Intro
How did Mary remember what she never experienced?  She is young, a teenager 
when the angel appears before her.  He announces: You will become the mother of 
the Messiah, the Savior of the world, God in human flesh.  

Main Body
The angel’s presence and greeting catches her by surprise; his message does 
not.  Mary wonders how she will become pregnant, for she’s a virgin, never 
having slept with a man.  Still, the message of the coming Messiah does not 
faze her.  

Her song reveals the promise of the Messiah is rooted in her bones.  She echoed 
the songs of Scripture for God’s Old-Covenant people: Her soul proclaims and 
her spirit rejoices.  The Mighty One carried out His mighty deeds for her, 
scattering the proud in the imaginings of their hearts.  

Mary composes the story of Scripture into a new song.  Well, both new and old.  
Did you not find Hannah from our Old Testament reading in Mary’s words?  Mary’s 
mind is resonating with the Messiah.  

Who formed her and filled her with the Promise?  Did her mother make such 
music, with Mary later ringing out in such song?  Anna is preparing the supper 
meal, imprinting Mary as she grew within the womb.

Did her father throw Mary into the air, catching her in his arms, filled with 
delight?  Joachim sings to her the songs of their ancestors, as dinner sizzled 
over the flame.  

Rabbis didn’t teach girls in those days.  Mary’s ear catches her male cousins 
singing of the Messiah—the Promise made to father Abraham long ago.  

Mary’s betrothed, Joseph, is a holy man.  Perhaps, they imagine what life will 
be for them.  They gaze into the sky, dreaming of life after the Promised One 
arrives.

Someone shared the melody emanating from Mary’s lips.  Her song now grows 
stronger as the angel tells her of Elizabeth, her much-older cousin, being 
pregnant.  Elizabeth lived more years than Mary; she is past the age of bearing 
children.  God is at work here!  “Nothing is impossible” with God. 

The core of Mary’s faith in the Messiah, soon to be stirring with life within 
her, is the covenant God gave to Abraham.  The promise to Abraham is her 
promise.  She is part of the people through whom the Messiah will come.  Now, 
she sits stunned.  God will use her as His chosen vessel to bring His salvation 
into the world!

God’s Covenant with Abraham shows God as loving, caring, forgiving, renewing, 
and encouraging.  God promised Abraham a land, the Promised Land.  A populous 
people as the sands on the shore and the stars in the sky would descend from 
him, because of the Promise.  Blessings would abound for all through Abraham 
because of his Descendant.  Now, Mary will bring the promised Descendant into 
the world!

Mary’s melody recalls the many times God showed Himself faithful to His 
Covenant promise.  Her mind relived the experiences of God’s people as she 
carried with her the Hebrew way of remembering, of being brought back to an 
event.  God did scatter the proud in the imaginings of their hearts.  He 
toppled the mighty from their thrones and exalted the lowly.  She is becoming 
living proof.

She will soon become the mother of the Son of God, “I AM,” Yahweh in human 
flesh, the God so holy she feared to speak His name.  Such an honor.  Her head 
spins, and she can only speak a “yes” to God’s messenger.  “I am the Lord’s 
servant.  May your word to me be fulfilled” (Luke 1:38).  The Holy Spirit 
through the spoken Word of the angel does what the Word declares: Mary is 
pregnant.

She now passes her intoned words of remembrance to us!  Her song is now our 
song—the Church’s song.  Her words pull forward the prayers, needs, and 
expectations of the promised Messiah.  We sing, reliving the Divine Promise of 
salvation by God through Abraham’s Descendant.  

Mary’s song reaches forward to us—to all generations born after the Savior’s 
birth, to all who need God’s mercy and forgiveness.  To sing Mary’s song is to 
sing with Mary, with generation after generation of God’s people through the 
centuries, who bow before God in awe and receive His grace. 

The Lord of heaven and earth is eyeing the humble state of His servant.  The 
angel’s words deliver God’s words to Mary.  Her lips cannot remain silent from 
such an event.  She will become the mother of God, God in human flesh.  

God casts His rays of favor on those who don’t rely on themselves, their deeds, 
or supposed righteousness before Him.  His mercy unmasked to Mary through His 
spoken Word, is a foretaste of God’s restoration.  “I am the Lord’s servant.  
May your word to me be fulfilled” (Luke 1:38).  God chooses Mary to bear His 
Son because, in her humility, her heart is not full of herself but empty, 
waiting for God.   

