Homily for December
20th, 2017: Luke 1:26-38.
“Do not be afraid, Mary,” the angel
says to the young teenage girl in today’s gospel reading. Her angelic visitor
came direct from God. The encounter with the divine is never casual or routine.
Mary’s response to the angel’s message, that she was to be the mother of God’s
Son, shows her to be the model of trusting faith
Yet Mary’s faith was not blind. She
doubted and questioned. “How can this be?” Mary asked the angel who told her
she would conceive her child without a human father. What Mary questioned,
however, was not so much God, as her own ability to understand God and his plan for her life. Even in the midst of
perplexity, Mary confessed that God knew best, even if she could not understand
what he was about: “May it be done to me according to your word,” she told the
angel.
Mary’s assent to God’s plan for her
was not a one-time thing. It had to be
constantly renewed, through many sufferings. The first was the humiliation of
being (as everyone assumed) an unmarried mother in a little village where
everybody knew everyone else’s business, and gossip was rife. Later Simeon told
Mary that her Son would be “a sign which men reject,” and that Mary herself
would be “pierced with a sword” (Lk 2:35).
Upon reaching manhood, Jesus left his
mother, as he demanded that his followers should leave their parents. At Jesus’ farewell meal with his closest
friends there was, apparently, no place for his mother — though there was a
place for her the next day, at Calvary . There,
at the cross, Simeon’s prophecy, that a sword would pierce Mary’s heart, was
fulfilled. Yet Mary went on trusting even when — as long ago — she “did not
understand” (Lk 2:50).
Can there be any doubt that it is
precisely Mary’s trusting faith which we need today? Which of us can fully
explain or understand all that we have experienced in recent years? Today, more
than ever, we need the kind of faith which Mary had, the faith she models for
us: faith which continues to trust in God even amid things we do not understand
and cannot explain.
And so I invite you to supply the
conclusion to the homily, by responding to the age-old prayer based on the
angel’s words to Mary in today’s gospel:
Hail Mary, full of grace, the Lord is
with you. Blessed are you among
women and blessed is the fruit of your
womb, Jesus.
L Holy Mary, Mother of God, pray for us sinners
now and at the hour of
our death. Amen.
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