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The Magi and Their Gifts

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Title: The Magi and Their Gifts


1
The Magi and Their Gifts
  • The Church's celebration of Epiphany (appearance,
    revelation, manifestation),
  • the "twelfth night of Christmas,"
  • apparently originated in Egypt sometime during
    the third century.

2
Epiphany
  • Epiphany is traditionally celebrated in honor of
    Christ's birth, of the adoration of the Magi, and
    of the baptism of Christ's (also celebrated on
    the first Sunday following Epiphany), three
    manifestations of the Lord's divinity. The Eve of
    the Feast of the Epiphany is the twelfth day of
    Christmas, and tonight is known as "Twelfth
    Night" .

3
Appearance/Magi
  • to the Magi who, guided by the great and
    mysterious Star of Bethlehem, came to visit Him
    when He was a Baby (Matthew 21-19)

4
Revelation/Baptism
  • through His Baptism by St. John, when "the Spirit
    of God descending as a dove" came upon Him and
    there was heard a voice from Heaven saying, "This
    is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased"
    (Matthew 3, Mark 1, Luke 3, John 1), and the
    revelation of all Three Persons of the Most Holy
    Trinity.

5
Manifestation/ Miracle
  • through His first public miracle -- that of the
    wedding at Cana when Our Lord turned water into
    wine at the request of His Mother (John 2). Just
    as God's first miracle before the Egyptian
    pharaoh, through Moses, was turning the waters of
    the Nile into blood, Our Lord's first miracle was
    turning water into wine.

6
Old Testament Prophecies
  • Typified in the Old Testament by the Queen of
    Saba (Sheba), who entered Jerusalem "with a great
    train, and riches, and camels that carried
    spices, and an immense quantity of gold, and
    precious stones" in order to ascertain King
    Solomon's greatness (III Kings 10), the three
    Magi entered Jerusalem bearing gold,
    frankincense, and myrrh for the newborn King.

7
Kingly Gold
  • the gold as a sign of His Kingship. The gifts of
    gold and frankincense were both prophesied by
    Isaias in the sixth chapter of his book.  

8
Divinity/Frankincense
  • the frankincense -- a gum resin (i.e., dried tree
    sap) from the Boswellia tree, native to Somalia
    and southern coastal Arabia -- as a sign of His
    Deity. Mixed with stacte, and onycha, and sweet
    galbanum, it was used by Moses to set before the
    tabernacle as an offering to God, and was
    considered so "holy to the Lord" that it was
    forbidden to use profanely (see Numbers 30).

9
Humanity/death/myrrh
  • the myrrh -- a brownish gum resin from the
    Commiphora abyssinica tree, native to eastern
    Africa and Arabia, and used in embalming -- as a
    sign of His death. Myrrh, along with cinnamon and
    cassius, was used by Moses to "anoint the
    tabernacle of the testimony, and the ark of the
    testament" (Numbers 30). It has analgesic
    properties, too, and was offered, mixed with
    wine, to Christ on the Cross, which He refused
    (Mark 1523). Nicodemus brought myrrh to annoint
    Our Lord's Body after death (John 1939).

10
Magi/Kings/Wisemen
  • The three Magi -- Caspar (a.k.a., Gaspar, Kaspar
    or Jaspar), Melchior, and Balthasar -- are seen
    as the "first fruits of the Gentiles" -- those
    outside of Israel who came to faith. They
    undoubtedly travelled from Persia (modern Iran, a
    distance of about a thousand miles from
    Bethlehem), and their ancestral origins are
    probably found in Persia, Babylon (modern Iraq),
    Arabia, India, and/or Ethiopia.

11
Three???
  • How do we know there were three? We don't know
    that from Scripture, but tradition relates that
    were were three, and that there were three gifts
    mentioned supports this notion as well. Tradition
    says, too, that these three men were
    representative of the three ages of man and of
    the three "racial types" of man, the three
    families that descended from Noe's three sons
    (Sem, Cham, and Japheth).

12
Melchoir/Gold
  • Melchior was an old, white-haired, bearded
    descendant of Sem who brought gold.

13
Caspar/Frankincense
  • According to tradition, Caspar was the young,
    beardless, ruddy descendant of Ham who brought
    frankincense.

14
Balthasar/Myrrh
  • . And Balthasar was a bearded black descendant of
    Japheth, in the prime of his life, who brought
    myrrh.

15
Feast Days
  • Tradition also has it that the kings were
    baptized by St. Thomas, and they are considered
    Saints of the Church. Though their feasts aren't
    celebrated liturgically, the dates given for them
    in the martyrology are as follows St. Caspar on
    1 January St. Melchior on 6 January and St.
    Balthasar on 11 January.

16
Tradition
  • Several lovely family customs are associated with
    Epiphany. It is on Epiphany that the Christmas
    creche is finally completed, as the figures of
    the three wise men at last arrive at the crib. In
    many families, the wise men are moved a bit
    closer to the crib every day from Christmas Day
    until Epiphany. Also, recalling the gifts to the
    Infant Jesus, many families exchange small gifts.

17
Tradition
  • A time-honored custom (especially in France) is
    the baking of a cake with a bean or trinket
    hidden inside. The person whose cake contains the
    bean is made king of the feast. Processions of
    robed and crowned "wise men" to the manger are
    fun for little ones, and provide them with an
    opportunity to think of a good deed that they can
    offer as a gift to Jesus.

18
Tradition
  • The blessing of the home is also a popular
    Epiphany custom. using specially blessed chalk
    (your parish priest will bless the chalk, if you
    ask, or use the prayer of blessing below), many
    households mark their entrance door with the year
    and with the inscription CMB, the initial Caspar,
    Melchior and Balthasar, the names of the three
    wise man in legend. The inscription also stands
    for Christus Mansionem Benedicat, which means
    "Christ, bless this home." The popular form the
    inscription takes is 20CMB11. It remains
    above the doorway until Pentecost.

19
Epiphany Cake
  • A common custom in many cultures, is the Epiphany
    cake containing a trinket or bean, the person who
    finds it in his piece becoming the king of the
    feast. Sometimes there are two trinkets, or one
    bean and one pea one for a king and one one for
    a queen. In the royal courts of the later Middle
    Ages, these customs were very popular.

20
Inculturation
  • . Some believe these celebrations derived from
    pagan Roman customs associated with Saturnalia,
    which fell at around the same time as Christmas.
    If so, it can be seen as an example of
    "inculturation", or transforming pre-Christian
    customs and practices by giving them Christian
    significance. The Roman theme of the lordship of
    the feast was easily shifted to the Epiphany
    theme of kingship that of Christ himself and of
    the Magi, or "Three Kings".
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