Her name means: "Bitterness"
Her character: She was a virgin from a poor family in an
obscure village in Galilee. Her response to Gabriel reveals a young woman of
unusual faith and humility. Her unqualified yes to God's plan for her life
entailed great personal risk and suffering. She must have endured seasons of
confusion, fear, and darkness as the events of her life unfolded. She is
honored, not only as the mother of Jesus, but as his first
disciple.
Her sorrow: To see the son she loved shamed and
tortured, left to die like the worst kind of criminal.
Her
joy: To see her child raised from the dead; to have received the Holy
Spirit along with Christ's other disciples.
Key Scriptures:
Matthew 1:18-25; 2; Luke 1:26-80; 2:1-52; John 19:25-27
Her Story
She sat down on the bench and closed her eyes, an old woman silhouetted
against the blue Jerusalem sky. Even the wood beneath her conjured images.
Though she could no longer recall the exact curl of his smile or the shape of
his sleeping face resting next to hers, she could still see the rough brown
hands, expertly molding the wood to his purposes. Joseph had been a good
carpenter and an even better husband.
These days the memories came unbidden, like a gusty wind carrying her away to
other times and places. Some said drowning people see their lives unfold in
incredible detail just before they die. Age had a similar effect, she thought,
except that you could relive your memories with a great deal more leisure …
A cool breeze teased at her skirts as she balanced the jug on her head,
making her way toward the well. A stranger, she noticed, was approaching from
the opposite direction. Even in the dusky light, his clothes shone, as though
bleached bright by the strongest of fuller's soap.
"Greetings," he shouted, "you who are highly favored! The Lord is with you."
No Nazarene, she was sure, would ever dare greet a maiden like that. But with
each step his words grew bolder, not softer, rushing toward her like water
cascading over a cliff:
"Do not be afraid, Mary….
You have found favor with God….
You will give
birth to a son….
He will be called the Son of the Most High….
The Holy
Spirit will come upon you….
Elizabeth your relative is going to have a child
in
her old age."
Wave after wave broke over her as she listened to the angel's words—first
confusion and fear, then awe and gratitude, and finally a rush of joy and peace.
Her whole being drenched in light. Then she heard more words, this time
cascading from her lips, not his:
"I am the Lord's servant.
May it be to me as you have said."
Though the angel departed, Mary's peace remained. The Most High had visited
the lowliest of his servants and spoken the promise every Jewish woman longed to
hear: "You will be with child and give birth to a son, and you are to give him
the name Jesus. The Lord God will give him the throne of his father David, and
he will reign over the house of Jacob forever; his kingdom will never end." The
moon hung like a smile in the night sky as Mary lifted the brimming buckets and
began walking across the fields. As the water swayed and splashed to the rhythm
of her movements, she realized that she too felt full and satisfied—as though
she had just finished a favorite meal. Questions, she knew, would come with the
morning. For now, it was enough to look up at the stars and know that God was at
work shaping her future.
...
"Mama, Mama," he yelled, running toward her, chubby arms flung out
beseechingly.
"Jesus, what is it now, child?" she smiled, scooping the chunky boy into her
arms before he could topple over in the usual tangle of arms and legs. But he
was all kisses, squealing and nuzzling his curly head against her breast, as
though to bury himself in her soft, warm flesh. She sighed contentedly. How many
mothers had she known? But none had adequately described the sheer wonder of a
child—the laughter, the constant surprise, the tenderness. Not to mention the
fear and worry that were also part of the bargain.
But this was no time to entertain such thoughts. The men from the East had
recently left. How strange these Magi seemed, with their tales of a star that
had led them all the way to Bethlehem in search of a new king. They had bowed
before her dark-eyed child, laying out their treasures of gold, incense, and
myrrh—as though paying homage to royalty. One morning, however, they had packed
in haste, saying only that a dream had warned them to return home without
reporting news of their successful search to King Herod. Even the mention of
that king's name had filled her with dread. Bethlehem lay just six miles south
of Jerusalem—dangerously close to the man who had murdered his own children out
of jealousy for his throne. How would such a ruler respond to rumors of a
child-king in Bethlehem?
Two nights ago Joseph had shaken her awake, shushing her with details of the
dream he had just had: "Mary, an angel appeared to me. We must leave before
sunrise. Herod plans to search for our child and kill him!"
Now they were on their way to Egypt, reversing the steps of Moses, Aaron, and
Miriam, who had led her ancestors to freedom so long ago. Mary wondered, as they
rested, if they would ever see their homeland again.
...
"Woman," he breathed the word softly, painfully, through lips encrusted with
blood, his lean arms flung out on either side of him, as though imploringly. The
palms of his hands were pinned with spikes. He looked at her first and then at
the young man standing beside her. "Here is your son." The words came
haltingly.
Then to the man, he sighed: "Here is your mother."
She wanted to reach for him with all the might of her love, to bury his
sorrow in her breasts, to tell him he was the son she needed most. Would not the
God who pitied Abraham also pity her? Would he allow her to suffer what even the
patriarch had been spared—the sacrifice of a child? All her life she had loved
the God whose angel had spoken to her, calling her "highly favored." But how
could a woman whose son was dying on a Roman cross ever consider herself
"favored"?
Suddenly her own words came back to her, as though a younger version of
herself was whispering them in her ear: "I am the Lord's servant. May it be to
me as you have said."
The midday sky had blackened, but she could still see her son's twisted form
on the cross, his eyes searching hers. Thorns circled his forehead in the shape
of a crown, a crude reminder of the sign the Roman governor had fastened to the
wood: "Jesus of Nazareth, King of the Jews."
She thought of the Magi and their priceless gifts. The gold and incense,
royal treasures that had helped them survive their stay in Egypt. She had always
wondered about the myrrh. Now she knew—it was embalming oil for the king the
wise men had come to worship.
"My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?" His cry pierced her. The earth
shook violently and she fell to her knees, barely able to complete the words of
the psalm for the man who hung dead on the cross:
O my God, I cry out by day, but you do not answer,
by night, and am not
silent….
But I am a worm and not a man,
scorned by men and despised by the
people.
All who see me mock me;
they hurl insults, shaking their
heads….
Yet you brought me out of the womb;
you made me trust in
you
even at my mother's breast.
From birth I was cast upon you;
from my
mother's womb you have been my God….
They have pierced my hands and my
feet.
I can count all my bones;
people stare and gloat over me.
They
divide my garments among them
and cast lots for my clothing.
But you, O
Lord, be not far off;
O my Strength, come quickly to help me….
You who
fear the Lord, praise him!
All you descendants of Jacob, honor him!
…
Future generations will be told about the Lord.
They will proclaim his
righteousness
to a people yet unborn—
for he has done it. — Psalm 22
By the time Mary opened her eyes, the setting sun had turned the city into a
golden land. She smiled, wiping the tears from her wrinkled face. How true the
angel's words had been. No woman from Eve onward had ever been blessed as she,
the mother of the Messiah, had been. Yes, the past was alive inside her, but it
was the future that filled her with joy. Soon, she would see her son again and
this time it would be his hands that would wipe away the last of her tears.
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