Tuesday 20 December 2011

The Confident Hope of Mary...

“you will conceive and bear a son, you will name him Jesus. He will be great, and will be called the Son of the Most High.” (Luke 1: 31)

In this passage from Luke’s gospel we hear the story of Mary, and the angels visitation announcing she would have a child, not just any child, but the Son of the Most High, God’s own son was to be born to her.  Perhaps we can’t imagine the magnitude of what that announcement must have been to Mary.  A young unwed Jewish girl at that time to be found with child would have been trouble enough for her; Not only would it have meant great shame and disgrace for her family, but to claim that she was carrying the Son of God, would have been sure disaster for Mary, with the likely charges of heresy brought against her and probably a sentence of death by stoning. However when we read this passage in Luke’s gospel we don’t hear anything about the fear that Mary must have felt or the predicament she could possibly find herself in, only the pondering question of Mary asking “how can this be?” and then when the angel replies with  “nothing is impossible with God”, Mary’s response is “Here I am, the servant of the Lord; let it be with me according to your word.” Mary’s response while it may astonish us when we think of her being so young and the possible outcomes from what was being asked of her, we know however Mary’s response was not one taken lightly it was one made with a sure confidence and hope in a God she trusted. Mary’s story invites us to be more attentive to the message of Christmas, to listen for the angel voices, and hear what it is God is seeking to do among us not only at Christmas but all through the year.  Mary’s yes, changed the world for ever. In this final week of Advent, leading us  into Christmas, if we were to prepare for Christ’s coming as Mary did, with that same confident hope and trust that God still acts among his people, might we perhaps be a little more attentive to what God might be speaking to us and our response be a more confident 'yes' to making a way for it to happen in our world. Might we perhaps be a bit more attentive to the needs of the world around us, instead of being so involved with the consumerism of the day. And might we perhaps be a bit more effective in our efforts to spread the Christmas message of ‘peace and good will to all’, as the line from the Christmas Carol goes, “Let there be Peace on earth, and let it begin with me.”

Blessings and Peace, 
Rev. Hannah+

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