Advent 4-C
Dec. 23,
2012
Micah 5:2-5a
Canticle 15: The Magnificat
Hebrews
10:5-10
Luke
1:39-55
People of faith are viewed by many people in this society as
kind of kooky. People of faith are just not realistic. Even the “I’m spiritual
but not religious” types are seen this way by the hard-headed realists. We are
sometimes dismissed as “Religious do-gooders,” airy-fairy types. Just how much
of a difference can our meager efforts make in this world where the problems
are immense and the solutions nearly unimaginable?
Mary and Elizabeth must be seen as the ultimate kooky
“people of faith.” What could be less realistic than the words Mary sings when
she meets up with her cousin, Elizabeth? Casting mighty from their seats of
power? She, a pregnant, poor, unmarried girl? Filling the hungry with good
things? Her cousin Elizabeth is elderly, and is now pregnant for the first time
in her life. These are just ordinary people, not miracle workers; how much more
delusional can they be?
These two women, and the two baby boys they carry in their
wombs, come to us today in the line of prophets. Mary and Elizabeth came from
people who read their Bibles carefully. They lived on the fringes of society,
where they could see the things that were wrong, where they could see how poor
and powerless people were treated. They knew their Bibles well enough to know
that God promised that the world would be a better place. They stood in a long
ling of prophets who listened carefully to God, and who looked carefully at the
world around them, and said, Wait a minute here. There are things going on in
this world that are not what God intends. When Mary and Elizabeth listened for
God, they heard the great and powerful swooshing sounds of angels’ wings, the
Holy Spirit coming upon them, overshadowing and empowering them to see the
world as God sees it, and to speak and to act.
And all the world is grateful that these two kooky women,
these people of faith, and hope, these attentive listeners to God, said yes.
Meister Eckhart, a popular and mystical teacher of the
Middle Ages, said this about Mary: “We are all meant to be mothers of God.” To
be mothers of God in the sense of being a kooky person of faith like she was.
To be a person who listens closely for the swoosh of those mighty Holy Spirit
wings, and who looks closely at the world around her. We are all meant to be
mothers of God when we say yes to the promises God has in store for us. Mary
and Elizabeth certainly saw lots of darkness and violence in the world around
them – December 2012 has no corner on that! – but in spite of that, Mary and
Elizabeth said yes to the goodness God put here when God created this world. We
are meant to be mothers of God when we open ourselves to be changed by God, even
if we only take one step at a time, not exactly sure that what God would have
us do is reasonable, or socially acceptable, but we do it nonetheless. To be a
mother of God is to be willing to be a kooky person of faith.
There is something curious about this Magnificat song that
Mary sings. It is in the words of a young woman, talking about the promises God
has made for the world, but it is spoken from the point of view of something
that has already happened. God has already overthrown the mighty and given the
hungry enough to eat. God has already pulled the downtrodden up and sent away
the rich people, who were not willing to participate in this way that God would
have the world work.
This kooky person of faith seems to think that all those
things have already happened, and that the birth of the son she carries is part
of this ongoing process of healing the world, of bringing it back to the world
God created it to be.
What a kooky imagination this Mary has, to listen to the
swooshing, swooping powerful wings of the Holy Spirit, and to begin to see the
world as God sees it – to take it on faith, as it were, and to begin to live
her life, now, in the real world here and now, believing it to be true.
“We are all meant to be mothers of God.” Kooky. Hopeful.
Knowing that the world could be, and is, a better place, and saying yes to God,
when God shows us how this could be so.
Ok, love the comment above. Great. And, this reflection, too.
ReplyDeleteWe are all cheerleaders for God!
ReplyDelete