Early legends tell of 12 wise men living in the East, that their special treasure was a scroll written by Adams son. It is said that written on the prized scroll were prophecies about the arrival of the Messiah of the Jews and of the star which would appear in the heavens at His birth. Generation after generation, the 12 wise men would climb a mountain cave and purify themselves in its fountains for three days, praying and searching for that awaited star. As each wise man died, his son or other close kin would take his place.
Ancient accounts say this awaited Messiahs star enabled the Three Kings (Wise Men or Magi) to travel towards Jerusalem in 12 days without stopping for food or rest! The journey of 12 days seemed to last only a day. Other legends say the actual journey took the Three Kings two years, and during the trip the Messiahs star shared the Gospel of Christ with them and replenished their food and water supply so they could go on non-stop to Jerusalem.
For us in the Philippines who celebrate "the worlds longest Christmas season," we begin this great fiesta marathon on Dec. 16. It officially ends on the first Sunday of January or the Feast of Epiphany, or also known as Day of the Three Kings. It is said to be the day when Three Kings from the East visited the Christ child, 12 days after his birth. For Hispanic kids in colonial Manila, this day was a fun celebration in their once exclusive Casino Español. Children in Bavaria and Austria traditionally dress as kings and hold a big star each, as they go from house to house for caroling. In the Czech and Slovak republics, the initials of the Three Kings names are written over the entrance doors of houses to celebrate Epiphany.
In Western societies, the Feast of the Three Kings has for generations been a day for gift-giving, also the day families take down the Christmas tree or burn it in a big bonfire. In the Eastern Christian churches of Russia, Greece, Eastern Europe and Middle East, Jan. 6 is celebrated as the nativity according to their Julian calendar, while our Dec. 25 Christmas holiday based on the Gregorian calendar was adopted by the Western Christian churches in the fourth century.
I do not think the Three Wise Men
Were Persian Kings at all.
I think it much more likely they
Set sail out of Manila Bay
To follow the starry call.
And though the good Abbe Fouard
May stare at me, and frown,
I still maintain the three Wise Men
Were Kings of my own town.
And if you ask why I affirm
That Melchor was King of Tondo,
When Gaspar ruled Sampaloc,
And Baltazar Binondo
We will not argue. We will walk
The streets on Christmas Eve,
And I will show you the poor mans rafter,
Where hangs the Star the Kings sought after,
Hung high above Christian prayer and laughter
You will see it, and believe!
For when Kings came home again
From Bethlehem afar,
They lost their camels in the sea
And they forgot the Christmas tree,
But they brought home to you and me
The Secret of the Star.
And that is why the simple folk
Think Christmas incomplete
Unless they can make a Star of paper
With bamboo sticks to frame and shape her
The newborn King to greet.
The simple folk, the childlike folk,
With their dim little paper star!
We who are modern, and therefore old,
We must have meaningless trees of gold
Tawdrily tinseled, fold on fold-
But these are happier far.
Ah, we have lost the Star of the Kings
To whom Christmas is merely a feast,
And merely a time to dance and wine,
With western music and western wine,
Because a gigantic neon sign
Has blotted the Sign in the East.
But if through the quiet evening streets
We follow the Wise Kings Star,
Where it beckons and swings from the sills of the poor,
It may lead us yet through a low church door
Where we too may kneel, as the Kings long before,
Where the Child and His Mother are.