My friends, today we begin the short fourth week of our Advent — two plus days as we conclude our time of waiting. And what are we waiting for? It seems that we might best answer this question by considering what our good God “was up to in the Incarnation.”
I have stressed the point throughout Advent that God choosing to become, “One-with-us” in the person of Jesus of Nazareth, who would later become “the Christ,” was all about love—love for us created ones, desiring to show us “the way.” The notion that many, if not all of us heard throughout our lives, that Jesus would come to “save us,” was accomplished not by “dying,” but by “living” for us, showing us the way to do that well.
Our chosen readings for today speak, in many ways about “little ones” being called to do great things. The first of these “little ones” the prophet Micah speaks of, is in fact, “a place”—Bethlehem—out of this seemingly insignificant place will come One who will “stand firm” and “shepherd” the people. This One will be about “peace.”
My friends, we who would follow our brother Jesus must be about what he was about and the writer to the Hebrews articulates the response that we must have in following our brother, “Here I am. I have come to do your will.”
The remainder of this homily, I would like to focus on two significant women, our sisters, Mary and Elizabeth as “little ones” who came in response to their God’s call stating with truth and love, “their presence,” “here I am” and their intention of doing God’s will in their lives.
These two don’t get much “press-time” throughout the Church Year, but they are ones who should because of their steadfastness amid all that life can call forth from any of us!
This past week, Robert and I watched an American Masters presentation on the life of Laura Ingalls Wilder and her “Little House” books. The presentation lifted up the truth that she and her daughter, Rose Wilder Lane worked as “companions” in the writing and editing of these well-known books. I raise this simply to mention something that will serve us well as we read the Scripture story today of our sisters, Mary and Elizabeth.
Rose, as her mom’s secret editor encouraged Laura in the writing of her books, “to stay in the mind of Laura” when writing—write in that vein, she seemed to be saying, and what you write will be much more interesting to your readers.
For us then, my friends, not only today, with Mary and Elizabeth, but with Scripture stories in general, we should try to stay in the “minds” of those being discussed, to get the full benefit that then can be applied to our own lives.
Let’s begin, “in the mind” of Mary in today’s selection from Luke. The text says, [she proceeded] “in haste.” Why do you think that would have been? Remembering the earlier text that Mary had said “yes” to becoming the mother of the long-awaited, and foretold, Messiah, and hearing that her relative, Elizabeth, in her old age was also, “with child,” Mary is compelled to “go quickly” to be with her aunt.
Now, it would have been common for a younger relative to go and assist an older one; but I would suggest a deeper urgency here in Mary’s flight.
Keeping “in her mind” and additionally, her heart, and thinking about Mary’s own condition of being pregnant before she was formerly married—not against the law, as she was espoused to Joseph, but just the same looked down on in respectable society. Add to that, the heavenly, and mysterious component of this, “being with child,” Mary’s haste was probably as much about getting acceptance and confirmation from her aunt to the wonder of what had taken place as it was to support and assist Elizabeth—and in the end, her long-awaited baby would prove to be significant too, in God’s plan.
Thus the two women were gifting each other with “time and presence” in order to understand their blessed pregnancies, more through their hearts, than their minds. This Scripture reading friends, as all of Scripture, for the most part, becomes “alive” when we try and stay, “in the minds” (and hearts) of the characters presented. And additionally, when we read on this “heart level,” it becomes so much easier to apply the life lessons learned there to our own lives.
Let’s briefly turn from Mary and Elizabeth to look at all the prophets who foretold the “coming of the Messiah,” but never lived to see their God-given message come to reality—they merely planted the seeds of hope that others would see come to fruition. In our own lives my friends, we do the same—we plant seeds too as teachers, parents, counselors, friends that we may never see fully grown, but we know it is our call too, like prophets before us to do our part.
Moving back then to Mary and Elizabeth, we “see and hear” that, “when Elizabeth heard Mary’s greeting, the baby stirred in her womb.” Up until this time, Elizabeth, considered beyond the years when giving birth would have been possible, had not yet felt her baby move. It would have been understandable, “in her mind” and heart to think that “this time too” it may not happen.
The Scriptures tell us that upon Mary’s greeting, not only did the baby stir, but it stirred “for joy!” Those who have been blessed to have given physical birth know “that joy” the first time their own babies stirred! So, my friends, if we simply read without fully engaging with the words of Scripture, trying to be “in the minds” and hearts, of those we read about, in order to understand as fully as we can what they are experiencing, we miss so much.
Mary’s canticle, in Elizabeth’s presence, is all about proclaiming in strength and power, the greatness that her God has bestowed upon her, for the good of the world. She prays her Magnificat with humility, yes, but strength too!
One final idea that I will simply mention, because I will speak more of it at Christmas, is the way we believe Jesus, our brother, came into this world. One might think that it would be with a good deal of pomp and circumstance, as in the past we have used such titles as Lord of Lords, King of Kings, even creating Christmas Crib scenes depicting Mary and Joseph in royal robes. But no, God’s plan was to incarnate within the poverty and the announcement of God’s glory was first made not to those “in power,” but to those “with no power” on the hillsides of Bethlehem…to be continued…
Amen? Amen!