Second Sunday after Christmas (Year 1, NL)
79 results found.
The magi and their epiphany (Isaiah 60:1-6; Matthew 2:1-12)
Do they later say to their friends, “How could we not have known?”
January 6, Epiphany (Matthew 2:1–12)
In welcoming the Magi into her home, Mary opens the door to the whole world.
December 24/25, Nativity of the Lord (Isaiah 9:2–7; Psalm 96; Titus 2:11–14; Luke 2:1–20)
The God of exiles, refugees, and migrants still shines light amid today’s present darkness.
The Magi’s interfaith encounter (Matthew 2:1-12)
And six stars they offer for our own
by Liddy Barlow
January 6, Epiphany of the Lord A (Matthew 2:1-12)
It must have been a strange sight: grown adults, prostrate before a toddler.
by Liddy Barlow
January 1, Christmas 1A (Matthew 2:13-23)
Before Mary can cut the tags off the brand-new frankincense, the weeping starts.
by Liddy Barlow
An ordinary Epiphany (Isaiah 60:1-6; Matthew 2:1-12)
The glorious and impressive features are only half of the story.
January 6, Epiphany (Ephesians 3:1-12; Matthew 2:1-12)
Theology is not popularly understood to be a landscape where dreams are welcome.
Magi on camels? Seriously? (Matthew 2:1-12)
It’s all too much like a fairy tale.
January 3, Epiphany (Matthew 2:1-12)
Epiphany is the ultimate bad-guy story.
Gifts we bring (Matthew 2:1-12)
Epiphanies come to us in all shapes and sizes.
The grief of the widows (Matthew 2:13-23)
Grief is like a lead-weighted blanket that can never be fully lifted.