I
love to teach Sunday School. The last two weeks have been about Mary,
Jesus' mother. I was once told that the best lessons you teach are the ones
you've best learned. For me, this has been the best Christmas lesson ever.
The
first Mary week I taught my college girls all the traditional parts about Mary
being young and ordinary and obedient. It was good and convicting.
The second week we dove in to what it might've been like to actually PARENT
(verb) Jesus. Mary usually gets the "perfect, hands-folded, blue
bath-robed, angelic mother" award as she kneels next to a manger
holding a silent sleeping baby. We love her for giving birth to
Jesus. We forget to even consider the other experiences she had with
Jesus. The Bible tells us about them.
While
there are beautiful lessons on friendship as we watch Mary and Elizabeth
interact (Luke 1:39-45), it's what happens right after that part where God started to get me
with this lesson. Elizabeth speaks Spirit-filled Truth over Mary and her
baby and Mary's previous willingness turns into precious rejoicing. In the next
nine verses she sings a beautiful prayer (Luke 1:46-55). I
saw that in my Study Bible there are 38 Old Testament verses and 12 New
Testament verses listed in the cross-references for Mary’s song. Mary knew the Scriptures. She didn’t necessarily quote the
Scriptures, but as she sang, the Truth of them is what came out. I love this
quote about Mary's song, "The song reveals that Mary was a
learner of God before she became a disciple of Christ….she was confident that
God would come through.” – Women’s Evangelical Commentary New Testament,
147.
Mary
knew and BELIEVED the Scriptures….and so she trusted.
In
Luke 2:15-20 we see another famous Mary scene. She’s recovering from
childbirth. The shepherds hear about Jesus from thousands of angels and
come looking for Him. When they burst in [for real, anyone burst into your room soon after you gave birth?] they start telling their story, that the angels told them that this
baby was a Savior, that He was Christ, that He was the Lord. Everyone who heard
them say this craziness "wondered" (18). While they wondered,
Mary "treasured" (19). I learned that to treasure
means “to guard, keep. To preserve, keep safe, close.”
Do you have any words or memories that you keep? They are treasured in
your memory because you keep them close by remembering and rehearsing. I want
to be a woman who is quick to treasure what matters even while others are
wondering if it matters. Luke 2:51 is the next time Mary treasures and this
time it's after she and Joseph find Jesus at the temple after losing Him. [There are a thousand things that blow my
mind about even imagining to be the mother of the Son of God, but losing him on a family trip has gotta be close to the top. Seriously, can you
imagine?]
Now
this is the heart of the Mary lesson for me. From this point we see her a
few more times in Scripture. First at the wedding in Cana (John 2:1-12), she's adorable here.
I love her. In Mark we are told that shortly after he left home to start
His ministry His family went to get him because they thought he was "out
of His mind" (Mark 3:21). In Mary's defense, the verse just before
that said that the crowd around Him was so big that He "couldn't even eat.” And
we all know nothing makes a momma crazier than when her child needs to
eat. As the tension thickens she and her
other sons go to speak to Him and only get as far as the edge of the
crowd. He won't see her. As Jesus uses his earthly family
to make an eternal lesson (Mark 3:31-35,
Luke 8:19-21) I can only imagine Mary. Here we set aside our sweet little
Manger Mary. See instead a mother who is
confused and angry and very quickly nearing “I’ve
had it up to here!” mode. We don’t see how she reconciles her fleshly
expectations of Him with what she is coming to understand is His unique God-ordained
calling, but she does. It’s hard for every mother to transition from parenting
a child to supporting a young adult. For
this mother, it must’ve been a monumental lesson in submission. Here is where her lesson on treasuring
must’ve kicked in. As she stood unsummoned at the edge of a crowd or heard the
talk going around town about what her child was up to, these are the Truths she
had carefully protected that surely came to her troubled mind:
He is Savior,
He is Christ,
He is Lord,
He is the bringer of great
joy for all people,
He is doing His Father’s
business.
Mary
follows her son to the terrible cross (John
19:25-27) and to the amazing grave (Luke
24:1-12). Jesus died. And Jesus rose from the dead. For 40 days He cared
for His followers and gave them the seeds of assurance that would root and grow
to bear entire generations of new faith. Then he went back to heaven as His
mother watched. As he disappeared into the clouds did she close her eyes and
remember the same sky years earlier filled with a remarkable star? Did it seems
like lifetimes away? Did she treasure
again the words the shepherds spoke of Him? I can’t imagine and can’t begin to
put it to these mere words. Her life was
remarkable and difficult and miraculous.
As his followers walked away from their very last time to lay physical
eyes on Jesus, we last lay our eyes on Mary. “They all met together and were constantly united in prayer, along with Mary the mother of Jesus,
several other women, and the brothers of Jesus.”
Acts 1:14 NLT
Some versions say the followers “continued in one accord.” Continue
literally means to endure, “to remain,
tarry, to continue with someone, to cleave faithfully to someone, referring to
those who insist on something or to stay close to someone.” Imagine Mary’s prayers in this room. I know this post is long, but take a few
minutes to fold your hands and imagine your head covered in our favorite baby
blue Mary color. Bow your head and
imagine her memories, her treasures, her pain, her acceptance and joy. What would she have prayed? Imagine the joy
of seeing her treasures anew and spiritually fulfilled. Here Mary is making the
choice to follow God’s Son as HER Savior, to submit to a plan that caused her
great pain and loss but will bring great joy for ALL PEOPLE, to be about the
Father’s business. The mother who
insisted on seeing her son and protecting him from what would certainly bring
him earthly harm now is insisting on spiritual endurance.
There are just so many ways that she encourages me:
I must
treasure the eternal, so that when my faith encounters bumps I am ready.
There
will be bumps in my faith journey. That’s not the end.
Sorrow
is a part of every meaningful faith journey. The joy is worth it.
Success
is not the goal of my journey. Relating to the Savior is.
Everything
worthwhile comes from that discipline of relating. Insist on staying close.
As I’ve studied about Mary for the last weeks, this
is my favorite quote about her;
But
her heart was true, and from the beginning to the day of Pentecost, she
pondered in her heart the meaning of her many puzzling experiences until the
light came. – ISBE, biblehistory.net
“We also have the prophetic message as something
completely reliable, and you will do well to pay attention to it, as to a light
shining in a dark place, until the day dawns and the morning star
rises in your hearts.”
2 Peter 1:19 NIV
Rejoicing over the Morning Star. Merry Christmas!
The word studies in this post are quoted from The Complete Word Study Dictionary New Testament by Spiros Zodhiates, p. 958 (treasure) and 952 (continue).
No comments:
Post a Comment