I spent the week wondering if the magi ever knew what their visit had helped to set in motion on a couple of fronts, which led me to this sermon.
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When I was in high school I had an after school job working as a gofer—all errands all the time—in a doctor’s office. It was about a ten-minute drive and, most every day, it coincided with a short radio program that some of you may remember by Paul Harvey called “The Rest of the Story,” where he told some mostly unknown or forgotten account about someone or something that had happened. About halfway through the short segment, he would break for a commercial and then come back to tell “the rest of the story,” where he revealed the name of some famous person or tied the story to some other event.
One of the things Harvey understood was that what we often consider the end of a story is actually the place where we just chose to stop telling it. Most of the time, things keep happening, whether or not we keep noticing. That’s true even with novels, where we actually reach a last page and it seems there is no more story. There’s a whole genre of fan fiction where people have written about what happened to certain characters after the books ended. Even when Paul Harvey finished his segment by saying, “And now you know the rest of the story,” there was more that happened.
Stories keep going, as we can see in Matthew’s account of the visit of the magi.
They went home by another way, choosing not to go back to see Herod, thanks to a warning that came in a dream, and then came the rest of the story.
Matthew tells us that the magi weren’t the only ones who received divine warnings. An angel came to Joseph and said, “Get up!” (That makes me wonder if angels are less frightening on the second visit. The first time, the messenger said, “Don’t be afraid.” This time, it’s just, “Get up!”) The warning was to get up and get out of town with Mary and the baby: to flee to Egypt and stay there because Herod wanted to kill the child.
In Matthew’s telling, Jesus, Mary, and Joseph were well on their way before Herod realized the magi weren’t returning and ordered his soldiers to kill all the children in Bethlehem under the age of two—an unbearable public tragedy that Matthew aligns with Rachel weeping inconsolably for her children. They lived in Egypt for a while it seems. When Herod died, the angel appeared again saying, “Get up,” but because another Herod was in Jerusalem, Mary and Joseph avoided Bethlehem and moved to Nazareth in Galilee.
It’s a complicated story that offers us many points of connection and interpretation, plus some difficult questions. This is also a difficult story, as we talked about last Sunday. In Matthew’s telling, Jesus was born into a hard and difficult world, which is why it mattered so much that he be named “God is With Us.”
Biblical historians have never been able to find historical evidence of a widespread massacre of children by Herod. That doesn’t mean something tragic didn’t happen. We already know Matthew told his story in big ways. When the magi asked about the whereabouts of the child, Matthew says Herod was troubled “and all of Jerusalem was troubled with him.” Since they were all in a closed room in the palace, all of Jerusalem was probably not in on what happened. What Matthew was saying was the emotions of this impulsive and explosive ruler were contagious. In the same way, as one historian noted, even if a dozen children were killed it would still be a tragedy.
The details of the story also connect with parts of Hebrew history that underline God’s presence in the middle of tragedy. Jesus, Mary, and Joseph fled like refugees to Egypt: the land where their ancestors had been enslaved was now a place of sanctuary. The allusion of Rachel weeping unconsolably connected the murder of the children to the deep grief at the heart of their faith, as well as the deep trust that God had never forsaken them.
Matthew tells all of this—from the magi arriving and then going home to Jesus growing up in Egypt until the angel came a third time and told them to get up and go to Nazareth (and avoid the new Herod in town)—in less time than it took Paul Harvey to air his afternoon segment. When we turn the page in our gospel, Jesus will be grown and asking to be baptized in the Jordan River. We never hear about the magi again. After this, Joseph kind of disappears from the story as well. Yet they are all crucial to how Jesus’ story played out.
Sometimes, maybe most of the time, the heart of the rest of the story is not so much what happened next but who happened to be there. The story of Jesus’ life is filled with people who show up for a verse or two, maybe a chapter, and affect how we see the rest of things, like the magi choosing to come west in the first place and then choosing to not keep their promise to Herod.
I remember the first time I drove after a snowstorm. I was going from Fort Worth, Texas to Ardmore, Oklahoma on I-35 and it started snowing hard. No one knew how to drive on it and there were not any plows, nor much of anywhere to stop. The exits were far apart. I was following in the path being made by an eighteen-wheeler in front of me when I hit an ice patch and my Oldsmobile Cutlass did a quick spin and left me in a snowbank on the side of the highway, and unable to pull myself out.
As I sat there trying to figure out what to do, a big pick-up truck pulled up on the shoulder next to me. A man got out and waved and then proceeded to pull a big chain down and attach it somewhere on the front of my car. He got back in his truck and pulled my car out of the snowbank and back on to the shoulder of the highway. Then he got out again, unhooked the chain, and drove away, and I drove on to Ardmore.
My life was changed by a man I never met.
I invite you this morning to think about who the magi are in rest of your story. Who are the people who have come looking for you? Who have offered you the gift of encouragement? Who are the Josephs in the rest of your story? Who are the ones who looked out for you? Who offered you a safe place to grow? Who protected you?
Some of those who come to mind may be people you knew for a season, or even a few moments. Others may be loved ones who have inhabited your life for years. They may be sitting here in the room with you this morning. As we think of those who have changed our lives, we also need to remember that we are also part of the supporting cast of most every person we come in contact with. How then will we contribute to the rest of those stories.
Whatever the story is, there is still more to tell. For now, we are the rest of the story, continuing to add to what the magi left behind, carrying on the legacies of love handed down to us. Then it will be time to let someone else tell the rest of the story, which is fitting to say as we come to the Communion Table where we share the meal with all those who have gone before us and all those who will come after us. We are all part of the story of God’s unfailing love. That is the rest of the story. Amen.
Peace,
Milton