Sunday, December 24, 2017

Good Medicine - Part 4: SUPPLICATION

In the sixth month of Elizabeth’s pregnancy, God sent the angel Gabriel to Nazareth, a village in Galilee, to a virgin named Mary.  She was engaged to be married to a man named Joseph, a descendant of King David.  Gabriel appeared to her and said, “Greetings, favored woman!  The Lord is with you!”  Confused and disturbed, Mary tried to think what the angel could mean.  “Don’t be afraid, Mary,” the angel told her, “for you have found favor with God!  You will conceive and give birth to a son, and you will name him Jesus.  He will be very great and will be called the Son of the Most High.  The Lord God will give him the throne of his ancestor David.  And he will reign over Israel forever; his Kingdom will never end!”  Mary asked the angel, “But how can this happen? I am a virgin.”  The angel replied, “The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you.  So the baby to be born will be holy, and he will be called the Son of God.  What’s more, your relative Elizabeth has become pregnant in her old age!  People used to say she was barren, but she has conceived a son and is now in her sixth month.  For the word of God will never fail.”  Mary responded, “I am the Lord’s servant.  May everything you have said about me come true.”  And then the angel left her.  Luke 1:26-38(NLT)
We have been journeying through Advent looking at Good Medicine for our souls. 
·       In week 1 we saw how Adoration, praising our Heavenly Father releases all the praise stored in our hearts.  It’s like personally offering the Great Thanksgiving we always pray before sharing the Eucharist, the Lord’s Supper.  We praise Him and it is good medicine for our souls.
·       In week 2 we learned that Hope brings us close to God and helps us hold-fast to the faith once-delivered to the saints, and the impact that makes on the world makes a difference in the world.  Making a difference is good medicine for our souls. 
·       Last week we explored Thanksgiving, the right response to being cleansed of our sins, and how that opens the pathway for genuine worship.  All good medicine for the soul!
Today, on Christmas Eve, we will complete this series as we consider the good medicine of Supplication – a fancy word for asking for stuff.  Now, that’s very connected to what we hope will be under the tree tomorrow morning. 
At this stage of December little children have written volumes of letters to Santa, asking for toys, baby dolls, puppies and ponies.  Older children have asked for new bicycles, Playstations™ and new IPhones™.  Women have dropped hints (some subtle, and others not-so-subtle) about what kind of jewelry they prefer (as well as where such baubles can be purchased), and men have wondered why they haven’t gotten a new Mercedes or fishing boat on previous Christmas mornings.  We all understand the concept of supplication!
But this season is not without its stressors.  And stress shows up in many unexpected ways (and all of them unwelcome); just ask the man who was engaged to Mary – Joseph.  As a local carpenter from a good family Joseph thought he had everything he wanted for that first Christmas.  His life was in order.  He was engaged, betrothed to the love of his life.  Mary was beautiful and his career as a carpenter was on track.  This changed everything.  It was big time stress! Betrothal was more than engagement; in those days it was legally marriage, except for the couple living together.  That’s so different from today where many couples live together and have children before marriage.
Well, Joseph had it all going in the right direction...until the news hit him that Mary was pregnant.  Joseph knew he wasn’t the father, so this shattered his dreams and hopes for a normal, respectable life.  It had to have crushed his heart.  Christmas stress indeed!   Joseph came to the first Christmas without tinsel, twinkling lights or fruitcake.
Scripture tells us Joseph didn’t want to see Mary hurt or embarrassed.  So he hatched a plan to divorce Mary privately.  He didn’t want her to go through the public humiliation he knew was coming.  It was more than just the snide remarks and social snubbing to which they’d be subjected.  While it may be hard for many in our 21st century culture to imagine why they would be judged for having a baby before marriage, in those days it was downright against the law!  That was the pressure society would bear on remaining a virgin until marriage.
Elizabeth and I know something of that pressure.  We married in 1967.  I had been inducted into the Army five months prior.  We made the decision to get married if I got orders for overseas, but we didn’t share that with anyone but our parents.  When the orders came I called and told Elizabeth I had nine days leave.  We met with the minister, bought all the stuff and had a wedding three days later.  We are certain some of our friends (and a few snooty relatives) were doing math for the next nine months!  (Jennifer came along a little more than four years later; so there!)
