Luke 1:26-38 · The Birth of Jesus Foretold
Lessons From A Girl In Trouble
Luke 1:26-38
Sermon
by Daniel G. Mueller
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Mary was "in trouble." A married woman gets pregnant and we say that she "is in a family way," or "expecting." But when an unmarried girl gets pregnant, we say she is "in trouble." And Mary was definitely "in trouble." She was going to have a baby and she wasn’t married.

One day, out of the clear blue sky, with no warning or advance preparation whatsoever, an angel from God came to Mary and told her she was going to have a baby. The news was understandably frightening and startling. Mary wondered what in the world was going on. But the angel said to her, "Do not be afraid, Mary, for you have found favor with God. And behold, you will conceive in your womb and bear a son and you will call his name Jesus." It was the kind of news that can wake one up very fast.

For Mary this news was confusing. "How can this be," she asked, "since I have no husband?" What she meant is that she had never had intercourse with anyone. "How can I have a baby without that?" she wondered. The angel explained, "The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you...." That’s how it was going to happen. And Mary, the Virgin, became pregnant. Or, as it seemed to those who knew her, she "got into trouble."

Had her pregnancy resulted in the usual way, she would indeed have been "in trouble." But her pregnancy was unique, unlike any other that has ever happened. She got pregnant not due to some indiscretion, but as a direct result of God’s willful plan for the salvation of the world. She got pregnant because she found favor with God and because God chose her, in his grace, to "be blessed among all women." She got pregnant because God was bringing his only-begotten Son into the world through her.

Mary was not the only one affected by the angel’s marvelous news and its development. Her parents, about whom we are told nothing, surely must have suspected their daughter, wondering what in the world she had been up to. She was engaged to a man named Joseph, and scripture tells us he not only suspected the worst, but was ready to act on his suspicions. One can hardly blame the poor man. Mary had gone away to the hill country of Judea to visit her relative Elizabeth, who was also pregnant. She was gone three months. Shortly after she got back the tell-tale signs of her pregnancy began to show. Joseph jumped to some logical conclusions: Mary had been unfaithful.

It took an angel from God to change his mind. After Joseph had prepared himself quietly, and with as much kindness as possible, to break off his relationship with Mary, an angel came to him and told him to go ahead with his plans to marry the girl, because that which had been conceived in her "was of the Holy Spirit." It was all part of God’s promise, the angel told Joseph, his wonderful promise through Isaiah: "Behold, a virgin shall conceive and bear a son and his name shall be called Emmanuel, which means, God with us" (Matthew 1:23).

Jesus, our Savior, was born of a virgin. This is part of the marvelous mystery of our faith, part of the good news that Saint Paul labeled "a scandal." For many people, the virgin birth is simply too fanciful a thing to believe. It is unacceptable, some say, because it sounds too much like mythology: gods coming down from heaven to have babies with human girls. Whatever it sounds like, it is a biblical fact. Jesus, our Savior, was born of a virgin.

The virgin birth is only half the story, however. We also confess that he was "conceived by the Holy Ghost." The Father of Jesus was God himself, the Holy Ghost. And because of it, the angel could say about the baby that would be born of Mary, "He will be great and will be called the Son of the Most High ... the child to be born will be called holy, the Son of God." Jesus, the baby born in Bethlehem, was true human, born of the Virgin Mary, and true God, conceived by the Holy Ghost. He was holy, blameless, undefiled, and separate from sinners. He was made higher than the heavens (Hebrews 7:26).

It was a miracle, a true miracle! Unlike so many things which are labeled miracles in our day, things which are nothing more than God’s customary grace at work, the birth of our Lord was a true miracle. By definition, a miracle is a break in the laws of nature. When a virgin gives birth, that’s a break in the laws of nature - much like when a man walks on water or a dead man comes back to life.

