Monday, December 20, 2021

Just As He Promised

 Just As He Promised

Luke 1:39-55[1]

I think it’s safe to say that we all know what it’s like to feel “lowly” at times. In our culture, we’ve been taught to view ourselves as unique, one-of-a-kind, and special. And that’s true. God created only one of you, and he did so for a purpose. We all have something important to do in this life. Unfortunately, we may never know just what that is! The “daily grind” of our lives can easily overshadow all of that and leave us feeling very “ordinary.” Some of us may even wrestle with feeling like we’re worthless. Life has a way of obscuring just how important each and every one of us is to God and to one another. We can all feel pretty “lowly” at times.

Many of us begin life with “big dreams” about what we will do and be in this world. One of the tasks life confronts all of us with sooner or later is accepting that we may never see all of those dreams realized. We have to come to terms with the hard truth that at some point it is in our best interest to let go those youthful dreams. That doesn’t mean that we have to “settle” for a life that is “less than.” It means accepting the life we have, in all of it’s apparent “commonness,” while at the same time recognizing that we remain uniquely important. Although our lives may feel very ordinary to us, we can embrace the routine and commonplace in the assurance that God did indeed create each of us uniquely, and that we all have something important to do in this life.

Our Gospel lesson for today reminds me of this challenge. Mary, who was a peasant girl from a small backwater town in the middle of nowhere, finds herself in the position of being chosen by God to do something I think we would all agree was important: she would give birth to the boy who would grow up to be the man who would fulfill God’s promises to her people, along with all the peoples of the world! More than that, Mary’s pregnancy put her in a dangerous situation. She could have easily been suspected of doing something that the people of her village would have considered offensive enough to have her stoned to death!

And so it is that Mary calls herself God’s “lowly servant girl” (Lk 1:48, NLT). I’m sure she knew what it was to feel “lowly” simply because of her status in life: she was a young woman in a world where women had no rights. She was one of the common people, with no power or position in Jewish society. Even at a young age, I have to think she may have questioned what the meaning of her life might be. She had good reason to be “confused” and even afraid when the angel Gabriel told her about the special task God had chosen her to carry out. Despite her fear and confusion, she had the faith in response to Gabriel’s assurance that “no word from God will ever fail,” to answer “I am the Lord’s servant; May your word to me be fulfilled” (Lk 1:37-38, NIV).

And so when Mary visited Elizabeth, she blessed Mary because of her faith “that the Lord would do what he said” (Lk 1:45, NLT). Elizabeth had a much different position in Jewish society as the wife of the priest Zechariah. But as a woman who had passed the age of childbearing without having any children, she lived with a unique kind of shame herself. Although it was unfair, the “blame” for not bearing children was heaped on the women of that day. And yet, there she was, filled with joy over her own child, and not only recognizing Mary’s great faith, but blessing her for it. I think Elizabeth’s affirmation was probably just what Mary needed!

And so Luke tells us that Mary burst into a song of praise to God. She praised God for being merciful “from generation to generation,” in other words, always and forever (Lk 1:50). She praised God for “lifting up the lowly” and “filling the hungry with good things” (Lk 1:52-53). She was not only thinking about the wonderful thing God was doing through her, but also the joy that had surprised Elizabeth as well. There they were, two women whom many in that day would have looked down on as “unworthy,” celebrating the goodness and mercy that God had shown them.

But more than that, Mary had the faith and insight to recognize that what was happening through her was meant to benefit her people, and also all the peoples of the world. She said that what was happening was a matter of God keeping the promise he made to Abraham. You may recall that promise: God would give to Abraham and Sarah so many descendants that they would become a great nation (Gen 12:2). And the purpose of all of that would be that “in you all the families of the earth will be blessed” (Gen 12:3). St. Paul saw that as a promise of salvation for all people (Gal 3:6-9). And Mary’s song celebrated the faith that God was doing just as he promised in and through her.

I think our Gospel lesson is a good reminder that God delights in accomplishing his work through the most unlikely people. It’s hard to imagine anyone being more “lowly” than Mary was. She had no rights, she had no power or position or privilege. But God had chosen her to bear a son who would bring salvation to all people, just as he promised. I think there’s a lesson in this story for all of us. No matter how “lowly” or “ordinary” we may feel, God has put each one of us in this life for a reason. As one Presbyterian pastor put it, “God has something he wants to do through you, right where you are.”[2] When we feel “ordinary” and wonder what our lives are worth, we can remember that God does his best work through “ordinary” people like us. And he will use each and every one of us complete the work of bringing salvation to the world, just as he promised



[1] © 2021 Alan Brehm. A sermon delivered by Rev. Alan Brehm, Ph. D. on 12/19/2021 for Hickman Presbyterian Church, Hickman, NE.

[2] Adapted from Rev. Richard Halverson’s benediction.

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