Luke 1:39-45 · Mary Visits Elizabeth
Beware of Cute
Luke 1:39-45, Luke 1:26-38
Sermon
by Leonard Sweet
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Beware of Cute.

This is the time of year when we need to be on high alert for cute.

We love cuteness. This is a cute-driven culture. And this season of year turns everything it touches into glitz and cuteness.

But the story of Jesus’ birth wasn’t cute.
The Annunciation wasn’t cute.
The virgin birth wasn’t cute.
The Magnificat wasn’t cute.
The little town of Bethlehem wasn’t cute.
The killing of the innocents wasn’t cute.

The nativity genealogy puts Mary in the lineage of Tamar, Rahab, Bathsheeba, and Ruth (yes, the one who snuck in to the rich Boaz’s tent at night while he was sleeping to seduce him). Jesus’ genealogy is not cute.

Golgatha wasn’t cute.

“Crux” in Latin means cross. The crux of Christianity is the cross. And the cross isn’t cute.

The old Christian calendar had ways of resisting this cultural drift into cuteness. On 26 December, the church celebrated the martyrdom of Saint Stephen. On 28 December the death of the infants whom Herod killed was remembered. In other words, the Christmas story was part of a larger story that dealt with injustice, suffering and even death. The joy of Christmas wasn’t a cute joy, but a joy that overcame obstacles and negatives.

You might even call Christians Star-Crossed Lovers: Lovers who bring together the Star of Bethlehem and the Cross of Golgotha.

Renaissance artists loved to paint Jesus’ nativity. They didn’t do “cute” as well as Thomas Kinkade, but they could get cute in their own way. One of their favorite vignettes was the “Annunciation of Jesus’ Birth” to Mary by the angel Gabriel. In most depictions Mary kneels in humility and obedience before a winged angel glowing with a holy aura — a powerful, awe-inspiring sight. No wonder Mary accepted the surprising message of this cute heavenly creature.

One slight problem: there is no text that states Mary actually saw her angelic visitor. Mary hears and responds to the words Gabriel utters, but there is no specific mention in the gospels of Mary seeing this angelic visitor or of any visual signs of glory or power that such a heavenly being surely would reveal. In fact, Mary’s first response to Gabriel is not to kneel in front this angelic apparition, but to be “perplexed” by the words of greeting the angel offers: “Hail, favored one!”

Forget what you may have thought and been taught. For Mary, at least, “seeing was not believing.” Hearing was believing.

Some early Eastern church writers testified that because it was with her ears and not her eyes that Mary was confronted with the angel’s message, Mary conceived through her ear. Some Renaissance paintings depict the Immaculate Conception by a light-ray from the heavens piercing Mary’s ear. In the Coptic Life of the Virgin” Ephrem declares, “By her ear did Mary behold the Hidden One who had come in the utterance; the Power who had come to embodiment was thus conceived in her womb.” (For some pictures of the Annunciation that show a beam of light shining into Mary’s ear, see Margaret Barker, Christmas The Original Story [SPCK, 2008], 59).

Sound can change our behavior. Is there anything more annoying than that “beep, beep, beep” reminder your car bleats out until you finally put on your seat belt. The ear-piercing scream of a smoke detector can jolt you out of a sound sleep and send you scurrying outside. Music has been used to sooth our spirits, but it has also been intentionally played at deafening levels by enemies as a form of torture. With the advent of radio the broadcast of bad news and blatant, hurtful lies was a tactic used to discourage troops and sow despair among all those who heard them. Today, I can’t listen to TMZ. TMZ is shorthand for TMI (Too Much Information).

Research on the reactions of babies still in utero has proven that long before we see or touch or taste the world around us, we experience it through sound. Mothers-to-be are encouraged to talk to their babies, play music for them, read to them. Angry words and harsh sounds cause physical changes in the fetus, increased heart rates, agitation, all the biological signs of anxiety. Once our newborns finally arrive, one of the most calming influences new parents can provide for their baby is the familiar sound of a heartbeat, the rhythm that had rocked the child for its first nine months of life.

