Following the Star That Truly Matters

January 4, 2025 – Epiphany of the Lord

Click here for the readings (https://bible.usccb.org/bible/readings/010426.cfm)

What is it that drives you these days? What keeps you awake at night, and what makes you get up each morning and continue? Many of us could also be searching for someone, for something, or for a situation that we hope will finally make us happy. We look for contentment that will quite down our restlessness, for success that will ease our worries, or for love that will fill the emptiness we sometimes carry in silence. This search is very human. It is also very real.

Each of us, in one way or another, is indeed on a journey. We take risks for what we hope will give meaning to our lives. We leave familiar places, sacrifice time with family, work long hours, and invest our energy in relationships and dreams. But we also know that every journey has its trials. We face failures, disappointments, wrong turns, and moments of deep uncertainty.

This is where today’s feast, the Epiphany of the Lord, gently meets and calls us. Epiphany means manifestation because God makes Himself known to us. The Gospel tells us of the Magi or wise men, seekers, who followed a star. They were not kings in the political sense. They were probably scholars, observers of the heavens, men who knew how to read signs. They had a common desire and that was to find the truth behind the light they had seen. That star was not only a guide, it was also an invitation for them to behold and to encounter.

They risked the long road, crossed unfamiliar territories, and faced uncertainty. And yes, they asked questions. They even made mistakes, stopping first at the palace of Herod, assuming that a king must be found among the powerful. Yet, in the end, the journey led them not to a throne but to a child.

Isaiah speaks of this moment, “Rise up in splendor, Jerusalem! Your light has come.” Thus, the light of God is not meant for one people alone. It is meant to draw all nations towards the glory of God.

Psalm 72 echoes this hope that justice and peace may flourish and that rulers may serve, not oppress. And Saint Paul, in his letter to the Ephesians, reminds us that this mystery has now been revealed for in Christ, all are included, all are invited, all are heirs.

This makes us realize that the heart of Epiphany is not really the Magi. The Epiphany is not about the Three Kings. It is the Epiphany of the child Jesus they have encountered.

Hence, God chooses to reveal Himself not in strength but in vulnerability of a baby. Not in wealth but in poverty and simplicity. Not in the center of power but in a simple home, with Mary and Joseph, in a place easily overlooked by many. This is the great surprise of God.

Yet, this was also the reason why Herod was troubled. He was shaken not by an army, not by a rebellion, but by a baby. Remember, power that is built on fear always feels threatened by truth and compassion. Corruption always trembles before humility and honesty. Herod represented all forms of leadership that cling to control and self-preservation. Jesus, even as an infant, already exposed this kind of power.

For us Filipinos in 2026, this feast also speaks clearly to us. Many families continue to struggle with rising prices, unstable work, and the painful choice of leaving loved ones behind to work abroad. Our young people are searching for direction in a noisy digital world, often pressured to succeed quickly, to look perfect, and to keep up. We also face fatigue from political disappointments, from social divisions, from disasters that test our resilience again and again. In all this, we too are searching for a star.

Yet, Epiphany reminds us that God is not absent from these struggles. However, we must learn where to look. God may not be found where influence is loud or where promises are grand. God is often revealed in the quiet faith of ordinary families, in honest work done with integrity, in compassion shown to the weak, and in courage that refuses to be silent before injustice.

Let us remember that the Magi were wise not simply because they searched and were knowledgeable, but because they discerned. They listened. They allowed themselves to be led, even when the path was unclear. And when they found the child, they offered their gifts. Gold, frankincense, and myrrh were not random. They were acts of recognition and surrender.

Gold was offered because Jesus is a true king. Frankincense was offered because  Jesus is a priest and divine. And Myrrh, an embalming oil, was offered because as a prophet and savior, Jesus will suffer and die.

Today, the Lord also invites us to do the same. To seek Him above all. To discern where He is truly present. And to offer not just things, but our lives.

Hence, I leave you now your three takeaways for this week.

First. Choose your star carefully. Ask yourself honestly, “What is guiding my decisions right now? Success alone? Fear? Approval? Or the quiet call of God that leads to truth and life?

Second. Look for God where He usually hides. Pay attention to the poor, the weak, the unnoticed. God often reveals Himself there, and He waits for us to respond with humility and compassion.

Third. Pray with openness and courage. Set aside time each day to speak honestly with the Lord. Ask for discernment. Ask for light. And ask for the grace to follow, even when the road leads somewhere unexpected.

May this Epiphany help us follow the star that truly matters and may it always lead us to Christ. Hinaut pa.

Comments

Leave a comment