The birth of God’s Son, our Savior, is nothing more than popular history for us until we confess it, with head and heart, as part of our faith. Until we believe it, it’s just something that happened a long, long time ago. The same is true of Jesus’ Baptism, that time long ago when God said from heaven, "This is my beloved Son with whom I am well pleased." When we confess it, it stops being "just history" and becomes part of God’s good news for every day of our lives. Listen to what John wrote: "Whoever confesses that Jesus is the Son of God, God abides in him and he in God" (1 John 4:15). God lives in him and he lives in God. God is with him and he is with God. And that’s what the birth of Jesus is all about, isn’t it: God with us. That happens when we confess him. Then we have good news for every day of our lives.

In the miraculous birth of our Lord there are some good lessons to learn, lessons that will help us live each day of our lives to God’s glory and our benefit. There are two lessons especially for us to note. The first is obedience; the second is trust.

God wants us to obey him. Mary and Joseph obeyed God. It surely must not have been easy for them to do that. There must have been a lot of hassles in their life. What God asked of each of them was extremely demanding. But they obeyed God. Joseph did what he was given to do and Mary did what God gave her to do.

Ever since Eve’s decision to disobey God we have been faced with a constant battle to obey him. The temptation is always there to do what we want to do instead of what God wants. We like to decide for ourselves what is right and wrong, what is good and bad. In every aspect of life we struggle with obedience.

A recent movie titled, "Right of Way" addresses the issue dramatically. In the film, James Stewart and Bette Davis play an elderly couple who decide to commit suicide because they can’t bear the thought of living without each other. What God has to say about the sanctity of human life doesn’t matter. All that counts is what they want.

If this were just a film, that would be bad enough in itself. But the film is more and more frequently becoming a true story as greater numbers of people begin to accept suicide as a viable alternative. There is no obedience in such a decision.

Suicide is just one example. If we check any area of our life and hold it up to God’s commandments, we can find examples of how we disobey God, seeking to ignore his will in favor of our own.

Beyond faith, what God wants from us more than anything else is obedience. No matter how difficult or unpleasant a task he lays before us, God wants us to obey him. "Be doers of the word and not hearers only," we read in his Word (James 1:22). It isn’t easy to obey, but of all there is that we could ever give to God, our finest gift is obedience to his will (1 Samuel 15:22). "If anyone loves me," Jesus said, "he will keep my words ... and my Father will love him and we will come unto him and make our abode with him" (John 14:23). Jesus nowhere promises obedience will be easy; But he does promise that the Father will love us for it.

Jesus obeyed God. "I have kept my Father’s commandments and abide in his love," he said (John 15:10). Jesus was perfectly obedient in our place, for us, to earn forgiveness for us because of our disobedience. Now Jesus, the Obedient One, lives in us to make us obedient like him. He was "obedient unto death, even death on a cross" for our sakes (Philippians 2:8). He prayed, "Not my will but thine be done," and has taught us to pray and to live the same way.

The second lesson is trust. We are to trust God the way Mary and Joseph did. Mary’s trust was so complete that she told the angel after hearing all he had to tell her, "I am the slave of the Lord; he can do with me whatever he wants!" Can you hear yourself saying that? "I am the slave of the Lord, he can do with me whatever he wants!" When I can’t find a job; when the doctor wants to do surgery; when my spouse doesn’t give me any affection any more; in every trial of life? Trust God with the trust of Mary: "I am the slave of the Lord; he can do with me whatever he wants."

Trust him because he is the God who does the impossible, who made a virgin have a baby. Trust him because he is the God who brings good out of bad things. Mary got into trouble; how awful. Through that, God brought the Savior Jesus into the world; how wonderful. Trust God because he works for good in all things with those who love him. Mary trusted in God and was rewarded with the gift of the Savior, a gift the Virgin shares with us, with all who trust in God.

"Don’t be afraid," the angel told Mary. God says the same to us. Do not be afraid to obey and to trust me. I will never let you down for I am with you always. I gave my Son as a living guarantee of that fact. Amen

CSS Publishing Co., Inc., Just Follow The Signs, by Daniel G. Mueller