I allowed my thoughts to take me back to over fifty years ago to a time and
place that I haven't thought of in at least the last forty five years. The
time was 1963. The place was Cabrillo Community College ,
in Aptos , California . I had subsidized my classes at Bethany Bible College
with a philosophy course. I
remember, distinctly, this twenty year old, fully hair headed, bull legged cowboy from Wyoming , being completely befuddled since arriving in California .
It seemed my entire person was turned up side down. One assignment for that philosophy class was that we were to
read and write a paper on Thomas Kuhn's The
Structure of Scientific Revolutions which had popularized the concept of "a paradigm shift"
in the realm of scientific thought. Later in life my understanding came as to
struggles with personal identity and such when experiencing the duck/rabbit
optical illusion used by Kuhn to demonstrate the way in which a paradigm shift
could cause one to see the same information in an entirely different way. Kuhn described a paradigm shift as that which
opens up new approaches to understanding that would never have been considered
valid before.
After a friend had kidded me about my personal practice of following the routine
of the church calendar, that’s when it kicked in for me the other morning. The word "epiphany" offers another
way to speak about paradigm shifts. To have an epiphany is to have the
proverbial light bulb go off in one's head, as a new idea changes the way in
which one sees or understands information. The lights are "switched
on" when understanding comes. The English word epiphany comes from a Greek
word meaning "manifestation or appearance." I’m thinking that an
epiphany is that "a-ha" moment that comes as a result of new
vision—of blindness being turned to sight. It is, to borrow from Kuhn's
description, an experience of a paradigmatic shift in view. And, at seventy one
years, no one knows better than myself that I need reorientation, reordering, a
transformation of my view from one way of looking at the world to another. That’s what I thing an epiphany does.
I’m thinking I missed out on a great deal over many years by not practicing this season
of Epiphany because, it seems to me, to be a season for new sight, new vision,
and paradigm shifts. The season commemorates the arrival of the foreign magi at
the birthplace of Jesus. Magi (not three kings of the orient as sung in the
famous hymn) were a caste of wise men specializing in astrology, medicine, and
natural science, which the New American Standard Bible notes reference. As the Gospel of Matthew records it, these
wise men "saw his star in the east," and recognized that this young
child was worthy of worship as King.
During Epiphany, I am asked to pay special attention to the teaching and
healing ministry of Jesus for the ways in which he is revealed to be the
Messiah. In seeking the truth I am asked to reconsider Jesus during this
season, to have my eyes opened and paradigms shifted. The author of the letter
to the Hebrews invites all who would look at Jesus to see in him the very
epiphany of God. "In
these last days God has spoken to us by a Son, whom he appointed heir of all
things, through whom he also created the world." Everyone who looks at his life has the
opportunity to experience epiphany, and to have vision altered as time is spent
looking at his life and listening to Jesus through his teachings.
I confess, on the other hand, the more aged I get, the more paradigm shifts become
burs under this cowboys saddle. They
have never been easy for me, but now their becoming a down right ugly
sight. I have to keep my focus on the biblical
image invoked again and again for this process of acceptance and personal
action as that of moving from blindness to sight. One very ironic example is
recorded for in the Gospel of John. It is the story of Jesus healing a man born
blind. Using the ordinary elements of clay and his own saliva, Jesus applies
the necessary ingredients to literal eyes in order to create the opportunity
for spiritual sight. After the man washes the healing balm off of his eyes in
the pool of Siloam, his healer is nowhere to be found. The religious leaders
are incensed that healing has occurred in such an ordinary way by an ordinary
man:
"How can a man who is a sinner
perform such signs?"
The once blind man answered, "Whether
or not he is a sinner, I do not know; one thing I do know, that, whereas I was
blind, now I see."
Thinking they see the situation quite clearly, the religious leaders put the
formerly blind man out of the temple, cutting him off from their community, and
taking away the opportunity to make sacrifice to God. Hearing this, Jesus comes
to confront these leaders who claim superior knowledge and insight. The kicker
for me is in paying attention to what He says in a couple of sentences in John 9:
"For
judgment I came into this world, that those who do not see may see, and that
those who see may become blind... If you were blind, you would have no sin; but
since you say, 'We see,' your sin remains."
Father, God, I approach You today, thanking You first and foremost and then the Church fathers for this season of Epiphany. I am thankful that this season has presented
the challenging opportunity for paradigm shift. I recognize that the Christian story
proposes that it is in the humble acknowledgement of blindness that I come to
see anything with clarity or insight. Ironically, I confess, especially during
these later years that I too often assume I know all the answers or am proud of
my clever arguments or assumptions. I humbly ask Your forgiveness, Father. May
the Holy Spirit convict me to allow Jesus to turn all of my paradigms upside
down from this time on. Even today,
might the realization of my blindness be the paradigm shift that opens this elder's eyes. Amen