Today, we celebrate Epiphany Sunday and the story of the Wise Men who came from the east to offer gifts to the Christ Child.
Wise Men, Magi, We Three Kings – These are all titles that are commonly used in referring to this group of people who traveled from Persia in search of the newborn King.
I’d like to add another title for these visitors from the East. For today, let’s think of them as “seekers.” I love that title. They were seeking to offer their gifts and honor the one who was born, king of the Jews.
For some of us, this year’s New Year’s celebration didn’t just feel like a welcoming of 2026. It might have felt more like saying good riddance to 2025 and don’t let the door hit you when you walk out. You might be looking forward to this New Year because 2025 wasn’t very kind to you and things just didn’t your way. Maybe you sensed a sigh of relief as you were able to finally hang a new calendar on the wall.
For many of us, this higher than usual expectation for a better year also includes a renewed hope. With this in mind, think with me for a moment what this renewed hope could mean for our faith.
Like those magi who traveled many miles to seek the newborn king, what if we too would see ourselves as seekers of a deeper faith? This is a year in which we can take our faith to a whole new level.
Being seekers like the magi means that like them, we have a curiosity to know who this newborn king is and what this means for our own faith perspective. And like saying goodbye to 2025 and hello to 2026, being seekers may also mean letting go of the past and embracing the future that God has in mind for us.
Yes, this new year seems like the perfect time to travel with the magi and seek a deeper relationship with God.
I love the name given to this day on the church calendar. Epiphany. We sometimes use this word in everyday language when we say, “I just had an epiphany,” and we will proceed to share some new insight or something we discovered or learned.
To have an epiphany means being open to the new direction that God may be leading us. It’s difficult to have an epiphany when we are satisfied with the status-quo and when our minds and our hearts are not open.
Not too long ago, I received a college magazine update from the college I attended, and in her letter to the college community, the president of the college wrote these insightful words, “The three Rs of education should be more than reading, ‘riting and ‘rithmetic. It needs to include seeking and finding truth – research and reflection – before reacting.”
I understood her words to mean that we shouldn’t be satisfied with the status-quo and to always have a healthy curiosity that will lead to growth and new understandings. Education and spiritual growth are never meant to be stagnant. When we stop learning and growing in our faith, we cease from being the seekers that God is calling us to be.
Kirsten Powers is a journalist and political analyst. She’s been on Fox News, CNN, and USA Today. I recently heard an interview she gave about her faith journey which is really interesting. Her story is the story of a spiritual seeker.
Kirsten shares how she grew up in a home that wasn’t particularly religious. Her mother was Catholic but had fallen away from the church. Her father was Episcopalian and didn’t attend regularly.
When she was in college, she saw herself as an atheist or agnostic. She just didn’t know if she really believed in God. When she was in her 30s, her boyfriend at the time was attending a well-known evangelical church in New York City, and she started attending worship services with him.
She said how that church got her to start thinking about her faith more seriously and she became a believer during that time. But as she continued in that church, she realized that she didn’t agree with a lot of what the people of that church believed about the Bible, about politics, and about social issues.
Here she was, not a very conservative person, worshiping in an evangelical church that didn’t reflect her values and theological views. But, she says that she’s thankful for that church because that’s where she encountered Christ in a very real way.
For the long-term, she knew that this church wasn’t the church for her so she started attending a different church, an Anglican Church, but that church also felt too restrictive in their beliefs.
And so, she continued her spiritual search in finding where God was leading her in her faith. In her role as a journalist, she met Father Jonathon Morris and they became friends.
She started asking him questions about the Catholic faith and he introduced her to a Christian faith that was open to a variety of theological perspectives, something that Kirsten had been seeking. For her, the evangelical church was too one dimensional, but in the Catholic faith, she felt there was more room for both conservatives and liberals.
This led her to join the Catholic Church and since then, she has continued in her spiritual quest. When she went to Rome on assignment to do a story with other reporters, she participated in a spiritual pilgrimage that was happening while they were there.
She said how that pilgrimage in visiting the holy sites in Rome had a big impact on her faith. It helped her to appreciate the mystery of the faith and that there didn’t need to be an answer for every spiritual question. Just live in the mystery. And this has led her to practice the spiritual discipline of meditation and prayer.
Another spiritual mentor encouraged her to read the book, “Falling Upward,” by Richard Rohr who has written several other books on Christian spirituality in which he talks about how our failings can be the foundation for our ongoing spiritual growth.
Kirsten shares how this long journey of seeking has been worthwhile and gives her a sense of peace and wholeness.
She is now writing a book on the topic of grace.
After I listened to her interview, I was reminded of how like Kirsten, we are all called to be spiritual seekers and that spiritual journey is ongoing and leads us to new understandings, experiences, and connections.
Kirsten’s story reminds me so much of what the Wise Men were doing when they made their long journey to seek the newborn king by following a star all the way to Bethlehem.
Kirsten’s story also reminds me of the kind of church that I appreciate, a church that gives room for people to be who God has called them to be, a church that is humble enough to see that we don’t have all the answers, but a church where we can point each other to the One who is the newborn king, the one who wants to live at the very center of all of our questions, doubts, and deepest longings.
One of my favorite things to hear as a pastor is when someone who has been a long-time church members says, “I learned something new about my faith,” or “that bible study helped me to see that there are other ways of interpreting scripture,” or “I like being part of a church where we see our faith in different ways.”
We are all seekers here. We are all following the star and it’s a long journey. But the good news that I want to leave you with today is that journey will always lead us to Christ. That journey will always lead us to a deeper appreciation of the divine mystery of our faith. That journey will always lead us to a richer understanding of God’s grace at work in our lives.
How appropriate for us, that this first Sunday of a New Year, is not only Epiphany Sunday, but it’s a Sunday that we are invited to share in the Sacrament of Holy Communion. The one who was born as our king is also the one who suffered, died, and who rose again for our sake and who promises to walk alongside of us in our life-long journey of faith.
May God bless each one of us with many spiritual epiphanies this year. May God bless each one of us with new and fresh understandings of our faith. May God bless each one of us with a seeking faith and a renewed curiosity of the unfathomable holy mystery of our loving and gracious God.
And like the Wise Men, may God bless each one of us with overwhelming joy along our journey together.
Happy New Year!
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