The term epiphany means to manifest.   In Western churches, it is celebrated as the coming of the three wise men bringing gifts to visit the Christ child.  In some countries influenced by Catholic tradition, Three Kings’ Day, or the night before, is the time for opening Christmas presents.

The Epiphany is a major training tool in the theological aspect of the church.  The Wise Men or Magi who brought gifts to the infant Jesus were the first Gentiles to acknowledge Jesus as "King" and so were the first to "show" or "reveal" Jesus to a wider world as the incarnate Christ. This act of worship by the Magi, which corresponded to Simeon's blessing that this child Jesus would be "a light for revelation to the Gentiles" (Luke 2:32), was one of the first indications that Jesus came for all people, of all nations, of all races, and that the work of God in the world would not be limited to only a few.

The day is now observed as a time of focusing on the mission of the church in reaching others by "showing" Jesus as the Savior of all people. It is also a time of focusing on Christian brotherhood and fellowship, especially in healing the divisions of prejudice and bigotry that we all too often create between God's children.

 

The next season of our church year is Epiphany.  This word means making God manifest.  It is our (the church) response to god's Christmas.  It begins with the Feast of the Baptism of our Lord.  Often a Three Kings dinner is held after in honor of the magi who traveled far to worship Jesus at Bethlehem.

The season begin on the Day of Epiphany and ends on Ash Wednesday, which is the beginning of Lent.  The color green is used representing the green things that God made on Earth and also the spiritual growth of God within us of His coming at Christmastide.

 
 

St. Martin's-in-the-Fields Episcopal Church
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Columbia, SC  29206

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