Sunday December 23rd,
2018 4th Sunday in Advent
(Cycle C)
Despising the Shame
The tie in between
today’s readings: Surrender to God’s Will
“Man is a religious animal. He is the only
religious animal. He is the only animal that has the true religion…several of
them.” Mark Twain. The basic concept of religion is reconnecting. Man
instinctively knows that something is wrong. He doesn’t play well with others,
and there’s an uneasy feeling within him and something else that he calls god.
He devises many schemes to try to correct this situation: eastern mysticism, pious observances, and
ritualistic performances, to name a few. On the other side of the spectrum, he’ll
ignore the whole problem, arrogantly ridicule this “religion nonsense” and make
up his own rules. By denying God, he then becomes his own god but fails to live
up to the job description. The final result of all these flawed and feckless
adventures is a grand case of “hope so”. The God of the Bible looks on the
scene. He sees the best that humans can achieve will never be good enough. “I
don’t want to lose them” says the Father, “Knowing what’s involved, will You go
down and become one of them, Son”? He agrees as illustrated in Hebrews 10,
today’s reading. Jesus is to have a body. Now, where to put Him?
google image |
The betrothed Virgin
Mary abandons her plans and submits to the terrifying privilege of giving birth
to the Messiah. In a way to ease her fears, the angel Gabriel reminds Mary that
nothing is impossible with God, even the miraculous pregnancy of Elizabeth
(hint, hint). After the visitation, Mary ups and goes to stay with her cousin
(Luke 1:39-45). There’s a lot of Holy Spirit going on at their encounter. Not
only does the embryonic John the Baptist leap in Elizabeth’s womb at Mary’s
greeting (a favorite verse of all the Pro-Lifers), but Elizabeth also knows she
is pregnant with God’s Son even before any double lines would have shown up on
the urine stick. Mary launches into her Magnificat, indicating that she is not
only a young girl of great faith, but she knows her scripture too. She stays
and helps out for three months until her cousin delivers. Elizabeth, “the
barren mother”, is no longer despised. It was a needed time of fellowship and
preparation for Mary The Blessed Mother who is now showing. She goes home ready
to face what’s coming: Joseph’s possible rejection, a “Scarlet Letter” stigma
by the villagers if not an outright stoning, a sword coming to pierce her heart,
suffering, and the relentless song of the town drunks about Mary and her
bastard baby boy (Psalm 69:12). In
fulfillment of Micah 5, Jesus is born in Bethlehem. She lays Him in a manger
and the humiliation of the Almighty is laid bare before the universe as the
Logos needs to have His diaper changed. It doesn’t matter. God’s love for man
and Mary’s love for God makes the indignity irrelevant
.
What do you say
to a God who loved you so much that He gave His only begotten Son? Will you put your ideas and plans aside like
Mary and say “yes” to Him? Will you trust your life in faith and obedience to
God in this world, which will pass away, to gain an eternal joy with Him in
heaven? “Fear not,” the angel said, “For unto you is born this day a Savior,
which is Christ the Lord” (Luke 2:11). Believe in the atoning sacrifice of
Jesus on the cross to pay for your sins and be saved. Make Christmas real and
merry.
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