Reflection
Mary was told that she will give birth to the Forever King who had been promised as the Saviour of God’s people. In response, she asked the obvious question — “How can this be?” — followed by her own particular impediment: “How can I have a baby since I am a virgin?”
Whatever our situation, we all have our own impediments that we are quick to show God as proof of our incompatibility to his plan, to being used by him. Oh, we of little faith. Nothing is impossible with God. Gabriel told Mary (and tells us): “No word from God will ever fail”. Nothing is impossible with him. After all, this is the God who does the impossible, who creates the world out of nothing, who speaks and it is so, who holds the paradox of three persons within his one united self. His word is living and active, the word of life. And in fact, Mary’s impediment is crucial to God’s plan — it shows that he is the Lord of the impossible made possible through his own person, love, and sacrifice.
Mary has a choice in how she responds. Will she respond like Zechariah did at the altar of incense when Gabriel showed up with his news? Will she cling to her impediment as Zechariah clung to his? Mary responds in trust of the Lord. “I am the Lord’s servant, may your word to me be fulfilled”. In the face of possible ridicule, a potentially broken engagement, a loss of all earthly security — a good name, a good husband, a safe home — Mary trusted God, clung to his name and yielded to him. May we do the same; may we cling to the Lord Jesus Christ, who gives us a good name, a family, and a safe home for eternity.
Prayer
Lord God, you overcame all impediments to come to be with your people and to save us. Teach us to respond to you not with our impediments, but with obedient faith. Amen.