Astronomer Matthew 2;11
The day I met you, changed me.
I had spent my life in the pursuit of scientific knowledge,
being taught by the best minds in Arabia and studying alongside the brightest
students in the country. My parents had
paid for me to travel so that I could expand my knowledge and I was considered
one of the leading scientists in my field.
Which was geometry and astronomy.
Several weeks prior to my journey to Bethlehem
I had been with a group of students calculating the next season of lunar phases and mapping the stars when one of my youngest
disciples asked a question which changed
the trajectory of my life. He wanted
to know what was my explanation for a comet which he thought he had seen the
previous evening in the eastern skies.
I had assured him that the charts did not
predict any such comet and that he must have been seeing a star or known
satellite. But he was adamant. So
that evening the students and I went out onto the hillside to see if we could
identify the object. As we searched
the pitch black night sky I was soon able to make out the slightest smudge in
the heavens where it most certainly had not been the week before. I was puzzled. The charts were invariably accurate about the movement of the planets and the
position of the stars. I myself
had spent a good part of my life working
on mathematical calculations to
determine the projected movement of heavenly bodies and this anomaly was
certainly a variable I had not forseen or counted on. Over the next several weeks the smudge in
the sky turned into a clearly visible comet and it was moving at significant
speed across the skies. I
contacted some of my learned colleagues
to discuss what this might mean.
To cut a very long story short, we came to the conclusion
that this new sign in the skies was a foretelling of something momentous which
had happened, or was about to happen and consultation with the priests and
oracles led us to believe that the event concerned the birth of a King.
Personally I would have been happy just to chart and record
the event and leave it there. But my
senior colleague Melchior seemed uncharacteristically excited about the whole
thing and suggested that we research the comet in more detail. He pointed out that this would be a once-in-a-lifetime
opportunity and that we might go down in
history for discovering something
significant . His suggestion was
that we track the path of the comet , recording its proximity to earth, speed
of travel and eventual disintegration or disappearance from view. He was quite adamant that this needed to
involve a road trip. He later confessed
to me that he was actually just really excited about the possibility of meeting
a King ! And given that he had somehow managed to
persuade the Council of Sciences to fund the trip..... well who was I to argue?
We set off on our journey in high spirits. Every few nights we would stop and record the
position of the comet in relation to the stars and planets. Our scribes were kept busy taking copious
notes and after a couple of weeks we
found that the heavenly sign was now so close to the earth that we could see it
in the daylight . We followed the star
through towns and deserts and over rivers and across mountains ( the mountains were my least favourite part
of the whole thing) all the time
travelling east. Finally we arrived
in Jerusalem.
We had settled into a hostelry for a couple of days, needing
time to re-stock our supplies and needing to rest the pack animals. Of course we attracted some attention as we
were foreigners on a mission and I suppose to the locals we probably looked
rather .... different. As we sat in
the evenings in our hostel, with our charts on the tables in front of us,
discussing the mathematical formulae which might predict where and when the
comet might eventually disappear from sight , and what this might mean, we
attracted quite a crowd. Locals wanted
to know who we were and what we were doing.
They had also been fascinated (
and some had been downright terrified) by
the comet and many theories abounded as to its significance and meaning. We explained that we believed that a King
had been born and that this star was a sign in the heavens. None of the locals had heard anything
about the birth of a King, but many seemed deeply worried at the mention of
such an event. Apparently the political
situation in Jerusalem at that time was rather precarious and some were worried
that Herod would not take the news of
the birth of rival well.
The third day, at around three in the afternoon, we were
packing up our provisions and getting ready to start off again in pursuit of
the star, when a herald arrived from none other than King Herod himself saying
that we had been summoned to the palace.
It was made clear to us that we were to tell no-one where we were going,
and that we were to arrive under cover of darkness. We had no idea why. But it isn’t every day you get invited into
the presence of a King. So that evening
we crossed the plaza, ascended the steps and entered the Imperial Palace. Quite some place let me tell you !
