The verdict
The Bible never states how many Magi (wise men) visited Jesus. The number three is a Western Christian tradition that derived from the three categories of gifts they brought — gold, frankincense, and myrrh — but Matthew’s text never says one Magus per gift.
Matthew 2:1 (BSB): After Jesus was born in Bethlehem in Judea, in the days of King Herod, magi from the east arrived in Jerusalem, asking, ‘Where is He who has been born King of the Jews?’
The Greek is magoi apo anatolōn — magi from the east. Plural, but no number specified. The text could have given a number; it doesn’t.
What Matthew 2 actually says
Matthew 2:1-12 is the only Gospel passage that mentions the Magi. The Lukan birth narrative — shepherds, manger, angels — is in a different Gospel and does not include them. The narrative gives:
- That they came from the east (likely Persia or Babylon based on the term magoi)
- That they followed a star
- That they arrived in Jerusalem, met Herod, then were directed to Bethlehem
- That they presented three categories of gifts: gold, frankincense, and myrrh (Matthew 2:11)
- That they were warned in a dream not to return to Herod and left by another route
The number of visitors is not stated.
Eastern Christian traditions
Eastern and Oriental Orthodox traditions have historically named twelve Magi. This number appears in some Syriac Christian sources, in some Armenian traditions, and is implied in some Eastern liturgical commemorations. The twelve corresponds to the symbolic number of the tribes of Israel and the apostles.
The Western Christian fixation on three is a later artistic and liturgical development, propelled by the three-gifts reading.
The names
The names Caspar, Melchior, and Balthasar appear in sources from around the fifth to sixth century CE — centuries after the events described. The Excerpta Latina Barbari (a Latin translation of an earlier Greek chronicle) is among the earliest witnesses to these names. From sources of this period the names entered Western Christian liturgical commemoration (the Feast of the Epiphany) and visual art.
None of these names appears in the Bible.
”Three Kings”
The Magi are sometimes called kings in Christian tradition (e.g., the hymn We Three Kings of Orient Are, 1857). They are not called kings in Matthew. Magoi refers to priestly astrologers, not royalty. The king-attribution developed in medieval Western Christian art and hymnody, partly through readings of Old Testament passages (Psalm 72:10, Isaiah 60:3) that mention kings bringing gifts to a divinely-favoured ruler. These OT passages, applied retrospectively to the Magi, generated the three kings tradition. Matthew’s text does not call them kings.
Houses, not stables
Matthew 2:11 specifies on coming to the house [oikia], they saw the Child with His mother Mary. The Magi visit a house. The stable / manger setting comes from Luke 2:7’s manger (Greek phatnē) — and that narrative does not include the Magi. The two birth narratives are not synchronised on timing or setting; the Magi may have visited Jesus when he was already a young child rather than a newborn (Matthew 2:16 has Herod killing children aged two and under, suggesting the Magi’s visit was up to two years after the birth).
The popular nativity-scene image of shepherds and Magi together at a stable harmonises two Gospel narratives that the texts themselves do not combine.