Luke 1:46–50 (NKJV)
46 And Mary said: “My soul magnifies the Lord, 47 And
my spirit has rejoiced in God my Savior. 48 For He has regarded the lowly state
of His maidservant; For behold, henceforth all generations will call me
blessed. 49 For He who is mighty has done great things for me, And holy is His
name. And His mercy is on those who fear Him from generation to generation.”
Christmas is a time to
reflect on the particular blessings that God has bestowed on each of us and to
lift up praise and thanks to God. We see this modeled in Mary’s Magnificat –
her song of praise written while staying with Zacharias and Elizabeth.
Has it ever struck you that
God gave a gift to Mary that He did not give to any other human being on earth?
Consider this for a moment: don’t just let the Christmas story pass you by;
consider what’s happening. God chose Mary to be the mother of our Lord. God
chose Mary – a girl in the city of Nazareth who was betrothed to a man named
Joseph; who had a sister named Salome; who had a mother and father whose names
are not recorded. God chose Mary – a girl who had a certain color hair and
eyes; who was of a quite definite height and weight; who had skin of a
particular shade. God chose Mary.
Now doesn’t that seem a
trifle unfair? Why Mary? Why should she get the honor? Shouldn’t Mary perhaps
feel a little guilty for being chosen? Don’t you and I have the right to be a
little jealous, perhaps?
After all, let’s consider
this: here God bestows on Mary a privilege that He had bestowed and would
bestow on no other woman ever in all
of human history. God chose Mary. Shouldn’t Mary feel guilty? Shouldn’t she
realize that this was a trifle unfair and bemoan the gift that God had bestowed
on her? Shouldn’t she perhaps have flogged herself? Felt guilty every time that
babe leapt in her womb or sucked at her breast? Been apologetic to the various
other women she met in the course of her life? “Sorry, sorry, sorry – so much
wish it could have been you… Sorry.”
And shouldn’t you be a little
jealous? After all, because God chose Mary, He didn’t choose any other to have
this honor. Have you considered that? God did not choose Mary’s sister Salome.
He did not choose Herodias – for which we’re grateful! He didn’t choose Mary
the wife of Clopas or Mary Magdalene or Elizabeth or Anna the prophetess or
Susanna or Joanna the wife of Chuza. God chose Mary. And consider that what
this means: it means that God didn’t choose you. If you’re a woman, God passed
you over; He simply did not choose you to be the mother of Jesus. God chose
Mary. And, if you’re a man, God eliminated you from the running before you were
even out of the gate. God chose Mary. Shouldn’t you be a little jealous?
I ask these questions because
they have great relevance for us on Christmas day. You who stand here today
have been given many remarkable gifts from God. If you are in Christ, you have
been given the gift of salvation, a gift some men will never receive. If you
are an American citizen, you have been given gifts of liberty, constitutional
government, and incredible prosperity, gifts that others, who remain subject to
tyrants and who are starving even as we speak, can only long for. If you are a
husband, then you have been given the gift of a wife, a gift men some will
never have. If you are a mother, then you have been given the gift of children,
a gift some women will never enjoy. If you have Christmas gifts at home, then
you have been given a measure of prosperity that millions have never known. Should
you feel guilty?
And some of you aren’t
getting the same gifts as others. Perhaps your brother got the Lego set you
wanted? Perhaps the neighbors drove up in their brand-new Cadillac Escalade?
Perhaps you find yourself unmarried still? Perhaps that other lady just
announced that she’s having a baby and you’ve never had one? Perhaps, perhaps,
perhaps… Perhaps you should feel jealous?
But guilt and jealousy are
both unbecoming and sinful responses to the Lord’s gifts. God is the Creator;
God is the Giver of all good gifts; God is the Sovereign Lord; and God is not
fair. He simply does not give gifts equally. But that inequality is not to move
us to guilt and jealousy but to praise and thanksgiving. Listen to Mary’s
Magnificat:
My soul magnifies the Lord, And my spirit has rejoiced
in God my Savior. For He has regarded the lowly state of His maidservant; For
behold, henceforth all generations will call me blessed. For He who is mighty
has done great things for me, And holy is His name. And His mercy is on those
who fear Him from generation to generation.”
Notice, first, that guilt is
not the way to respond to God’s gifts. After all, none of us deserve the gifts
which God gives us. We all of us have forfeited God’s favor – including Mary.
God chose Mary in His mercy, Mary
tells us. And in this mercy, God gives sinful, undeserving men and women gifts;
He lavishes kindnesses; He bestows graces – to one this and to another that. And
the one who fears God learns to receive these graces not with guilt but with
gratitude. Solomon reminds us, “The
blessing of the Lord makes one
rich, And He adds no sorrow with it” (Pr 10:22). So today receive the gifts
that God has given with praise and thanksgiving. Lift up your heads! Don’t feel
guilty – give praise to God! Don’t feel guilty – give thanks to God! And in
that praise and thanks imitate Him by loving those with less.
Jealousy is just as
unbecoming as guilt. Our Lord forbids covetousness – for covetousness, greediness,
makes us small of heart and small of soul. The angels rejoice with Mary – they
who long to know the things we know and cannot; Elizabeth rejoices with Mary –
she who was chosen to give birth merely to the forerunner, not the Messiah;
Anna rejoices with Mary – she who had never had a child and whose husband had
been taken from her when a young woman. They were large of soul, rejoicing in
the good gifts that God had given to Mary. God chose Mary – and they rejoiced!
So Christmas is here –
rejoice, give thanks, and sing. Put away guilt; put away petty jealousy;
rejoice in the good gifts of God, sing of His mercy, and share His kindnesses
with others.