We were ushered into the presence of Herod – a rather overweight
and uncouth man with very poor table manners and a habit of scratching his head
whilst talking. He was reclining at
his dining table when we arrived and invited us to join him. We had already eaten, but we weren’t going
to refuse. He immediately started to
question us about our travels, about how long since we had first seen the star,
where we thought it was headed and what we thought it might mean. We answered his questions as well as we
could telling him that as far as we could ascertain the comet was slowing and
that it might start to disintegrate somewhere in the vicinity of
Bethlehem. Herod seemed agitated. After about an hour of questions he
suddenly stood up from the table and told us that we were to go to Bethlehem,
find this new King and then return to Jerusalem to let Herod know how to find
the child so that he too could go and pay homage to him. Herod didn’t strike any of us as the sort
of person who would pay homage to anyone or anything. We left feeling distinctly uncomfortable
about the whole thing.
Next morning we packed up and carried on eastwards. The star was now so bright in the sky that
we couldn’t actually look at it . It was
definitely slowing in its progress and, as we had predicted, by the time we
reached Bethlehem it appeared to have completely stopped. But rather than having consumed itself and
vanished, as we understood was the way of these heavenly bodies, this one remained
burning bright in the skies over Bethlehem. There
was a rising tide of excitement in all of us as we realised that we had reached
our destination. We found lodgings and
started our search for a new King.
It didn’t take us long to find you. You were the talk of the town.
Apparently there had been other odd astronomical phenomena
happening over Bethlehem that month. The
people were buzzing with stories of lightning in the skies and music coming
from the clouds and shepherds meeting angels.
As a result you were already a minor local celebrity and we soon found
the rooms that your parents had rented .
As we approached the threshold of the simple farmer’s home in which you were staying, I felt a rush of joy and fear and
anticipation which is hard to put into words.
We had started this journey most interested in a star, and now , all of
a sudden, meeting you seemed to be much more important. All important. The only thing I really wanted and needed to
do. We knocked and the door was opened
by a middle aged man with a happy smile who didn’t seem surprised to see us and
invited us in.
Sitting by the window was a rather lovely young girl,
holding a baby. As we came in she stood
up , set the baby in a cradle and invited us in to have refreshments. I suddenly felt awkward and unready. As though I was in the presence of greatness
and importance. I couldn’t understand
it. These people were simple
peasants. They were not Kings and
Queens. And yet they seemed more royal
than Herod in his palace dressed in gold cloth and fine linen. Melchior nudged me and I falteringly
explained that we had travelled for many miles following the star and that we
had come to visit the newborn King. The
mother smiled and looked out of the window.
She laughed and said that the star had been so bright she hadn’t been
able to sleep for the last few nights. Her
laughter broke the tension in the room and we all relaxed. She asked us if we would like to see
you. We all crept closer to the
cradle.
You were wide awake and smiling. I swear that you looked right at me and
smiled. You were just an ordinary baby
boy – not unlike my own sons had been at that age. Vulnerable yet robust. Adorable and funny. But when you looked at me I felt
unnerved. As though something in my
soul had woken. Or as if something in
my spirit had been released. It’s hard
to describe but I knew as I looked at you that you were indeed destined to be a
mighty King. You had royalty in your
chubby fingertips. I found myself
kneeling before you. Melchior was in
tears and was pulling off his gold ring and laying it in your cradle. I suddenly felt the need to give you a
gift too – and I reached inside my robe for the purse of frankincense and myrrh
resins I kept there. I had always been able to afford the best
in medicines and perfumes. I gladly
laid the purse in your cradle alongside the gold ring. Somehow these expensive gifts seemed
inadequate and pathetic, but they were all we had and we gave them gladly. Your mother watched as we knelt beside your
cradle and didn’t say a word. She
seemed to understand that something holy was happening. You raised your tiny hand, almost as if in
blessing. And then kicked your legs so
hard that the gold ring went flying out of the cradle and rolled across the
floor. Everyone laughed. We stood up and shook the hands of the
peasant girl and her husband and left the room stunned by what had just
happened.
That was the day I met you. And that was the day I started to follow
you rather than the stars.
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