25 March 2024
St.
Athanasius Lutheran Church
Holy Monday Vespers
Vienna, VA
Holy Monday Meditation
Text:
Luke 1:26-38
March 25th is the day the church remembers and
celebrates the Annunciation of Our Lord - the day when the angel Gabriel came
to the virgin Mary and spoke to her the Word of God:
that she would be a mother. But not just a mother, the mother
of Jesus, the mother of the Saviour, the mother of
God.
Since this day falls during Holy Week, our
celebration is subdued. But at the same time it seems quite appropriate that it
should fall in Holy Week, for it is for this week, and what is done this week,
that the Son of God took our human nature: to restore our human nature. That by
His dying and rising, we who die might also rise to life with Him. That we
might live again as the men and women we were created to be.
That we don’t - that we don’t live as the men and women
we were created to be - is evident. Surely, we sin in
many and various ways, but we also sin against the very manhood and womanhood
our Lord has given to us. In our world today we see men becoming women and
women becoming men. We see not just the fact, but also the promotion, of
mothers to kill their babies, and of scourge fathers abandoning their wives,
children, and families. We know this should not be, and yet it is. Lord, have
mercy upon us.
But thanks be to God it is not so everywhere and
in all places. There are women who rejoice in being mothers, and fathers who
faithfully serve their families. It was so with Mary. She would fulfill her
womanly vocation, that for which her body was designed and created, by
conceiving a bearing a child. This was good news! But the even better news was
that she was also given another vocation - of being the mother of the Saviour, the promised Messiah. Through her the Son of God
would receive His human nature. She could have said no, as so many today say no
to bearing a child. But instead, her soul magnified the Lord, and her spirit
rejoiced in God her Saviour, as we will sing in just
a moment. I am the servant of the Lord, she said. A task that
though joyful, would not be easy.
And the Son she would bear would also be the
servant of the Lord. And for Him, too, it would not be easy. He would be the
suffering servant. He would fulfill His vocation by laying down His life for
the life of the world. He would be the perfect servant of the Lord where we are
not, and He would be the servant of the Lord in serving us. For we have a God
who not only demands perfection and righteousness, but gives it. For we could
not, we could never, be perfect and righteous, just as Mary could not and could
never conceive while still a virgin. But she did, and we are, for as the angel
Gabriel told Mary, nothing is impossible with God.
So the Son of God is enfleshed, incarnated, this day of His Annunciation. The Son of God becomes a son of man, that we sons and daughters of man might be sons of God in Him. And at the end of this week, we hear why, as the darkness and death of Good Friday become the life and light of Easter. The life that began in the womb of a heretofore unknown virgin, nailed to a cross, and then risen, that all might have hope in Him. Hope of life now, and hope of life forever. That along with Mary, our souls, too, magnify the Lord and rejoice in God our Saviour. Words we now rise to sing . . .