Monday, August 16, 2004

St. Mary the Virgin

 

Sunday, August 15, 2004

St. Mark’s Lutheran Church

Fargo, ND

The Rev. Jamie Parsley

 

Luke 1.46-55

 

Let us pray. God of love,

through your most Holy Spirit,

Mary the Jewish girl conceived your Son;

may his beauty, his humanity,

his all-transforming grace be born in us,

and may we never despise the strange and stirring gentleness

of your almighty power;

in your mercy, we pray. Amen.

 

Good morning. It’s pleasure to be back here again at St. Mark’s. For those who don’t know me, my name is Father Jamie Parsley. I am a priest in the Episcopal Church and I am currently serving as an Assistant Priest at Gethsemane Cathedral here in Fargo. Occasionally, I fill in for Pastor Mark and I enjoy doing it each time.

 

 

Today, as you probably have guessed, we celebrate the feast of Mary the mother of Jesus.

 

Now this is one of those feast days that makes a lot of us non-Roman Catholics a little nervous.

 

My very Lutheran grandmother, who, as many of you know, was a member of this church many years ago, would be somewhat upset I imagine to know that I am in this pulpit this morning preaching about, of all people, the Virgin Mary.

 

Let’s face it, when most of us non-Roman Catholics think of Mary, we think of how the Catholics honor her.

 

Visions of plaster statues in backyards, or on dashboards of cars or on the side altars of Catholic churches no doubt go through our minds.

 

After all, as my grandmother would say, they “worship” Mary.

 

Most Roman Catholics I know deny that they worship Mary, though they certainly do not deny that they honor her greatly and place a quite a bit of importance in her intercession.

 

But I think that stigma of Roman Catholics having the market cornered on the Virgin Mary is still very much a reality in the Christian church.

 

The fact is, all of us who are Christians should honor her and should remember at times how important she is to our faith in Christ.

 

It is a good thing to honor Mary and who she is.

 

And certainly it’s nothing new in the church as a whole.

The honor paid to Mary goes back to the earliest days of the Church.

In fact, it goes back even further.

In today’s Gospel reading, we hear Mary say, "From this time forth, all generations shall call me blessed."

Certainly that prophecy she made on that very momentous day when the Angel came to her and told her she would bear the Son of God has come true.

Mary is by the far the most honored saint in the Christian Church.

But who was Mary?

Well, when we meet Mary, she is a simple Jewish girl. It’s believed that she was about fourteen when she became pregnant and bore Jesus, which, at that time and in that place, would not have been by any means unusual.

Outside of that, not a whole lot is known  about her life.

We know for certain of the words she spoke to the angel Gabriel, to her kinswoman, Elizabeth, when she visited her not long before she gave birth. But outside of the words we heard this morning, there isn’t a whole lot we know she said.

The only other instance in which her words are recorded are at the wedding feast at Cana, when she instructs the servants there, regarding Jesus, to do “whatever he says to you.”

But the story of Mary becomes very interesting in the years following the Gospels. It is here that we see the fulfilling of her prophecy. It is here that we find that she truly does become blessed for all generations.

If we don’t believe that, then let’s take a look at the Creed which we will recite together later this morning.

Besides Jesus, there are only two other people mentioned in it.

The first is Pontius Pilate.

The other is Mary. It specifically says, he was “born of the virgin Mary."

That’s an important phrase.

On one hand, what this phrase says to us is that Jesus was really a human being. He was born of a woman, just like all of us were born of a woman.

He did not simply come down out of heaven like an angel, or like the gods of the Romans or Greeks.

He was born, like any other human being.

On the other hand, the phrase tells us that although he was born like us of a woman, unlike us he wasn’t born in ordinary way. He was born of a virgin. This virgin birth puts a whole new light on who Jesus was and who he claimed to be.

He was like us. He was a human being, like us. But he also was not like us, because he was at the same time God.

So, we can see how important Mary’s role is in our own views of what we believe.

Without her, Jesus would not have been able to come to us. She literally bore Jesus to us.

The Greeks call Mary the Theotokos, or God-bearer. And she really is.

If we believe Jesus was God, then she did, in a very real sense of the word, bear God.

Through her, God came to us in the person of Jesus.

She was the Mother of God, as hard as it might be to wrap our minds around that phrase.

Now most of us here can agree with those statements.

But what about the role Mary has in the Roman Catholic Church.

Although she may have only said a few words in the Gospels, we all hear sorties from time to time about visions some people have of the Virgin Mary, usually bearing some sort of message to the world.

Some of you might remember on old classic movie with Jennifer Jones called The Song of Bernadette, which is of course based on actual event in France of a young girl, Bernadette, who saw and spoke with the Virgin Mary in the 1840s.

The Virgin Mary who appears to Bernadatte did not look a lot like the Virgin Mary we heard proclaiming God’s goodness this morning in the Gospel.

The Virgin who appears to Bernadette in that film is no poor Jewish girl.

She is a beautiful, glowing celestial figure who performed, and some say continues to perform, miracles.

Most of us shrug our shoulders and either choose to believe or disbelieve a story like Bernadette’s.

But the fact remains that Mary needs to be honored by all of us who call ourselves Christians.

So, what do Lutherans believe about the Virgin Mary?

Well, here’s what one very prominent Lutheran said about Mary:

"men have crowded all her glory into a single word, calling her 'Theotokos'. No one can say anything greater of her or to her, though he had as many tongues as there are leaves on the trees, or grass in the fields, or stars in the sky, or sand by the sea. It needs to be pondered in the heart what it means to be the Mother of God."

 

Do you know who made that comment?

 

That’s right. Martin Luther.

 

I think a lot of good Lutherans would be shocked to know that many of the early founders of the Lutheran church had a deep affection for Mary.

 

For example, in Article XXII of the Apology of the Augsburg Confession, Lutherans testify that

blessed Mary prays for the church

 

Now listen to that.

 

blessed Mary prays for the church.

 

That’s a present tense verb. She prays. Right now.

 

Those Lutherans truly believed that Mary was in heaven at that particular moment praying for the church.

 

The Apology goes on to state that Mary

 

is worthy of the highest honors

and desires

to have her example considered and followed

 

So, the founders of the Lutheran Church held her in high esteem.

 

They commended her as example.  

Certainly, Lutherans and Roman Catholics will never agree on everything regarding Mary.

There will never be statues of Mary in Lutheran churches and I don’t think praying the Rosary will become a popular pastime among Lutherans in the near future.

But I think that reclaiming Mary’s role in the life of our salvation will become more and more of a part of all Christians, not just Roman Catholics.

After all, she is, without a doubt, a vital person in our Church and in who we are as Christians.

Mary continues to speak to us, not in supernatural visions, but in her words recorded in scripture.

Remember what Mary said at the Wedding in Cana. Those words are just as clear to us today. She is still saying to us,  "Listen to my Son. Do what He tells you."

This is the heart of Mary’s continued role in the church.

She is the example.

Just as Mary said “Yes” to the angel when he brought her his good news, we too can say yes to God and, in saying yes, we can bear God within us, as she did.

Like Mary we can be bearers of God to the world, to those who need God and long for God.

We too can carry Christ into the world and let him be known through us.

As Jesus found in her his first earthly dwelling-place so, following Mary’s example, he can continue to dwell on earth within each and every one of us as well.

 Amen.

 

I Christmas

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