by Archbishop Innocent of Kherson
And when they had opened their treasures they presented
unto Him gifts: gold, and frankincense, and myrrh. (Matt. 2:11)
One could say that these pilgrims of the Orient stood before the manger
of Christ for all mankind. Their gifts represent symbolically all that we,
followers of the Saviour, bring to Him. The gold signifies material gifts; the
frankincense--immaterial gifts, gifts of the spirit; and the myrrh represents
those gifts that are at once both spiritual and material. There are,
accordingly, persons who bring the Lord gold; there are those who bring
frankincense; still others bring myrrh; lastly, some bring several gifts
together. Who are these individuals? In examining this question, we shall see
how we too, like the magi, can
serve our Lord and Saviour. Who brings the Lord gold?
Gold
is brought by those who, for the glory of God and the benefit of their neighbor,
offer anything of their labor s and possessions. For example, you bring gold to
the Lord if you build, renew or adorn God's temple. Your gift pleases Him, for
even though He sits now on the throne of glory, for the sake of our salvation He
continues at the same time to appear in the manger as well. This manger is
present in church upon the table of oblation, where at every Liturgy He is, as
it were, born again so as to offer Himself anew as a sacrifice for our sins. How
often He suffers want in this manger. Here He needs both clothing and shelter,
light and warmth. Therefore, if you do anything for the benefit of the church,
your offering delights the Lord -as much as did the gift of the magi who brought
Him gold.
HOW
much of this gold is brought to the Lord? Oh, if we were to compare what is
brought with that which is spent to answer the demands of the passions, for the
satisfaction not only of our needs, but of our very whims--or even With that
which is patently surrendered for the flesh and the world to consume--then it
shall turn out to be the very smallest part ....
Before us a poor man shakes from bitter cold, hunger, and disease; we
either rebuff him harshly or give him a measly pittance, and that same day we
are ready to exhaust half our fortune in a senseless game, or to display Our
munificent squandering at some gaudy spectacle.
Such
is our gratitude to Him Who, being rich, for our salvation is this day
embeggared, that we through His poverty might be rich (II Cor. 8:9).
Who brings the Lord frankincense? These are they who apply
their abilities, knowledge, and talents to the glory of God and the benefit of
their neighbors; for these are immaterial gifts of greater value than gold or
silver.. These are gifts which God gives to men but, they, also are--and should
be made--men's gifts to God.
This
costly frankincense is offered to the Lord by each one who, sparing not himself,
serves his neighbor. Frankincense is offered to the Lord by that shepherd of the
Church, who faithfully stands alert guarding souls and hearts against the
confusions and temptations of the age, who ardently proclaims the ways of the
Lord, who guides those who have lost their way, comforts those in despair,
instructs all. Frankincense is brought to the Lord by that mother who does not
rely upon servants, who does not spend time in idleness and vain amusements, but
rather devotes her time and abilities to the rearing of her children in the fear
of God, to nurturing in them the habit of self-denial, the spirit of meekness,
of prayer, and of love for mankind. Permeating the home, the fragrance of this
frankincense is thereafter diffused everywhere by those who received in that
home a pious upbringing. Frankincense is brought to the Lord by that artist who
does not utilize his talents to pander to human lust in keeping with the spirit
of the time, but rather, strives to turn all his creative powers into m e a n s
of disseminating--'with the refined and beautiful--What is True and good, This
frankincense envelops many with its heavenly fragrance. And just as there is no
-one who does not possess abilities or talents
of some kind, neither is there anyone who is unable to
bring the Lord frankincense by using his abilities to the glory of God and the
true profit of his neighbors.
·
The third gift to the Lord from the magi · was myrrh. This was the last gift
and therefore more exalted than gold or even frankincense. What kind
of gift is this, and why is it so important? Like frankincense, myrrh exudes a
heavenly fragrance, but its distinguishing quality lies in its great bitterness;
for this reason it represents our trials and sorrows, our tears and sufferings.
Now
it is clear who brings to the Lord the gift of myrrh. They bring it who
patiently bear trials in life and. suffer blamelessly without giving in to bleak
despair, nor fainthearted complaining, nor useless sighing; those Who, in
enduring their trials, are moved neither to prideful scorn towards others, nor
to the desperate stifling in themselves of all · human feeling, but to a lively
hope in the living God--to the thought that through suffering he or she is
cleansed from sins, made perfect in virtue, and, what is even more gladdening,
made like unto their Saviour Who, died for them upon the Cross. Such endurance,
in the spirit of faith and love, of the tribulations and sorrows of the age is
also a gift to the Lord, a gift more precious than ~old and of a sweeter savor
even than frankincense.
May
all those who suffer cruelly hear this, and may they come to fathom the
advantage of their condition which is seemingly bitter, but actually not without
its sweetness if only they consider their faith and the Cross of Christ. May
they hasten to bring their myrrh to the Lord as a gift. Those who are satisfied
in this world cannot do this; unacquainted with want, they seem to lack nothing;
but they have no myrrh. Many of those who possess frankincense-that is,
exceptional talents, also cannot do this: they have no heavy trials to bear, no
myrrh. It is all with you, God's bloodless passion-bearers; you, who through no
guilty act of your own--whether by the lot of your birth or by the perversity of
circumstance, by human malice or by our corruptible physical nature--greet
virtually every day, and also end it, with sighs; and who, it may be, this very
morning greeted Christ's holy Feast day with tears. Those who look upon you
disdain your hardship; you yourselves, perhaps, stumble at times beneath the
weight of earthly trial. But we, in the name of our Saviour, greet you with the
precious likeness of His Cross! Cherish the precious myrrh which you have
received as your portion; do not exchange it for frankincense, and even more
guard against trading it for mere gold. And do not rob it of its heavenly
fragrance by complaint or fainthearted murmuring. What is the use of
complaining? The Lord sees everything without it. Each of your tears counts with
Him, each of your sighs knows its weight--and in time you shall receive for all
of these a hundredfold.
Amen.
(Translated by Maria Belaeff from a leaflet published by
the Vladimir Mother of God Convent, San Francisco.)
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