Luke 1:26-38 · The Birth of Jesus Foretold
I Believe That Jesus Was Conceived By The Holy Spirit
Luke 1:26-38
Sermon
by Bill Bouknight
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It’s a shame that about the only time we think about Mary, the mother of Jesus, is around Christmas. I’m grateful for the recent movie, “The Nativity,” that focused attention on her. Mary was a remarkable young woman. In our Apostles Creed, she is one of only three people mentioned—Mary, Jesus, and Pontius Pilate. (1)

When we meet Mary in Scripture, she is just an adolescent Jewish girl, probably 14 or 15 years old. She is engaged to marry a young carpenter named Joseph. Though this engagement was probably arranged by her parents, she has developed a genuine love for this young man. She has dreams of a home and a family. Then one day in Nazareth, something very strange happened. Did she hear thunder or see strange lights or quiver all over? We don’t know. But we do know that she received a visit from an angel of the Lord. He said, in effect, “Mary, I have a special task for you. It’s going to disrupt your whole life, but I need you.” And Mary said, “Yes.” Time passed. Inside herself, she began to feel a stirring. A baby was growing within her. This baby would come to planet earth in an altogether unique way. He was fully human yet also divine. He was called “the holy one.” He became the first person since Adam and Eve to be born without sin. Many people hated him because of his holiness. He was executed in a gruesome manner, as Mary watched in horror. But a few days later she discovered that her son was alive again, risen from the dead. Before her life ended, she knew that her son was both Savior and Lord. (2)

When I think about her, and him, I am in awe that God would go to such lengths to save sinners like you and me. In order to save us, God had to become one with us, though without sin himself. That decisive invasion of earth from heaven began when Jesus was “conceived by the Holy Spirit, born of the Virgin Mary.”

When we claim that Jesus was conceived by the Holy Spirit and born of the Virgin Mary, we are into strange obstetrics. Why is that truth counted among the essentials of our faith? Because it conveys three basic truths that are at the very heart of our faith.

First, borrowing a line from a greeting-card company, GOD CARED ENOUGH TO SEND THE VERY BEST. That’s the message of John 3:16 : “For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son so that whosoever believes in him shall not perish but have everlasting life.”

Here we are talking about the doctrine called Incarnation. That just means that God took human form in Jesus. God was incarnate or embodied in the man Jesus. God made his beachhead on humanity at Bethlehem where he entered our world as a gasping, crying, sucking baby.

Christianity starts with a miracle, the birth of its founder. The Bible teaches that “God has come as low as humanity can sink.” God has gotten down in the muck with us. He has descended into the filth and foulness and vileness of our mortality. (3)

Occasionally I stop by a certain restaurant in town that has a first-class aquarium. It contains a glorious assortment of tropical fish so colorful that only God could have decorated them. It takes a lot of work to run an aquarium. The owner monitors the oxygen and nitrate levels and the ammonia content. The water is filtered. Vitamins, antibiotics, and sulfa drugs must be pumped in. The fish have to be fed regularly.

Now with all that care and attention, you would think that the fish would adore the owner. But they don’t. Anytime he comes around, they dart away in fear. The owner is like a god to those fish, too big to comprehend, too frightening to love.

The only way to change that would be for the owner to somehow become a fish and communicate the truth to the other fish. Similarly, God had to become a person to communicate with us. Because God wanted to send his very best to us, he made a visit himself, in the form of Jesus.

The second great truth from this line in our Creed is this: MARY’S VIRGINAL STATUS IS AN INDICTMENT OF OUR LOOSE MORALS.

Mary lived in a culture that attached great shame to having premarital sex. At that time, virginity was a prerequisite for a Jewish bride. By way of contrast, we live in a culture that seldom attaches shame to anything.

In recent weeks we have been bombarded by information about the late Anna Nicole Smith and the multiple men claiming to be the father of her baby. Mystery and intrigue surround this case, but no shame.

Mary’s virginity earns her little credit in our culture. Virginity is seldom praised and is often ridiculed. College coeds sometimes make fun of a virgin if they discover one on the hall. Someone has written that in our time we have experienced the “McDonaldization of sex.” It’s like fast food, cheap and available. Couples just hook up. As the song asks, “What’s love got to do with it?” According to surveys, more than half of our 11th graders have had sex with a casual acquaintance. (4)

The National College Health Assessment Survey found that 71 percent of college students are sexually active. (5)

Thousands of Hollywood movies and TV sitcoms have trained our young people that sex happens on or about the third date if the couple really likes each other. You don’t even have to be in love. If the chemistry is right, you do it. The message is that if you don’t become sexually active, one or both of you are weird. Over half of our culture has bought into that lie. And we see the awful harvest of that sin in terms of divorce, disease, and heartbreak. When a couple behaves in a way that is directly contrary to God’s will, they forfeit God’s blessings and invite his judgment.

Sex is not the only holiness issue of our time, but it is the presenting issue for our culture. The culture is claiming that sex is just one more human appetite that should be satisfied in whatever way suits you. But the Bible screams “No!” St. Paul warned us, “Flee from sexual immorality. All other sins a person commits are outside his body, but he who sins sexually sins against his own body.” (I Cor. 6:18) Why is that? Because his sin drives out the Holy Spirit.

