Third Sunday After the Epiphany – Lectionary January 25

Third Sunday After the Epiphany – Lectionary January 25

The Adventurous Lectionary – The Third Sunday after the Epiphany – January 25, 2026

Bruce G. Epperly
Isaiah 9:1-4 ; Psalm 27:1, 4-9; I Corinthians 1:10-18; Matthew 4:12-23

Today’s readings continue the spirit of the magi, followers of Zoroaster, non-Jews who experience God’s revelation when the rightful religious leaders are oblivious to God’s light of salvation.  The life and teachings of Jesus are universal and not restricted to a particular culture or religion, even Christianity. The passages are good news to foreigners and strangers and pioneers in inter-spirituality who worship God of Jesus, while remaining true to their own faith and ethnicity.

Following the star, taking a chance on a dream, they find Jesus. Their lives become their gifts. The light of the Christ Child is universal, touching and enlightening everyone, persons of other faiths and even political and religious leaders who turn toward the pathways of darkness. God’s still shines are guides the way of pilgrims and those who struggle with personal and communal dis-ease. God’s light is infinite and also intimate, personal and also global, individual and also political. As we break down the walls of religious separation, we claim our vocation as children of the magi. (For more on religious pluralism, see Bruce Epperly, “The Elephant is Running: Process and Open and Relational Theology and Religious Pluralism” and for the deeper and wider meaning of Jesus, “Jesus: Mystic, Healer, and Prophet.”

The coming of God’s saving and healing light brings rejoicing to Isaiah and his people. After years of chaos and despair, the light has come to the fallen nation Israel. The path ahead is clear, and hope is on the horizon. So, delights Isaiah, as he sees his nation’s fortunes restored. Corporate and individual salvation are interdependent; so, the health of the nation will bring health to individuals, especially those who have suffered most in this time of destitution. We see the way toward God’s future, and God’s future embraces all who are lost and searching. Our little light transforms the nation, and an enlightened nation adds light to each resident, citizen and undocumented.

The question for us today is “Will the light come?” The earth is on fire and glaciers are melting, and misguided politicians darken the air by fiery bellicosity as they threaten to invade allies, murder citizens in the streets, demonize immigrants, and withdraw from climate treaties.  Indeed, our leaders seem to prefer darkness and destruction over light and reconciliation.  They promote division rather than healing. How can we be children of light without succumbing to binary thinking, incivility, and polarization? How can we champion the light while honoring the light within others’ darkness?  This is especially challenge when faithfulness to the gospel requires resistance to Caesar’s state sponsored violence and culture of greed.

The Psalmist is a hymn of joy and recovery. The Psalm affirms that God is our light and salvation; God is our life’s stronghold God’s light shines on our path, and we need no longer be afraid of anything for God has the final word in our lives and history, and that word is salvation. The Psalmist does not deny challenge. In fact, like Psalm 23, there is an implicit threat, experienced by the Psalmist’s worshipping community. There are things of which we can be afraid, not just things that go bump in the night, but enemies who threaten our national integrity and personal, including the reckless and incoherent behaviors and threats of our own nation’s leaders. Nevertheless, God’s presence dwarfs the objects of our fear. Neither the Psalm nor Isaiah is for the faint-hearted. These words come from those who have lived with tragedy and loss and have found God’s blessing amid our pain.  Trusting God’s light and salvation may be the best antidote to our own polarization: trusting God’s care, we can confront the evils of our time without hate and see the presence of Christ even in those whom we must challenge with all our might.

The Psalmist also notes something that may strike some readers as unusual. The beauty of God. Many people do not think of God as beautiful. Yet, the aim of the universe is toward beauty, as philosopher Alfred North Whitehead asserts. How can we “embrace a beautiful God,” as theologian Patricia Adams Farmer asserts? Can we commit ourselves to bringing beauty to the world? To doing something beautiful for God in our personal and political lives? (See Patricia Adams Farmer, “Embracing a Beautiful God”)

Paul invites the deeply divided Corinthian church to reclaim the unifying mind of Christ. It is hard not to think of Philippians 2:5-11 when you read of Paul’s cry for Christian unity. Perhaps his vision of the “mind of Christ,” the deepest reality of Christian experience, motivates his words. The mind of Christ is all-embracing, welcoming, and relational. Power and truth are not found in unilateral and judgmental orthodoxies, of being right while others are wrong but in loving relationships. Nor are they found in authoritarian theologies, ecclesiologies, or public policies.

