Magnificat
And Mary said “My soul magnifies the Lord, and my spirit rejoiced in God my Savior, for he has looked with favor on the lowliness of his servant. Surely, from now on all generations will call me blessed, for the Mighty One has done great things for me and holy is his name. His mercy is for those who fear him from generation to generation. He has shown strength with his arm; he has scattered the proud in the thoughts of their hearts. He has brought down the powerful from their thrones, and lifted up the lowly; he has filled the hungry with good things and sent the rich away empty. He has helped his servant Israel in remembrance of his mercy, according to the promise he made to our ancestors, to Abraham and to his descendents forever.”
Mary’s Song is hardly the same tone as the message given to the shepherds and of all the Christmas carols and sentimentalism that we have. Instead of having peace, we have a Savior who comes to save us, but at the same time brings into chaos and reverses all that is the status quo. The powerful are toppled, the lowly are lifted up, the hungry are filled and the rich are sent away empty.
This massive overhaul of the world sounds great for those who are lowly, but it is also frightening for those who are wealthy and powerful. But God consistently acts in this manner, serving the poor and bringing down the powerful and wealthy. Think about this woman who God chooses to be the mother of God. She is a peasant girl, not a queen or a princess or the daughter of a wealthy family. And instead of acting through a married couple, he works through one whose pregnancy will be a great scandal. Think about it, our Lord and Savior is an illegitimate child, born to an unwed, teenage girl. There is a great amount of shame that society places on this girl. Mary was not kidding when she said that God looked with favor on the lowliness of His servant. There wasn’t much lower that God could have gone in society’s eyes than an unwed, teenage girl. Instead of coming down in glory from the sky and forcing everyone’s eyes upon Him and for the kings of the earth to bow down, he comes the child of this insignificant, scandalous girl.
How Mary even finds the strength to sing in joy of God when given this message is beyond me. She had to either be really naïve or really faithful. Her life is now being turned upside down, with the birth of this child. While I don’t have children, I know how much it changes a person’s life. It is far different than being an uncle, where I am able to enjoy being with my niece and nephew while they are happy and fun, while being able to hand them off when they are being grouchy. And I know that my mother has not had a sleep-filled night since she had my brother and I, since mother’s worry about their children. And I know that my brother is now prone to going to sleep around 10 instead of staying up all hours of the night, since he is exhausted by his very active children. Life changes drastically with the birth of a child, and here is poor Mary, barely more than a child herself, being told that she is going to be entering adulthood and going to have to completely live for someone else, as parents do, without any say and without taking the actions necessary to do so herself. And yet she sings in joy and in thanksgiving to God. Her strength and trust is astounding to me.
But she has seen the amazing power of God, for He has taken her, who physically could not possibly bear a child, and causes her to become pregnant. And she has seen the favor that God has for the poor, the partiality that God carries for the poor and the outcast. By being the child of on unwed mother, He has put himself in infamy and in that shame that she would have felt at that time as well. Christ is born not in victory, or even in mediocrity, but in shame in a reeking stable to an underage, poor, unwed mother. And he does so by choice and design, not by random chance. And so Mary rejoices, for she knows that God is with her and with all people who are under the burden of oppressive cultures and practices. Mary has hope and joy, because God has shown her the many wonders that He can do. He can make the high and powerful falter and fall and uplifts those who are weak and oppressed. He shows great mercy to His children and fills the hungry with good things.
And so we sing “Joy to the World” as well, for we have seen the glory of God and the coming of His Son, Jesus Christ Our Lord. For we know that with the coming of the Lord, there will be no more sin and sorrow, the earth will be restored, and that truth and grace, not riches and ego, will rule the world. We celebrate because God will drastically change our lives, not in the way that we might imagine the perfect world, with us getting every last thing that we want, but will change it so that God’s will is truly done and our hearts and minds will be more in tune with God’s. Right now our hearts and minds are like listening to a radio station form too far away. Sure, we can hear what is going on for the most part, but the static makes it hard to listen to and focus upon and we miss words and tones at times. We can’t make it out completely clearly and it is tiresome, but we do it. Other channels may seem clearer, but they all play messages of self-importance, hate, and all those things that are against God’s will. So we struggle to listen to God’s word and seek to live out his calling for us, knowing that we are getting closer to Him and the signal is coming in clearer and clearer and our joy expands exponentially.
This Savior that Mary expects is not the sweet baby Jesus that makes adorable baby noises and whose diaper she will have to change. It is not the sweet innocence of the child that she waits for and the preciousness of a child that makes the heart grow warm. No, instead she awaits the man that this child will grow to become. She awaits the one who will change the world, who will go and suffer on the cross so that all people may be saved from their Sin and that all people may see the true price of love and the true will of God, which is that people will serve one another instead of serving themselves each moment of every day. She awaits the one who turns the mountains into valleys and who humbles the hearts of all the rich and powerful. Just as we wait, we wait for the day when He shall return and God’s kingdom shall reign and all of His creation will be freed from the bonds of Sin and suffering and death.
Loving the baby Jesus is easy. After all, He’s a baby, pure and innocent, adorable and full of life. Loving our Savior Jesus Christ is much harder. Because showing our love for Him requires the sacrifice of ourselves and reminds us each day that we are NOT God and that we need to be humble and to be the tools of God, working His mission and calling for us, not our own desires. We don’t like handling the messiness, it is far easier to deal with the baby that we get to view from afar than it is to deal with the reality of the child, the sleepless nights, dirty diapers, and temper tantrums. Life is easier when we get to ignore the complications caused by having to live for others. But yet our lives are also emptier when they are easier. This is not to say that babies fix all the problems one has with themselves and their loved ones, but it is to say that without God’s ever-present mercy and forgiveness, and without serving others instead of ourselves, we are a shell of who we are supposed to be. The hole inside of us that only God can fill is left open, and there is nothing else that can fill it. Listening to God and living out his calling for us does come with sacrifice and it is not easy, but it does allows us to see purpose in the world and a meaning to our lives that exceeds our mortal limitations.
The world as well has an emptiness to it without the presence of God. Without God, we live in a world that is filled with corruption, hate, and oppression and without any real hope for restoration or for its betterment. We look around and see that half of the US population lives in poverty, an even greater amount live without clean water and food to eat in other nations, while the rich keep on getting richer. We live in a world in which war is a constant, not the exception. Yet we still have hope and we still sing “Joy to the World” and join with Mary in her jubilation, for we know that God is the Lord of All, because God comes to us in the place of a small child and grows to be our Savior, willingly dying on the cross to save us from our Sin and who reminds us that as long as there is God, there is hope, for God will never betray us or fail us or turn his back on us. We are the children of God, the God who is partial to those who have nothing and who tells us that we are to serve as He has served us. The God who loves us unconditionally and who gives us our lives, our purpose, and our forgiveness, all for free.
Amen.