The gospel reading for this
Fourth Sunday in Advent (December 24, 2006) is Luke 1:39-55. The text for this sermon by Pastor Jim
Kniseley is Luke 1:45, “And blessed is
she who believed that there would be a fulfillment of what was spoken to her by
the Lord.”
Dear
Friends in Christ,
This
morning we have an opportunity to focus on someone very important in the
Christmas Story, the Virgin Mary, the mother of Jesus. If we had time to have a round-table
discussion of our understanding of who this Mary is, I know that we would shock
ourselves with the diversity of our understanding. A sizable number of you have been brought up
in the Roman Catholic tradition and an equally large number of you have been brought
up in the Evangelical Protestant tradition.
Roman Catholics figure that Protestants have neglected Mary. Protestants say that Roman Catholics show
unbiblical veneration to Mary. This
morning I would like to help us find a place for Mary in our theological
understanding of how God chose to come to us at Christmas.
There
are thousands of Roman Catholics parishes in the
The
Bible is very simple in its presentation of Mary:
·
The angel
Gabriel went to
engaged to be married to Joseph, that she would have a baby,
the Son of God, and she should name him “Jesus.” Her pregnancy would come from the Holy Spirit
and her son would occupy the throne of David forever.
I
guess it is just a natural human tendency to want to fill in the blanks where
scripture is silent. Through the ages
folks have wanted to know much more about Mary.
Who was she? Why was she
chosen? What happened to her after Jesus
ascended to heaven? Is there a special place for her in heaven now?
Various
popes and councils of the Roman Catholic Church have answered these questions
with official teachings or doctrines through the years. Here are three that drive Evangelical
Protestants crazy: the Perpetual Virginity, the Immaculate Conception, and the
Bodily Assumption.
Catholic
Teaching says that even after the birth of Jesus, Mary had no relations with
her husband and was a virgin the rest of her life. The mention of her other children in
scripture is just a misunderstanding that can be explained away (perhaps they
were from Joseph’s first wife, or were nephews and nieces). Catholics are also taught that Mary too was
not conceived in the way the rest of us were.
The Holy Spirit also came upon her mother and so no earthly father can
lay claim and there is no original sin that could ever be passed on to
Jesus. Finally, Catholics are taught
that Mary did not die like the rest of us, but was “assumed” bodily into heaven. This last doctrine was made an infallible
teaching by Pope Pius XII in the year 1950.
The
response of most Protestant denominations through the years has been to ignore
these doctrines as unbiblical and to almost brutally ignore Mary and her place
in the story of salvation. She is
brought out at Christmas to take her place in our crèche scenes and most young
girls would love to portray her in the Christmas pageant, but after Christmas
we tend to forget her again for another year.
Perhaps
it is time to recover and understand our own tradition that comes out of the
Reformation understanding.
In
1521, Martin Luther was hidden away at the
“Mary is the embodiment of God’s
unmerited grace. She is called blessed
not because of her virginity or even
her humility, but because she was
chosen as the person and place where
God’s glory would enter most
deeply into the human story. “I am only the workshop in which God
operates,” Mary said. Mary’s faith is not the achievement of
merit, but the
gift of divine grace.
I
see Mary as a fellow pilgrim on the journey through this life to the next
life. God chose her for a mission, just
like God chooses each of us, for a mission.
That her mission was so very, very, important was not a credit to her
but to God. We must always remember her
with reverence and thanksgiving to God,
not because she was so wonderful but because she exhibited such faithfulness
and trust. Oh that we could do the same
in our lives!
Luke
tells us that Mary was one of those
standing at the foot of the cross of Jesus.
When the disciples (including Peter) had fled in fear, Mary remained
true to Christ and his word.
There
is a famous religious painting by Mathias Grunewald. It was painted on the eve of the
Reformation. It shows John the Baptist
pointing with his long bony finger to Jesus writhing in the agonies of death. In faded red letters, in Latin, are the
words, “He must increase, I must decrease.”
John points not to himself nor to anyone else, but to Christ alone. This
is the task of all true Christians.
The
Blessed Virgin Mary is also a prominent figure in this painting. She joins John
in pointing others to Jesus, representing the Church in its primary call to
discipleship and witness.
This
is the Mary that you and I can and should embrace today. We do not think of the mother of God as an
object of devotion by herself, in isolation from her son. We do not need to go through Mary in order to
get to Jesus, but we can join with Mary in pointing others to him.
Thanks
be to God. Amen.