The Three Wise Men

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In Christian tradition the Magi (Greek: μάγοι magoi), Three Wise Men, Three Kings or Kings from the East are said to have visited Jesus after his birth, bearing gifts. They are mentioned only in the Gospel of Matthew , which says that they came "from the east to Jerusalem" to worship the Christ, "born King of the Jews". Because three gifts were recorded, there are traditionally said to have been three Magi, though Matthew does not specify their number.

According to Matthew, the kings, for whom the Eastern church gives a variety of different names for (in the West the names have been settled since the 8th century as Caspar, Melchior and Balthasar) followed a star which came to be known as the Star of Bethlehem. As they approached Jerusalem, Herod tried to trick them into revealing where Jesus was, so that he might be put to death. (They didn't fall for it.) Upon finding Jesus, they gave him three symbolic gifts: gold, frankincense and myrrh. The tradition of gift giving for Christians dates back to this story. In many countries, they're the equivalent of Santa Claus.


The Three Wise Men provides examples of the following tropes:

Appearances of the Magi in Fiction

Comic Books

  • In the Justice League of America comic story "2000 Light Years to Christmas" the League helps three aliens counterparts of the Magi recover the gifts they bore for a messiah born on another planet that they had lost on Earth.

Film

  • The three Magi arrive with gifts for Brian at the start of Monty Python's Life of Brian, though it turns out that the real Messiah had been born across the street.

Literature

  • In the short story "The Other Wise Man" by Henry Van Dyke, the Mage Artaban arrives too late to meet baby Jesus, as he had stopped along the way to help people in need. He only finds Jesus on the day he was crucified, and fails to rescue him because, again, he stopped to help someone. A voice (presumably Jesus') tells him however that his kindness to others was just the kind of real gift he wanted from people.
  • The Magi themselves do not appear in O. Henry's The Gift of the Magi, but they inspired the characters to give each other presents.

Live-Action TV

  • In the Twilight Zone episode "Paladin of the Lost Hour" the old man who holds back doomsday from happening hints that he's really Caspar.
  • In The X-Files episode "Existence", which likens Baby William's birth heavily to the birth of Christ (including a prominent Star of Bethlehem), the Lone Gunmen step into this role, bringing gifts and admiring the baby.
  • An SCTV Christmas show has an extended commercial with Edna Boil and her line of holiday fashion for dogs, modeled by little yappy dogs. Creepy enough, then she highlights the true meaning of Christmas with Magi costumes worn by "We Three Pups".

Theatre

Video Games

  • The Three Sages in Chrono Trigger are named after the Magi, at least in the English version.

Western Animation

  • In the Ed, Edd 'n' Eddy Christmas Special "Jingle Jingle Jangle", the Kanker sisters take on the role, bringing the Eds the gifts of "mold, franks and cents, and fur."