Advent 4 / Year B
I recall vividly the moment in early 1991
when my wife told me she was pregnant with our first child. We had been married for two years and were
living in our first house, which we purchased several months earlier. Because we were actively trying not to have a
baby, my initial reaction was bewilderment.
Like Mary, I said, “How can this be?”
As the shock dissipated, secondary emotions began to fill the void –
panic and fear.
We had a lot going for us back in the
day. Educated and employed, our careers
came with demanding and quirky schedules.
We were married, but didn’t have a lot of family around able to offer
critical support. We had a home, but
needed two incomes to pay the mortgage.
I did not feel ready to be a parent and could not imagine for the life
of me how it was all going to work out.
I remember a wise parishioner telling me we are all born into families
whose parents had doubts, yet they made it work for us, so too I would make it
work for my child.
Any person who does not receive the news of
pregnancy – at least the first pregnancy – with an element of hesitation and
doubt does not fully understand (understandably) the implications. When I do premarital counseling I tell
couples I am not going to attempt to describe the challenges of being a parent
for the first time because there is no way to express it adequately. I just say to them, “After the birth of your
first child, let me know if I could have said or done anything to prepare you
for it.” To a person they have come back
to me and said “No!” Parenthood is a
daunting challenge, even in the best of circumstances, and yet we all find a way
to make it work.
This morning we read the story known as The
Annunciation, when the Archangel Gabriel tells Mary she has been chosen to give
birth to God’s Child. I am not sure
which is more frightening for her, being in the presence of an Archangel or the
message he conveys. Surely both are
overwhelming for a young, unmarried woman in her early teens. The text tells us she is “perplexed”, but
Gabriel picks up on something deeper: “Do not be afraid, for you have found
favor with God.”
Gabriel is allotted the bulk of the
dialogue in this brief passage. Mary has
but two lines to speak, still they are memorable: “How can this be, since I am
still a virgin” and, once Gabriel lays out the plan, “Here am I, the servant of
the Lord; let it be with me according to your word.” The Archangel’s clinching argument is this:
“With God, nothing is impossible.”
What at first appeared to be mission
impossible becomes mission possible through God’s activity and Mary’s
consent. Her willingness and cooperation
have made Mary a model of Christian devotion and openness to God’s plan for
one’s life. When in your life have you
had this kind of experience – a movement from mission impossible to mission
possible?
The truth is life is filled with a lot of
occasions feeling like mission impossible, some are more significant than
others. It may be as commonplace as
wondering how you are going to manage everything on the day’s ‘To-Do’
list. But of more significance, it may
involve figuring out how to embrace parenthood.
I have known people who have gone through this shift during a job or
career change; either voluntary or on account of termination. I see it in folks who receive devastating news
from a doctor. I sense it in people who
must learn to live after a divorce. And
I recognize it in those who find themselves alone after the death of a
spouse. Each feels impossible and each
is… apart from God.
If, prior to any of these kinds of things
unfolding in our lives, Gabriel appeared to announce what was about to happen
to us, I suspect we (like Mary) might say, “How can this be?” How can we get to a place where we (like
Mary) can say, “Let it be to me according to your word”?
I think the ability to see into the future
would be a frightful thing. When I look
back over my life and consider the many ways I have been blessed, if I could
have seen all of this when I was starting out I would have felt unworthy. And when I consider the many hardships,
disappointments, hurts, and pains I have experienced, if I could have seen them
coming in advance I never would have been able to get out of bed in the
morning. You see, the thing missing in
being able to see the future is the sense of how God equips us to manage what
at first feels unmanageable, how God sustains us in moments of need, how God
makes the impossible possible.
Think about how you felt on Thursday, March
12 – the day all in-person worship and parish activities were shut down due the
pandemic. Within days everything stopped
– schools, jobs, all non-essential events.
Back then we thought it might be a two-week ordeal. And while things have eased and opened a bit
sense then, these are still challenging and difficult times. Back in March, who would have thought this is
where we would be at Christmas and who would have thought it would be possible
to endure all we have been through?
Praise the Lord, God is in the business of making the impossible
possible.
And now we turn our attention to Juniper
Mae who is to receive the sacrament of Baptism.
Her very presence here this morning is a testimony of God’s desire to
make the impossible possible. I suspect
every day her life will bear witness to this truth. She truly is a miracle child and more than
once, when being given an update about her natal activities, I said, “How can
this be?” Well, because with God all
things are possible.
I began this sermon by reminiscing on the
birth of Ellen, my first daughter. By
coincidence, she and Juniper’s mother - Christa - were born on the same day…
September 5, 1991. Christa has already
done much for St. Paul’s: acolyte, nursery, vestry, administrator. Christa will be the first to tell you I love
to give her a hard time… which is not all that hard to do. But I hope she knows I think of her as being
a surrogate daughter. Given this, I lay
claim to being Juniper’s surrogate Grandfather.
I can’t wait to see her in a Nativity Pageant, bringing a beloved pet to
be blessed, receiving communion at the Altar Rail, searching for leprechauns,
hunting for Easter eggs then sitting on the tower door steps with me for a
bazillion pictures, standing on the Chancel steps and singing “He’s got the
whole world” led by Sarah Blake, running up to me after church showing me what she
created in Sunday School.
Christa, Josh, always remember God makes
possible what seems impossible. And
always remember to remind Juniper she is the most powerful, most profound, and
most poignant example of this hope and truth I have ever known!
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