Epiphanytide

I am experiencing a series of epiphanies. That is, sudden manifestations of the divine in the ordinary. It’s been happening since the beginning of 2026, during the last of the twelve days of Christmas. As I mentioned in the previous post, I intentionally celebrate the Christmas Season through the Epiphany, the Visitation of the Magi, on January 6. Now that we are officially in what liturgically is called “Epiphanytide,” my attention span dial is set at its highest level, and little glimpses of gold, frankincense, and myrrh peek through the torrent of darkness that bombards our world today.

The first epiphany, here in California, was golden. Amidst the gloom and rain that descended on us right before Christmas and through the New Year, the sun poked brilliantly through the clouds and has shone down like butterscotch ever since. Our usual brown hills turned bright green, and the succulents in my backyard went crazy. While on a contemplative walk on the beach, the dazzling display of sunlight made the water luminous. Everyone from dog walkers to tide fishermen to cellphone starers looked as though they wore halos, bearing a divine presence. A gift, whether they knew it or not. Then a rainbow appeared. Where is the gold? Right inside of us.

The second epiphany happened on January 6, the evening of the Epiphany. A group of friends gathered in a host home for the annual Ritual of the Magi, which involves chalking the initials of the legendary Wisemen, along with the date, over the front door. This year, when I lit the charcoal and placed the frankincense in the antique brass burner, an enormous flame sprang up, accompanied by billowing black smoke. Fearing the smoke alarms would go off, I doused it with water and started over again. Soon, the pungent aroma permeated the room and wafted over the chalk, water, and oil. “It smells like church in here,” remarked someone. Indeed. The smoke rose, disappeared, and blessed the household, us, and streamed palpable love from our little group out into the world.

The third epiphany, sad to say, came from my distress over the violence in Minnesota, my home state. Something seems to be forever dying in me as I join in the endless mourning for all innocents killed in the name of peacekeeping. The gift of myrrh, presented to the innocent baby in the manger, was a foreshadowing of his ultimate horrific death by execution. Somehow, this is strangely comforting. The Son of God knows our anguish, our suffering, our need for a dose of reality. In my epiphany awakening, I realized that ultimately, the way we exit this earth does not matter so much as what we do with the time in between–how much we love, how much we try to convey to others that they matter.

I have chosen “forgiveness” as my word for the year 2026, which has already been challenging. What can I say?  After listening for months, forgiveness echoes in my head as the way to reconcile death and life, not only during this Epiphanytide, but for the remainder of time I have left.

Friends on Twelfth Night

O star of wonder, star of light, star with royal beauty bright,
westward leading, still proceeding, guide us to thy perfect light.”

The Twelve Days of Christmas are officially over today.  While I always feel a little sad about ending the season, I have had so many wonderful celebrations and illuminated moments this year! Besides seeing “The Nutcracker,” “A Christmas Carol,” and three magical Christmas concerts, I had fabulous family celebrations, Christmas teas with friends, and adventures looking at lights. Then, to mark the end of the Christmas season, a group of faith-filled friends gathered  last evening to celebrate Twelfth Night and the Epiphany, sometimes referred to as “Little Christmas.”

Seventeen of us gathered at a cozy home, still beautifully decorated and lit for Christmas with a magnificent tree, creche, and evergreen boughs.  We intentionally entered into a familiar final Christmas celebration focused on the story of three “kings” who make a long journey, following a star. We proclaimed readings from the Gospel of Matthew, T.S.Eliot’s “The Journey of the Magi” and Jan Richardson’s “Wise Women Also Came.” Then we held a special ritual for Epiphany written by my dear friend, Tessa Bielecki from her book SEASON OF GLAD SONGS: A CHRISTMAS ANTHOLOGY. 

We sang “We Three Kings,” meditated on the gifts of gold, frankincense, and myrrh, blessed chalk and then wrote the initials of the three Magi (Caspar, Melchoir, Balthazar) along with the date: C+20+M+B25, over the front door to light the way of pilgrims and seekers.  Afterward, we feasted on delicious appetizers, sweets, and a traditional spicy Kings’ Cake with hidden surprises. As conversations and laughter flowed, I felt surreally caught up in the light of the “star of wonder” by this mystical circle of friends who miraculously decorate my life every day.  

I have said this before, but no one on the planet is luckier than me to have such richness. I say “luckier” rather than “blessed” because I believe God blesses everyone equally. Some of us, in rare moments of transcendence, realize this. No explanations can be given. It is simply pure luck (some call it grace), a free gift, to have such loving friends, rituals, precious moments of togetherness, when all troubles and suffering are put aside and we bask in the glory of a starry night. The only response is gratitude, big gratitude, in my case.

“Friends are the best presents,” is a phrase embroidered on a little Christmas pillow given to me many years ago. May we never take that for granted.