
The trouble with Epiphany is that it gives the distinct impression that once the star has shone, the gifts have been opened, and the visitors from the East have politely excused themselves, everything should now be clear, luminous, and permanently sorted.
And yet.
By January 22nd — or in my experience much sooner — the star has been carefully packed away in a labelled box (or shoved hastily into a cupboard marked Seasonal Things—Do Not Open Until Advent). The wise ones have gone home by another route, the camel parking lot is empty, and there is a suspicious smell of cold coffee lingering in the parish kitchen.
Epiphany, it turns out, does not cancel the ordinary. It hands it back to us.
The magi depart, but the dishes remain. There are crumbs on the parish hall floor. Someone has to put away the folding chairs. Someone has already misplaced the bulletin announcements for next Sunday. And someone — often the same someone — is wondering whether the star was meant to do a bit more heavy lifting than it appears to have done.
This, I think, is the great mercy of Epiphany.
The light comes not to rescue us from daily life, but to accompany us back into it. God does not say, “Now that you have seen something extraordinary, you may leave the ordinary behind.” Instead, God says, “Now that you have seen — go wash the cups, answer the emails, shovel the snow, show up again.”
One (who is given to often make observations in a rather Tongue-in-cheek manner might observe that the Church, having successfully hosted celestial visitors, immediately turns its attention to whether anyone remembered to turn off the lights and who is responsible for the broken casserole dish. This is not failure. This is faithfulness.
Epiphany does not mean we walk around glowing faintly for the rest of the winter, dispensing wisdom and smelling faintly of frankincense. It means we carry a quieter light into kitchens and offices, hospital corridors and parish committee meetings, Tuesday afternoons when nothing much seems to be happening.
The star does not stay overhead forever. It does its work and then trusts us with the rest.
Which is perhaps the deeper revelation: God is content to be known not only in radiant signs, but in the faithful, unremarkable continuation of love. In dishes washed without applause. In prayers said without fireworks. In showing up after the wise ones have gone home.
Epiphany leaves us not with answers, but with enough light to keep going.
And that, it seems, is quite enough.
A Prayer After Epiphany
Holy God, You gave us a star, and we followed as best we could. Now the sky is quieter, the visitors have gone, and the ordinary work waits for us again.
Bless the tasks that remain when the wonder has faded from view. Meet us in sinks and spreadsheets, in hallways and hard conversations, in the love that looks small but lasts a long time.
Keep your light alive in us when no one is watching, and teach us to trust that this, too, is holy ground.
Amen.