Paul is not disparaging doctrine or diversity but placing our unique perspectives and allegiances in the context of God’s reconciling love and are ultimate concern to follow the way of Jesus and God’s vision of Shalom. There are a hundred ways to kneel and kiss the ground, as Rumi says. But these multiple ways are penultimate and finite, not ultimate and all-inclusive. Christ brings unity without uniformity. The various Corinthian religious movements are of value and reflect God’s wisdom, but they become harmful when they are seen as final. Doctrinal, ecclesiastical, liturgical, and charismatic finality are idols and abstractions that lead to diminution and division. Christ is bigger than any religious movement. Though we may cherish our pathways, they are always penultimate, relative, and subject to revision. Doctrines are judged by their fruits, by the behaviors they inspire, and as Paul says in I Corinthians 13, the greatest of all things is love.

Paul’s passage is especially provocative in a time in which we are tempted to split entirely from our Christian kin, who in our perception have placed loyalty to Trump above loyalty to Christ.  Even if we think them “apostate” and find few points of contact with them and even see ourselves as members of a different “religion,” they are still our kin as God’s beloved children.  Even in their and our darkness, there is God’s inner and loving light.

The Gospel describes the beginnings of Jesus’ public ministry. When John is arrested, Jesus must choose to move to the forefront of sharing God’s good news. He becomes the embodiment of God’s light in the darkness – the fulfillment of Isaiah’s hope – as he preaches a message of turning and transformation. Jesus cannot preach the good news by himself: he calls Peter, Andrew, and the Zebedee boys to be his companions in ministry. Ministry is a communal enterprise, and the ministry of Jesus is more than mere words; it is love in action. Jesus’ message transforms whole persons and communities.

Good news preaching embraces the healing of bodies, minds, and spirits. Preaching is embodied in the actions of a healing community: the world becomes fresh, dwells among us, and transforms our world. In gathering his first followers, Jesus is establishing the foundations of a beloved community that will embrace the whole earth.

God’s good news is transformational and so is ours. God brings light and life to our world, cutting across divisions and looking for common ground. There is no place for political correctness or party spirit that divides or circular firing squads that demand full agreement to be in fellowship. This applies to our preaching as well. Sermons are intended to bring healing and wholeness. Clever words are “noisy gongs and clanging cymbals” if they are solely intellectual, critical, or deconstructive in approach. Cells as well as souls must find wholeness in our homiletics. We need prophets who are healers and healers who are prophetic.

The call of Jesus is “Follow me and I will make you fish for people.” Jesus’ words are calls to meaning. If you follow my path, you will make a difference in people’s lives. Following me will bring wholeness to your life and you will share that wholeness with others. Our fishing is no longer for material gain, to make a profit, or to use the object of our work as a means to an end. Our fishing benefits the others by inviting them to live fully alive in God’s realm.

Where do we see light today? In what way can we be light-bearers and light-bringers? How might we let our light shine, and the light of Christ shine through us?  The light that guides our way streams through us and gives light others. Where is our congregation called to bring life and light to the world; to reach out – fishing for persons – so that others might have a full share in God’s realm? God’s realm challenges us to follow the path of Jesus, and this means a commitment to healing cells and souls; to pray for God’s healing touch on those who are sick and to be partners in creating an institutional structure that nurtures health at every level of our community.

+++

Bruce Epperly is Theologian in Residence at Westmoreland Congregational United Church of Christ, Bethesda, MD and a professor in theology and spirituality at Wesley Theological Seminary in Washington DC. He is the author of over eighty books, including Jesus: Mystic, Healer, and Prophet; Creation Sings: Forty Days of Spiritual Wisdom from the Non-Human World; Messy Incarnation: Meditations on Christ in Process; and Homegrown Mystics: Restoring Our Nation with the Healing Wisdom of America’s Visionaries. His latest books are Creation Sings: Forty Days of Spiritual Wisdom from the Non-human World and Three Wise Wisdom: The Twelve Days of Christmas with Mary, Elizabeth, and Anna (volume seven in “The Twelve Days of Christmas” series along with his upcoming Lenten devotional, Just a Little Walk with Jesus: A Spiritual Saunter with Mark’s Gospel and Whitehead and Jesus.  He can be reached at www.brucepperly.com.

 

 

"Power of love is far more beautiful and effective than the love of power. "The ..."

Palm Sunday’s Tragic Beauty – March ..."
"Ash Wednesday, 2026The 40 Days and Three Tests of Jesus in the DesertThe joy these ..."

The First Sunday in Lent – ..."
"Thank you for the most uplifting Easter homily i've experienced in decades! Linking the quantum ..."

Embracing Resurrection without Supernaturalism
"We are blessed with yet another Good Friday on our journey. It's an opportunity to ..."

Good Friday Without Divine Violence

Browse Our Archives



TAKE THE
Religious Wisdom Quiz

Who tricked Isaac into giving him the blessing meant for his brother?

Select your answer to see how you score.