From Poverty to Riches

By |2026-01-20T15:07:16-06:00January 13th, 2026|Categories: Audio/Video, Catholicism, Christianity, Epiphany, Gospel Reflection|

This is how the rich pursue God: self-sufficiently, driven on by the conquest of curiosity, inevitably instrumentalizing the knowledge they seem to acquire for their own self-satisfaction. The poor of the Lord, however, must take another path: the path of the wise men. Matthew 2: 1-12 gives us the only narrative in the gospels of [...]

Why “Celebrate” Christmas and the Epiphany?

By |2026-01-05T17:15:09-06:00January 5th, 2026|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Christianity, Christmas, Epiphany, Timeless Essays|

Why celebrate Christmas? Why throw a party, instead of going to church, in the first place? Is not this religious holiday, by nature calling us to quiet contemplation? Did you know that Christmas celebrations were banned in Scotland until 1958?  I certainly did not, not until my son started working on his sixth-grade “Christmas around [...]

“Amahl and the Night Visitors”: The Classic Christmas Opera

By |2025-12-14T12:06:39-06:00December 14th, 2025|Categories: Audio/Video, Christmas, Epiphany, Michael De Sapio, Music, Senior Contributors|

It’s remarkable that "Amahl" should be the most frequently performed opera worldwide, considering this is a work created for a specific seasonal context. Yet in another sense it’s understandable, given how Gian Carlo Menotti brilliantly scaled down the luxuriant demands of opera to create a small-budget piece that just about any group of skilled performers [...]

Death at Yuletude: T.S. Eliot and “The Journey of the Magi”

By |2025-01-05T19:24:08-06:00January 5th, 2025|Categories: Advent, Christianity, Epiphany, Imagination, Literature, Poetry, T.S. Eliot, Timeless Essays|

T.S. Eliot’s “The Journey of the Magi” is as sincere a conversion poem as one can have it: No fancy light shining down from the heavens or a thunderous call to holiness; just one small event that left a Magus perplexed by a new worldview that was unsettling and strange, for it put into question [...]

On the Twelfth Day of Christmas: Belloc & Eliot on Twelfth Night & Epiphany

By |2025-01-04T18:50:40-06:00January 4th, 2025|Categories: Christianity, Christmas, Epiphany, Hilaire Belloc, Joseph Pearce, Literature, Poetry, Senior Contributors, T.S. Eliot, Timeless Essays|

On the Twelfth Day of Christmas two of my great loves sent to me a couple of great meditations on the mystery of the Nativity. The first and better-known meditation is by T.S. Eliot, whose “Journey of the Magi” places the poet in the entourage of the Three Wise Men as they journey to Bethlehem. [...]

Resolutions and Irresolutions

By |2024-12-31T18:43:00-06:00December 31st, 2024|Categories: Catholicism, Christianity, Epiphany, Glenn Arbery, New Year's Day, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays, Wyoming Catholic College|

The faith of our students has a Spartan or Roman openness to it, something Magian, that deeply respects the full reality of things. They understand that our deepest analogy to God is submission to the truth, but they know from this education that seeing the truth of God’s will in crucial decisions might require patience [...]

Did Matthew Make Up the Magi?

By |2024-01-08T17:58:33-06:00January 8th, 2024|Categories: Christmas, Dwight Longenecker, Epiphany, Senior Contributors|

When researching the story of the Magi visiting the Christ child in Bethlehem, it is not long before one discovers the scholar’s opinion that the Magi story is likely to be a story concocted by the early Christians—and probably Matthew himself, in order to show Jesus to be the long-looked-for Messiah and fulfillment of the [...]

Imagining the Epiphany

By |2024-01-05T18:33:03-06:00January 5th, 2024|Categories: Christianity, Death, Epiphany, John Willson, Literature, Stephen Masty, Timeless Essays|

The late Steve Masty’s “The Test of the Magi” is a novel that displays a powerful religious imagination and a profound knowledge of the history and cultures of the ancient world, as well as personal experience with the geography and anthropology of the middle east. The Test of the Magi, by Johannes Bergmann (254 pages, [...]

Did the Three Wise Men Really Exist?

By |2024-01-05T18:39:40-06:00January 5th, 2024|Categories: Books, Christmas, Dwight Longenecker, Epiphany, Timeless Essays|

It is easy to understand why skeptical New Testament scholars have relegated the magi from Matthew’s gospel to the realm of fantasy. Were they fanciful figures from the imagination of  Matthew, or historical figures who existed at the time of Christ’s birth? Every good fantasy story needs a magician. Dorothy encounters the Wizard of Oz. [...]

“The Gloucestershire Wassail”: A Carol for Epiphany Eve

By |2024-01-04T19:54:53-06:00January 4th, 2024|Categories: Audio/Video, Christmas, Epiphany, Music, Timeless Essays|

"The Gloucestershire Wassail" is a traditional English carol associated with the eve of Epiphany, when revelers drank wassail punch, a hot-mulled sherry- or brandy-based cider, sweetened with sugar and seasoned with other spices, and including yeast, apples, and toast. According to British Food History, "wassailing predates the Battle of Hastings and is thought to have [...]

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