The journey, however, was not a straight one. At one
point, it led them to Herod - into a place of power, fear, and unease. This,
too, belongs to the story. In our own seeking, we often pause in the wrong
places, mistaking noise for guidance, authority for truth, or security for God.
Yet even these detours are not wasted. The light continues to lead, patient and
steady, even when we briefly lose our way. Herod’s response reveals why some
recognize the light while others resist it. He was troubled because truth asked
something of him. We recognize this same resistance within ourselves, the quiet
hesitation we feel when light reaches parts of us, we would rather protect.
When the wise men finally arrived, they encountered a mystery that overturned
every expectation: the Almighty as a child. The search that began in the stars
ended in stillness. Words were no longer needed. They offered what they had,
not to receive anything in return, but because encounter itself had become enough.
And then they went home another way.
This final movement completes the journey. The wise
men did not simply find Christ; they were changed by the encounter. They
returned to the same lives, carrying a quieter strength, a deeper freedom, a
light now living within them. Once they had met him, returning the same way was
no longer possible. Epiphany reminds us that God continues to reveal himself
gently and patiently - like a star that waits, trusting that longing hearts
will follow. And when we do, the journey may lead us through uncertainty, even
wrong turns, but an encounter with Christ always leaves us changed, walking
another way.
- Lilly Pushpam PBVM

Thank you Lilly for another deep reflection on a Gospel reading.
ReplyDeleteBlessings for the year ahead.
Thank you Sr Maureen
DeleteAwesome Sr. Lilly! "What we see is seeking us"
ReplyDeleteThank you Fr Sathish
Delete