the feast in the Western Church. I’ll write more extensively about Epiphany itself in my post on January 6th, the traditional date of the feast.  Because today is the formal liturgical celebration in many dioceses, I’d like to focus briefly on the song.

John Henry Hopkins, jr. wrote “We Three Kings” in 1857.  At the time he was rector of Christ Episcopal Church in Williamsport, Pennsylvania.  At the same time, he was a deacon and music teacher at General Theological Seminary in New York City.  He composed the song for a Christmas pageant at the seminary.

Over the next few years, Hopkins shared the song every year with his family and friends.  Everyone thought highly enough of “We Three Kings” that Hopkins published it in a book of carols and religious songs in 1863.  It achieved wide popularity in United States and was published in Britain in 1928. The song has since become one of the most popular Christmas carols. You can read a fuller treatment of the song’s history here.

The Magi, mosaic from Basilica of Sant’Apollinare Nuovo, Ravenna, Italy, 536 AD

King, Priest, and Prophet

  In the first stanza of the song, we hear the Magi, the wise men from the East from the second chapter of Matthew’s Gospel, introduce themselves as “We Three Kings.”  Each king in turn describes the gift he brings to baby Jesus in the next three stanzas.  These are the three gifts we see in the Gospel account: Gold, Frankincense, and Myrrh.  Each gift denotes one of Christ’s roles as savior.  Gold represents kingship, Frankincense priesthood. Myrrh, which was used in embalming bodies, pointed to his prophetic death.  All three kings sing together again in the final stanza.

The Wikipedia entry tells us that

The carol’s melody has been described as “sad” and “shifting” in nature. Because of this, it highly resembles a song from the Middle Ages and Middle Eastern music, both of which it has been frequently compared to.

The beautiful and solemn performance of “We Three Kings” in the clip below gives the song an appropriately regal air.  The Choir of King’s College, Cambridge sings the song.  I have included several artistic depictions of the Three Wise men from different eras.  The words are posted beneath.

May you have a blessed Epiphany!

We Three Kings Clip

We Three Kings:

AllWe Three Kings of Orient are,
Bearing gifts we traverse afar,
Field and fountain,
Moor and mountain,
Following yonder Star.
RefrainO Star of Wonder, Star of Night,
Star with Royal Beauty bright,
Westward leading,
Still proceeding,
Guide us to Thy perfect Light.
GaspardBorn a King on Bethlehem plain,
Gold I bring to crown Him again,
King for ever,
Ceasing never
Over us all to reign.
Refrain
MelchiorFrankincense to offer have I,
Incense owns a Deity nigh:
Prayer and praising
All men raising,
Worship Him God on High.
Refrain
BalthazarMyrrh is mine; its bitter perfume
Breathes a life of gathering gloom;—
Sorrowing, sighing,
Bleeding, dying,
Sealed in the stone-cold tomb.
Refrain
AllGlorious now behold Him arise,
King, and God, and Sacrifice;
Heav’n sings Hallelujah:
Hallelujah the earth replies.
Refrain