Unexpected Epiphanies--July 7, 2026
At that time Jesus said, “I thank you, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because you have hidden these things from the wise and the intelligent and have revealed them to infants; yes, Father, for such was your gracious will." (Matthew 11:25-26)
You can't deduce the Reign of God like a geometric proof.
You can't prove the Good News of the Gospel with a laboratory experiment.
And you can't reason your way into the community of Jesus by a philosophical debate.
It's not like that.
I don't mean to say that the Christian message is nonsense, or that is merely wishful thinking like a fairy tale. I mean that some things in life--perhaps often the best and most important things, in fact--are not accessible by sheer brain power or human logic.
Brilliant economists can calculate the ideal interest rate for the purposes of holding off inflation while promoting commerce, but they cannot use the same tools to explain the economy of mutual flourishing between the trees, the birds, the insects, and the fungi in the forest. Astronomers can tell us how far away a particular star is in the night sky, and even how much longer it will keep shining, but they cannot thereby explain to us why we find ourselves captivated by the night sky and universally call these points of light "beautiful." Evolutionary biologists and experts in anthropology can give us plausible theories to explain why humans (and other creatures) live in groups, care for children, or even tend to the sick within our tribe, but not a scandalous notion like love for one's enemies. And yet, all of those things are real and present on any given day.
Jesus is convinced that this is God's calling card. God has a way of acting beyond the bounds of what human logic considers reasonable, and yet in ways that are receivable by the foolish, uneducated, and childlike. That's clear from these verses many of us heard this past Sunday from Matthew's Gospel, as Jesus continues to reflect on why his message (and that of his predecessor, John the Baptizer) was rejected by so many people when they came on the scene. Whether it was John's raw and bombastic declaration, "The Kingdom of God has come near!" from the shores of the Jordan River, or Jesus' invitation to sinners and outcasts, "The Kingdom of God has come near!" (funny, how both had the same message, isn't it?), the Respectable Religious Leaders scoffed at both of them and dismissed their words. So... why didn't they get it? Why did so many supposedly educated, scholarly, and credentialed "God experts" ignore the news of God's Reign breaking in around them?
Well, Jesus' answer here is basically, "Because they treat God like an academic subject to be mastered, rather than always beyond our complete grasp." Maybe we can't reduce knowledge of God to a set list of facts like learning your state capitals or the periodic table of elements. Maybe we can't circumscribe God's actions within the bounds of laws and rules we have reached by logical conclusion--maybe God is not confined like the laws of planetary motion and orbital gravitation. And yet, maybe God can still choose to be revealed, known, and encountered without any advanced degrees at all, in the least intellectual places around: a sprouting seed, a broken loaf, or open arms.
In fact, maybe the clearest and most powerful expression of God's very nature and presence is in something that looks utterly foolish, weak, and unworthy of the divine--say, a man nailed to a Roman cross. This, of course, is exactly the point that Paul the apostle will make in his letter to the Corinthians when he says that God's wisdom looks like foolishness to the world and God's strength looks like weakness, since those are revealed ultimately in the Crucified Christ. Our older brother in the faith Martin Luther would take that idea and run with it, saying that ultimately we don't find God in the places we expect, but precisely in the one place no respectable deity would go: the cross. All the proofs of the scholastic theologians, and all the philosophical arguments meant to demonstrate the existence of God fall apart in the face of the cross and resurrection--nobody would predict the Creator of the universe to save all of us by becoming one of us and then getting killed by the worst in us. And yet... there is the cross and the empty tomb, defiantly overturning our logic and reason.
Being a Christian, then, is really about a new kind of vision. Jesus intends to teach us his way of seeing things. We don't try and reason our way into understanding how God works, calculate the limits of where God's love is allowed to go, or deduce rules which God must follow because we say so. In fact, we give up on trying to "master" God like multiplication tables, and instead allow God's love to reshape the way we see everything else.
That's the invitation of this day: can we allow God to be revealed to us beyond our cleverness, right in the midst of the things the worlds calls foolish, weak, and small? Could we allow such unexpected epiphanies today?
Because God is already there, waiting to be seen--if only we will adjust our eyes.
Lord God, let us see you in unexpected ways, even when that means you defy our assumptions and conclusions about where to find you.