When Zechariah was told by the angel that in their old age he and Elizabeth would conceive a child, a child who would be a prophet, filled with the Holy Spirit, who would bring a message of the coming of the Messiah, the old priest voiced doubt instead of faith. He wanted to know more details before he signed on.

When Mary was given the astonishing news that she, a virgin, would conceive, she responded with faith; “Let it be with me according to your word.” Because of his doubt Zechariah lost his mission. His voice was silenced until after John was born. Because of her faith, the sound of Mary’s voice becomes the first herald of a new age. From within his mother’s womb the sound of Mary’s voice jump-starts the beginning of John’s mission and message, the first baby steps into the Kingdom of God.

Expectant mothers are cautioned to watch what goes into their bodies. Drugs, alcohol, toxins in the air and water -all can cause dire damage to the baby because of the umbilical connection between mother and child. For Elizabeth, that connection enables her to experience the same power of the Holy Spirit that courses through her unborn son’s being. At the sound of Mary’s voice John’s mission begins, but he requires his mother’s voice to make the opening announcement.

Have you ever played “Telephone” at a camp “ice breaker.” Everyone sits in a circle and one person starts the “conversation” by whispering some message into the ear of the person next to them. You may whisper fast or slow, but you may not repeat the whisper. The person listening only gets one chance to get the message right. After the message has traveled from ear-to-ear full circle, the last person repeats the message they have received. The results are usually pretty hilarious and rarely accurate.

Up until now the miraculous works of God that were underway have been played out kind of like a game of “telephone.” The angelic whisper of the events about to unfold have been passed from Zechariah’s ear, to Mary’s ear, to John’s ear, and finally now to Elizabeth’s ear. The fun of playing “telephone” is to see how mixed up the message has gotten as it has been passed around the circle.

But when an archangel is responsible for passing along this remarkable news, the message stays clear. Elizabeth’s interpretation of her baby’s leap for joy is perfect.

First, she praises the event itself: “Blessed are you among women, and blessed is the fruit of your womb” (v.42.).

Next, Elizabeth offers a blessing for all those in the future who will hear this good news and respond appropriately to it: “Blessed is she who believed that there would be a fulfillment of what was spoken to her by the Lord” (v.45).

Do you feel blessed by Elizabeth this morning? Do you believe in the promise of the incarnation?

You see, one virgin birth is not enough. We are all Marys. Each one of us is called to conceive Christ, to birth the newborn babe into the world.

Every Christmas is a new experience of hearing God’s promises and turning those promises into the presence of Jesus himself.

Every Christmas, Christ wants to be conceived anew in our hearts, in our hopes, in our families, in our communities.

When Christ was conceived in Mary, the incarnate word first prompted her to take an unprecedented journey to see her kinswoman Elizabeth. She set out in faith, not knowing what she would find when she entered Zechariah’s household. What Mary heard there was a message of affirmation and fulfillment so profound that her response could only be, “My soul magnifies the Lord and my spirit rejoices in God my Savior.”

What will incarnating the word look like this Christmas in your heart, in your home, in your church? What kind of unexpected journeys might true faithfulness put you on?

Some journeys are hard. When Mary affirmed “Let it be with me according to your word,” she could not foresee all that little word “it” would bring to her life. Sometimes “it” is not cute.

“It” would be a pregnancy out of wedlock.
“It” would be giving birth far from her home.
“It” would be a night of wonder filled with shepherds and angels and gifts from strangers.
“It” would be a royal threat to the child’s very life, and fleeing to Egypt for safety.
“It” would be long years of a seemingly simply, ordinary life.
“It” would be three years trying to understand the transformation of her son into the Son of God.
“It” would be the horror of the cross, and a mother’s heartbreak at the tomb.
“It” would, finally, be the glory of the resurrection.

What is your “it” this Christmas that will bring your faith out of “cuteness” and into acuteness of voice, vision, and mission?

ChristianGlobe Network, Inc., Collected Sermon, by Leonard Sweet