The angel Gabriel appeared to Mary with the announcement, “Greetings favored one, the Lord is with you!”
Mary did not know what to make of his words, but she knew what to make of him. His reputation preceded him -- the angel Gabriel, the archangel Gabriel to be exact. There were but four archangels - Raphael, Uriel, Michael, and Gabriel. Their reputations preceded them all. But why would an archangel appear to her? It made no sense. Mary had nothing to recommend or distinguish her. Just the opposite, she was a lowly girl.
But on the other hand, this was the archangel Gabriel. He could not be in error. He continued. “Do not be afraid, Mary, for you have found favor with God. You will conceive in your womb and bear a son, and you will name him Jesus...:”
Confusion compounded confusion. First the angel Gabriel was appearing to her, and second, the angel Gabriel was foretelling the impossible. “But how can it be?” Mary stammered. “I am a virgin.” “The Holy Spirit will come upon you,” he assured her. “The child to be born will be called the Son of God.”
Now they say that life can turn on a dime, and without question it can - for better or for worse. But this was pushing the envelope. One minute a lowly girl and the next the mother of the Son of God. But again, this was the archangel Gabriel. Mary could only have been at this point utterly disoriented. But she had her wits about her sufficiently to make one of the greatest leaps of faith in human history. “Here I am, the servant of the Lord; let it be with me according to your will.” Then the archangel Gabriel departed from her.
Now you may or may not be able to relate to this. Personally, I can relate to it. I do not rate an archangel, but I have felt the presence of angels in my life -- dimly, ambiguously -- but I don’t know how else to describe them. And they inspired me to make leaps of faith. If not an angel then perhaps you have experienced a sign or a portend that inspired you to make a leap of faith. But here’s the thing. The angel Gabriel departed from her. My angels departed from me. Your sign or portend passed. Nothing remained but our leaps of faith, which we were left to ourselves to live out.
Mary then was left to herself with her hard to believe pregnancy. Her finance Joseph didn’t believe one word of Mary’s story. You have to admit, it was quite a large pill to swallow. He was a decent man, though. He refused to indulge his feelings of betrayal. He refused to be vindictive. He planned to end the engagement without scandal….until an angel appeared to him and verified Mary’s story.
Then there was the math. We do that kind of math today. We hear of a baby being born “prematurely” seven months after the wedding. And we smirk. So it was with Mary -- recently engaged and sporting a baby bump. And she couldn’t exactly tell her story to the world. Better to countenance the smirks -- and the gossip and the dirty looks.
Of course, there were consolations along the way. Mary’s kinswoman Elizabeth had her own encounter with the angel Gabriel and was pregnant with John the Baptist. She was a safe harbor for Mary. And when Mary sought that safe harbor, Elizabeth greeted her, “Blessed are you among women, and blessed is the fruit of your womb.” Yes, there were consolations that served as confirmations of her leap of faith. But these were the exceptions and not the rule. The rule was hardship.
We will soon hear the oft repeated story of Jesus’ birth. Maybe Mary, when she heard of the imperial order to register for a census in far off Bethlehem, felt relief to escape from the harsh judgment that surrounded her. But the journey could not have been an easy one. Just the opposite, it would have been difficult, terribly difficult - in the last days of her pregnancy astride a donkey for a hundred miles.
Then after knocking on the door of every inn in Bethlehem, to be left to labor in a stable. We tend to sentimentalize it. We shouldn’t sentimentalize it. It’s not meant to be sentimentalized. It would have been painful, frightening, and dangerous, not to mention cold and dark. In this way was the Son of God born and the announcement of the archangel Gabriel fulfilled. There was at least the consolation and confirmation of the shepherds and the angels.
But the thing about leaps of faith is that they set you on a new course. You never return to where you were before them. So it was with Mary. The announcement of the archangel Gabriel was fulfilled, but for Mary it was just the beginning, and the hardship behind her was nothing compared to the hardship before her. She had great hopes for her son, but those hopes were to be dashed. Days after he emerged from obscurity, he garnered enemies, powerful enemies, enemies intent upon his demise. She tried desperately to deter him from his path. That’s a horrible position to be in, when you try desperately to deter something -- something unthinkable, something unbearable -- then come to confront the reality, against every fiber of your being, that it can’t be deterred. That might be the hardest reality that can be confronted.
She landed at the foot of his cross, her son in his death agony, an agony compounded by his witness to his mother’s grief. He did what he could for her. He called to his disciple John to care for her as if she were his own mother.
And finally, at long last, at the other side of hardship, the resurrection, where at last the fullness of it broke in upon her. When at last she knew that her son, the Son of God, had bequeathed humanity salvation from sin. Mary lived out her days with John caring for her surrogate son as he ministered to the nascent church he founded. Thus was Mary’s leap of faith.
So what can we learn from Mary’s leap of faith about our own? We learn that after the mysterious impetuses that inspire us to make them, we will be left to ourselves. We learn they will involve hardship. We learn there will be consolations and confirmations along the way. We learn we will never return to the people we once were. And we learn too, specifically, about the power of example. If that lowly girl could make that leap of faith; if she could see it through as she did, then we’ve got no excuse. We can see ours through as well.
What’s more, she would want us to. She foresaw that all generations would call her blessed precisely so we could recognize hers as an example to follow. And so it is apt this second Sunday of Advent that we honor that blessed woman by following her example. May our souls, like hers, magnify the Lord. Amen.