These days that kind of thinking is seen as prudish; something out of the Victorian-era.  In the eyes of the new millennium person, marriage is either seen with a romantic’s eye, that everything must be perfect because everyone is happy, stays happy, and lives happily ever after.  Or marriage is viewed as a throwback to oppressive male domination and is to be avoided at all costs.  Either way, Biblical marriage of one man and one woman for one lifetime has become the rare exception, rather than the norm.
Now the reason Joseph scurried around to find a plan to do something about this development privately is that sticking with Mary would bring danger into Joseph’s equation.  Mary had a few serious liabilities:
·       Legal liability – as a convicted adulteress she could have been stoned under Jewish law. 
·       Religious liability – Mary claimed to be pregnant by God; the Pharisees would’ve had a field day with that one.  They hung Jesus on a cross for that kind of claim.  Mary could have gotten the death penalty for blasphemy
The first Christmas was extremely stressful for Joseph.  His stress came from financial, emotional and spiritual drains.  He was picturing a wife, kids, dog, and white picket fence kind of life.  What he got was over-taxed, shamed, confused and run out of town.  Is this first Christmas not the most stressful you’ve ever heard about?
Turning back to our friend Luke’s story about Mary we find there was family stress in her first Christmas as well…in two different cities.  Of course Mary faced all of what Joseph was feeling – with the added factor that she was the one the community would stone if things went badly. 
But there was also Mary’s Aunt Elizabeth to consider.  Everyone in her family knew Elizabeth was unable to conceive, and she was well-past child-bearing age.  But the angel visiting Mary told her old Aunt Elizabeth was already six-months along.  So, really, there are two miracles in this story.  Mary is pregnant even though she is too-young and still a virgin, and so is Elizabeth, the too-old barren one.  These two are connected at opposite ends of the spectrum.
What’s really surprising here is that Mary went to her Aunt for comfort and enlightenment; but Elizabeth was the one who got both.  From this we learn that humble hearts are connected and never overlooked by God when it comes to blessing.  Mary was young, Elizabeth old; God blessed both of them.  We also must learn to not judge the young Marys or the old Elizabeths in our lives.  Unexpected beginnings are not endings!
Granny Parker was a church member in a small church I served in Florida.  By virtually all human standards she was not influential or revered as a leader.  Granny had a learning disability and couldn’t participate in a traditional education process.  But that was only her beginning.
As a young woman in the depression, Granny’s parents died and she inherited the 100 acre farm she lived on all her life.  When the opportunity came to start a mission church she gave two acres to begin the work.  Later she graciously parted with 10 more acres as the church grew and needed more space.  Today, where humble Granny Parker began life on a small farm in 1911 there is a 600-seat sanctuary and several other buildings to serve that community for Christ.
Granny died shortly before reaching 100 years in her journey.  This under-educated, unsophisticated, rough farm girl could barely write her own name, but her relationship with God was so strong, when you heard her pray, it was clear every angel in heaven had stopped what they were doing and were paying attention as Jesus and Granny caught up on the day’s events.
The Mary in our story is something like that.  When the angel told Mary what the future was going to look like she asked a question…how can this be…I’m a virgin…never even been with a manWhen the angel told her to trust God, she bowed in worship, and with a simple statement Mary teaches us what genuine supplication looks like:
I am the Lord’s servant.  May everything you have said about me come true.
Mary made her petition, supplication – tell me about this impossibility.  She got what she requested, and it wasn’t anything like she could have possibly dreamed.  But it was good medicine for her soul, because she embraced it as a gift from the hand of God.
Beloved you wrestle this week with embracing what Mary faced, in the name of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit, Amen!

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[1] Title Image Courtesy of Pixabay.com

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