Luke 1:39-45 · Mary Visits Elizabeth
The Christmas Song
Luke 1:39-45, Luke 1:46-56
Sermon
by James Garrett
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The business side of Christmas -- the commercialism -- doesn’t bother me as it does some. There are those who think the spiritual import of Christmas may be forgotten. There’s no danger of that. The spiritual significance of Christmas is so dominant that many who are ordinarily indifferent go out of their way to find a religious service. That is part of the miracle of Christmas.

Personally, the exchange of gifts, the decorations in our homes, and the adding of color to drab streets is not a contradiction to the spiritual importance of the season. These traditions and rituals repeated each year help rekindle in our consciousness what happened a long time ago. They help us recall emotions that otherwise would get lost in the past. The simple fact God has come to be with us in Jesus Christ never grows stale. Visual images help tell the story.

The holiday season is a ritual-filled time. Rituals are important. They build solidarity and generate loyalty. Christmas is a ritual-filled day for most of us. One family has a prescribed ritual for the opening of gifts. A family member goes to the pile of gifts under the tree, picks up a gift and gives it to the person whose name is on the tag. The gift is opened while others look on trying to guess what it is. Then they go through the same ritual with the next gift and so on.

Some of the gifts are wrapped in used paper from a previous year. The mother would always say, “Now save the paper. We’ll use it next year.” The world is divided into two kinds of mothers: those who save wrapping paper and those who don’t.

I cannot explain it, but every year it happens. A special quality of Divine Presence invades our world. It is as if a magic wand is waved over the world and everybody and everything becomes different. Year after year the world in some measure stops to listen to the story.

I love the Christmas music. Christmas has to be sung. Music and song began with the first Christmas. The song of Christmas sung by Mary is found in Luke 1:39-55.

Here is a moving account of the mother of John being visited by the mother of Jesus. A spirit of joy and celebration surrounded the births of both John and Jesus. The scene is an unnamed city in the Judean hills. Upon hearing Mary was to give birth to the Messiah, the babe leaped in Elizabeth’s womb. This prenatal activity accents the sovereign will and purpose of God. Elizabeth is inspired by the Holy Spirit and blesses Mary for having been chosen to be the mother of the Lord and for believing and accepting the word spoken to her from God.

Mary’s joy and excitement is expressed in a song. She praises God for the favor bestowed upon a maiden of low estate. Her song proclaims the triumph of God’s purposes for all people everywhere. All the oppressed, poor, and hungry will be blessed.

“He who is mighty has done great things for me, and holy is his name.” sings Mary. Ah yes, that’s the song of Christmas -- God has done great things, and holy is his name. The song contains the essence of the Christmas gospel:

“My soul magnifies the Lord, and my spirit rejoices in God my Savior,… And his mercy is on those who fear him from generation to generation. He has shown strength with his arm, he has scattered the proud in the imagination of their hearts, he has put down the mighty from their thrones, and exalted those of low degree; he has filled the hungry with good things, and the rich he has sent empty away.”

At Christmas we celebrate a mighty act of God. God sends the gift of a child into the world. All the conditions of normal human action and achievement are absent. They’re not there. It is totally, entirely, completely, absolutely the work of God. The Child is a gift of God’s grace.

Of course, every birth is a gift of God’s grace. Every child represents a new potential. Each newborn is a sign God has not given up on the world.

The observation has been made that during times of war and destruction the birth rate increases. Is this accidental? Or is it when the processes of men are engaged in destroying life there is One at work more authentic than the design of the human mind?

A new spirit was released into the world with the birth of Jesus. It’s a mystery beyond our understanding. He who is mighty has done great things for us.

A little girl, dressed as an angel, in a Christmas pageant was told to come down the center aisle. The child asked, “Do you want me to walk or fly?” You feel as though she almost could have flown. Don’t ever lose the wonder and mystery of Christmas.

Every year I’m reminded of those words of the late Peter Marshall: “When Christmas doesn’t make your heart swell up until it nearly bursts and fill your eyes with tears and make you all soft and warm inside then you will know that something inside of you is dead.”

The mystery of Christmas gave a young virgin a song to sing. This was not to be an ordinary birth but a virgin birth. The birth of righteousness, peace and love in this stern world is always a virgin birth. It is never humanity nor the power of mankind that brings it forth. It is always God! God working in and through those who hear and obey.

The new, the holy is to be born. If the new is to be born, then the old is going to have to give way. There is agony in the process as well as joy. Just as there is agony in the womb as it labors to give birth to new life.

Mary will give birth to a holy, eternal Child. The Child Herod could not slaughter. The Child the Roman Empire could not bury. This is God’s Son. The Child who was to be born is the One who may be born again even in us.

O holy Child of Bethlehem, descend to us, we pray; Cast out our sin, and enter in, be born in us today. We hear the Christmas Angels the Great glad tidings tell; 0 come to us Abide with us, Our Lord Emmanuel!

On this Sunday before Christmas Day we move closer to the manger at Bethlehem in our journey of Advent. Bethlehem will not be the end of the journey, only the beginning – not home but the place through which we must pass if we are to reach home at last.

May Christmas put a song in your heart.

“My soul magnifies the Lord, and my spirit rejoices in God my Savior, “He who is mighty has done great things for me, and holy is his name.”

Is there a person who is unable to say that? Repeat with me: “He who is mighty has done great things for me, and holy is his name.” Amen and Amen!

C.S.S. Publishing Company, GOD’S GIFT, by James Garrett