The church dares to hold up a standard that our culture trashes—fidelity in marriage and celibacy in singleness. (6)

I wonder sometimes about the trouble America is having in the world, not just in Iraq but elsewhere. I know that the Lord prefers freedom over terrorism, so why do we encounter so much opposition? I wonder if God’s judgment is involved. You know, we flaunt our immorality in America, not just in San Francisco but sea to shining sea. The prophet Jeremiah could well have been describing America when he said, “They have forgotten how to blush.” (Jer. 6:15) We ridicule righteousness. Not only that. We export our immorality. We send out far more movies than missionaries. If we want God to bless America, maybe what we need is more than a new strategy. Perhaps we should focus on repentance and revival. Remember this promise of God: “If my people who are called by my name will humble themselves and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then will I hear from heaven and will forgive their sin and heal their land. “(II Chronicles 7:14)

Mary is an indictment of our immoral culture and a clarion call for revival.

Here is the third biblical truth suggested by today’s lesson from the Creed: HE WHO HAD NO SIN BECAME SIN FOR OUR SAKES. That’s exactly what St. Paul taught us in Second Corinthians 5:21, which is becoming one of my favorite verses. “God made him who had no sin to be sin for us, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God.” We’re talking here about the doctrine of Atonement which is the heart of the gospel. Jesus suffered in our place. He paid the penalty for our sin so that we could be forgiven, saved, and made fit to spend eternity with a holy God.

The idea of Christ dying for our sins is out of style in modern America. Many modern preachers would prefer to proclaim a Christ who came to compliment our best rather than to redeem our worst. (7)

Many Americans are not attracted to a Savior who died for us; instead, they prefer a “do-it-yourself” means of salvation. You know, just give us five easy steps, like yoga exercises, to gain peace and contentment. And if sin is no longer seen as a problem, who needs a Savior to atone for it?

Nobody is regarded as a sinner anymore. If a person does something awful, he is considered to be sick or underprivileged or discriminated against. In a state like Vermont, adults who abuse children sexually are often regarded more as victims than the children they abuse. In such a society as ours, no one is called upon to repent. These offending folks are just sent to rehab for a few weeks.

We Christians dare to differ with our culture. We proclaim these biblical truths: “All have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.” (Rom. 3:23) “There is no one righteous, not even one.” (Rom. 3:10) But because of the Cross, there is good news! “While we were still sinners, Christ died for us.” (Rom. 5:8) “Therefore, there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.” (Rom. 8:1) My friends, that is the heart of the gospel, centering on Jesus’ atoning sacrifice for us on Calvary’s Cross.

For many years a Christian named Emil Mettler ran a popular restaurant in London. He kept a framed six-inch nail right beside his cash register. When someone would ask him about it, he would reply, “That nail reminds me of the stakes that pierced my Savior’s flesh when he died for me on a cross. It reminds me of the price Jesus paid for my salvation and what I owe him in return.”

So, when we declare in the Apostles’ Creed that we believe that Jesus “was conceived by the Holy Spirit and born of the Virgin Mary, “ we are affirming these truths at the very heart of the gospel:

• God cared enough to send the very best.

• Mary’s virginal status is an indictment of our loose morals.

• He who had no sin became sin for our sakes.

In the book “At Home in Mitford,” Father Tim comes to his Episcopal sanctuary one evening just after dark. He doesn’t expect to see anyone, but he quickly notices that there is a man sitting in one of the pews. He starts to offer the man some help but then notices that the man’s head is bowed. He is praying. Gradually his prayer becomes more and more audible, louder and louder. Finally he lifts his face toward the ceiling and screams, “If you’re up there, prove it!” Father Tim slips into the pew next to this stranger and says quietly, “I think the question is not ‘Are you up there?’ but rather ‘Are you down here?’” (8)

Oh yes, he is here. At the heart of our faith is this declaration: “The Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us.” (John 1:14) How did Jesus come among us? He was “conceived by the Holy Spirit and born of the Virgin Mary.”

In the words of the late Adrian Rogers: “Jesus is our way to God and God’s way to us.” (9)

Dr. Bill Bouknight, Christ UMC, 4488 Poplar Ave., Memphis, TN 38117
Copyright in progress. www.cumcmemphis.org


(1) Johnson, Luke Timothy, The Creed, (Doubleday: New York, 2003), pp. 158-150.

(2) Howell, James C., The Life We Claim, (Abingdon: Nashville, 2005), pp. 57-58

(3) Taylor, Gardner, The Words of Gardner Taylor, Vol. 3, (Judson Press: Valley Forge, 2000), p. 102.

(4) Howell, Op. Cit., p. 55.

(5) The Commercial Appeal newspaper, Memphis, TN, Friday, March 23, 2007 issue, p. A.4.

(6) Howell, Op. Cit., p. 57

(7) Logan, James C., Theology and Evangelism in the Wesleyan Heritage, (Kingswood Books: Nashville, 1994), p. 27.

(8) Howell, Op. Cit., p. 42.

(9) Rogers, Adrian, Adrianisms, the Wit and Wisdom of Adrian Rogers, (Love Worth Finding: Memphis, 2006), pp. 9-10.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by Bill Bouknight