The Relentless Light--January 7, 2026
"When [the Magi] had heard the king, they set out, and there, ahead of them, went the star that they had seen in the east, until it stopped over the place where the child was. When they saw that the star had stopped, they were overwhelmed with joy." (Matthew 2:9-10)
I have absolutely no idea how to explain the celestial event that Matthew describes here, but I find it utterly beautiful to envision a light that patiently waits for us when we get sidetracked, persists in sticking with us, and then leads us precisely to the place we need to be. I don't have a scientific accounting for a star or other cosmic entity that can steadily move in one direction, then hover in place like a car left idling outside while you run into the store on an errand, before resuming its motion and coming to rest at precisely the house that is your destination. But I do know that it says something about the way God's patient grace takes us by the hand while even taking into account our habit for getting lost, derailed, and detoured.
This isn't the typical behavior of astronomical phenomena, in other words. A comet might suggest a direction in the sky, but they tend not to hold in place while they orbit the sun. A supernova might well have provided a bright and new flash in the sky, but they tend not to shift position, only to sparkle and fade in place. And the motions of the planets were already well known even in ancient times, so nobody would have confused Jupiter or Venus with a new star in the sky that had some new significance. In other words, Matthew intends for us to see the peculiar hand of God in this scene. The motion of this curious star--including its patient waiting while the Magi get held up by Herod's scheming--is a glimpse of how God operates. The relentless light that ensures these traveling magicians are brought to Christ is a picture of God's own insistent and enduring love that pulls us into God's embrace.
And honestly, once you realize that's what is going on here, you realize that God's modus operandi in the Bethlehem Star keeps showing up all throughout the Bible. Back in the early memories of ancient Israel, God had accompanied the people through their journey in the wilderness in fits and starts, bearing with them when they complained, providing for them despite their doubts, and getting them back on track when they got distracted (or started making golden calves). Then Jesus calls a bunch of thick-headed, easily distracted, frequently misled fishermen and tax collectors to be his disciples--and when they do get themselves off track, he waits patiently, gets their attention again, and calls them back to himself. And as the disciple-community starts figuring out how to carry out its mission to share the news of Jesus with the world, there again is the Holy Spirit nudging, waiting, guiding, and sometimes grabbing by the scruff of the neck to lead the early church to reach new people and live the Jesus way of life. The patient persistence of the star that guided the Magi is just one more instance of God's way of acting toward us in the world. The relentless light is the same as the relentless love of God: drawing constantly like gravity, and yet also able to hold in place when we get off course to pull us back rather than leaving us behind.
When we see that in the story of the Magi, and then recognize the same pattern throughout the Bible, it dawns on us that this is how God relates to us, too. We sometimes imagine that our progress in faith is ever-forward with no missteps or dead-ends, like a short straight line between two points. Much more honestly, though, our real journeys of faith come in fits and starts like the Magi--going off course when we think we know where we are headed, getting sidetracked when the latest demagogue mesmerizes us, and then looking for how to get back on track when we realize we've gotten lost. We sometimes struggle with doubts, with grief, with trauma, with rabbit trails that lead us astray, and through all of those seasons, God remains patient, faithful, and persistent to keep calling to us like a light in the sky that keeps grabbing our attention. And the same is true with others, even when we want to give up on them or write them off. When someone else is going through a time in their faith when it seems like they are off course or getting sidetracked, we can be tempted to leave them behind as though they don't matter. But God doesn't give up on them. God continues to reach out, to radiate love, and to call them--the same way God does each of those for us as well.
Today, wherever you have felt stalled out, off course, or unsure of where to put your next footstep, the good news of the Bethlehem star is that God is willing to bear with our fits and starts, and to keep calling and drawing us more fully into the presence of Christ. No matter where you've been, no matter what mistakes you fear you've made, and no matter how many times it feels like one step back for every step forward. The love of God will not let us go--it is as relentless as the light.
Lord God, keep drawing us into the presence of Christ with your unfailing, undimming love.






