Thursday after Epiphany
January 10, 2019
CollectNativity, Washington, D.C.
“O God, … grant that your people …,
bathed ever more in [their Redeemer’s] radiance, may reach everlasting glory”
(Collect).
from http://kpshaw.blogspot.com/2013/03/184.html |
In these days after the feast of the
Epiphany, the liturgy continues the themes of light, glory, and splendor, of
Christ our Redeemer revealed to the world.
Today we prayed in the Collect that we,
the people of God, might “acknowledge the full splendor of [our] Redeemer” and
be “bathed ever more in his radiance,” and that thru this splendor, this
radiance of Christ, we might “reach everlasting glory.”
How is this to happen? No angels appear to us announcing, “Glory to
God in the highest,” and sending us to find a child in a manger. No fabulous star leads us to his home. How does Christ’s splendor bathe us?
We have heard the Good News announced
to us, the same “glad tidings” of healing and liberation that Jesus announced
in the synagog at Nazareth (Luke 4:14-22).
We encounter this Christ personally in the sacred mysteries of his
Church: in Baptism, Confirmation, the
Eucharist, Reconciliation, Anointing, Matrimony, and Orders. When we celebrate these with faith, we are
bathed in the splendor of Christ’s glory and we anticipate a fuller glory when
he brings us to everlasting life. Christ
himself is the fabulous star, the rising sun, who guides us to his home and
will make it also our home. The
sacraments, wherein his radiance touches us, are our portals to the eternal
glory of our Redeemer.
In the meantime, we acknowledge the
splendor of our Redeemer by bathing others, our sisters and brothers, in his
radiance; by loving them, as St. John says, loving all God’s children with the
love that he has bestowed upon us (1 John 4:19). The radiance within us, if it’s truly within,
must burst out and shine upon the world.
Our faith in the glory of the risen Christ, lived out in daily,
practical love, conquers the evil of the world (1 John 5:4).
The evil of the world isn’t something
lurking at the southern border. Yes,
there are evils in the outside world:
drugs, human trafficking, nuclear weapons, people in power using that
power to oppress others, abortion, religious persecution, sexual harassment,
racism, and all the other stuff constantly in the news. More immediately, we ought to be concerned
about the evils of our internal world:
our own unfair or unkind judgments, spitefulness, gossip, laziness, lack
of due attention to others, petty deceptions – well, you know the entire
litany, don’t you? This is the evil
which needs the bathing radiance of Christ our Redeemer, so that we might
“reach everlasting glory.”
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