Today, we are all Mary.  We bring nothing to God, for He does not shine with 
favor on us because of who we are in ourselves or what we bring to Him.  Our 
bondage to this fallen world is complete—we are helpless, impoverished, and 
destitute without God.  

For God to recognize us as His “servants” is His doing.  We serve Him because 
His Word and Spirit came, washing us in holy water.  His Word enters our 
hardened ears and changes our sinful flesh into sacred vessels as He lives in 
us.  In His Supper, His body and blood come to us in bread and wine so our 
flesh may be like His.

The Mighty One did His saving deeds: He scattered the proud, toppled the 
mighty, exalted the lowly.  He satisfied the hungry with food, sent the rich 
away with nothing, and remembered to help His servant Israel. 

The deeds of God are His mighty acts of salvation.  For Israel, this focused on 
the Exodus and Passover, God rescuing His people from slavery.  God’s act of 
redemption to come will be different.  God in Mary’s womb, will be born to 
suffer, die, and rise.  

Our Lord’s final act of salvation will be when He returns once more, on the 
Last Day, to resurrect our bodies, as He also rose from the tomb.  Mary is 
blessed because God is using her to bring about His mighty acts of salvation.

“His mercy is from generation to generation on those who fear Him.”  Such 
compassion from God begins and ends with the fear of God.  Mary does not sing 
of a paralyzing fear of punishment but humbled awe.  I deserve death, but God 
gives me life.  We realize what we deserve and who God declares us to be: His 
holy, forgiven child.   

We never outgrow this fear, this realization.  For if we do, we are acting like 
we are God, not His servant.  God’s mercy for the generations is on those who 
fear Him.  

Mercy is the essence of Jesus’ ministry.  He comes as the merciful and 
compassionate Messiah, not as a God of vengeance.  He does not punish His 
enemies for their sins against Him but places himself under the Father’s wrath. 
 He suffers for us.  

God shows His mercy, releasing the fallen creation from its bondage.  He sets 
the captives free, releasing the slaves of Satan, healing the sick, forgiving 
sinners, and raising the dead.  What God did and does to save us cause us to 
fear Him.  

We think “fear” should not be one of our responses.  So, we learn the fall into 
sin also took our understanding of fear as a hostage.  God also comes to redeem 
our fallen experience of fear, setting right what sin made wrong.

Mary’s example brings us to ask: “Who or what am I proclaiming as I prepare for 
Christ to come?”  Mary’s voice sings out: The Mighty One carried out mighty 
deeds for me, and His name is holy.  We can only declare the same truth for 
ourselves because of what God does.  God carries out His mighty deeds for 
chooses us as His own.  

God made us and, because of our sin, comes to remake us through our Savior, 
Jesus Christ.  Life and salvation are ours through God’s astounding love given 
to us in His Son, the promised Messiah.  He redeems us from our sins and makes 
sure we inherit eternal life from the Father.

Like Mary, we do not boast of our humility but confess the truth.  She shows us 
and teaches us how to praise the wonderful goodness of God.  Our worthiness or 
our unworthiness don’t give us cause to praise God.  Only His divine mercy and 
grace. 

Mary’s beautiful song reminds us: every song we sing in God’s house is to be a 
hymn inspired by the Christ-child.  His presence, born among us, redeemed us.  
His continuing presence to us in Word and Sacrament still comes to recreate us 
by His Spirit and Word, through water and word, bread and wine.   

Mary’s song is our song, for we can only proclaim and rejoice in the Lord 
because Christ lives in us and we live in him.  His humility is ours now, which 
means His glory will also be ours when He raises us on the Last Day.

Who taught Mary, so the Promise took root in her bones?  We are unsure.  What’s 
important is recalling, like Mary, we are the children of Promise, Abraham’s 
offspring.  

Conclusion
The Apostle Paul reveals: “Those of you who are baptized into Christ are 
clothed with Christ....  Now, if you belong to Christ, you are Abraham’s 
descendant, heirs according to the promise” (Galatians 3:27, 29).  This day, we 
are all Mary, filled with the presence of God, filled with the salvation of the 
world.  Amen.
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