Many
of you will know, or recall, that each of the candles on the Advent Ring has a theme
linked to it: with the fourth candle linked to both Mary and to the theme of hope.
With Mary’s song, known by many as the Magnificat, which we have just heard,
hope is a theme clearly appropriate to Mary, being, as she was, a member of the
Jewish community who were longing for the Messiah who would release them from the
subjugation and oppression of Roman rule under which they were living.
Mary’s
song is has become the song of all who hope for a changed world, a ‘better
world’. It is the song for all who pray that a world in which the mantra that
each person is a beloved child of God might become reality, as the Magnificat and the just and gentle rule of God are lived
out in the way in which we treat, speak to and pray for each other. The world
where the Magnificat is truth is a world where the promise that we are all made
in the image of God is lived out with arms laid down, with open and honest
conversation, with trusting hearts, with a passionate desire for equity and a fulfilling
life made possible for all.
Mary’s
song is a song of hope… it isn’t
necessarily sweet or lovely though… just as I imagine Mary’s life was not sweet
and lovely either. It is a song of change and disruption. The world is turned upside-down
and the comfortable place of those who are in places of authority and power
will be disturbed as the situations they hold will be taken away from them. Those
who occupy positions in which they are nothing will be raised up. All will be
disrupted.
We
say these words each evening at Evening Prayer; we hear them most Fourth Sundays
in Advent, often at Christmas and at our Patronal Festival… do we realise their
power? Do we realise – as in both to understand and to make happen – the radical
change that this song speaks of? I love the possibilities that it offers – but also,
I will confess, I also fear what it demands of me when I say it, when I hear
it, when I sing it.
I think
of the young woman who first praised God with the words we have heard. I think of
what needs to change in our world today to make the Magnificat a reality. I think
of what I could do, what I need to do, what we need to do – all Christian people
– to speak peace, to speak love and to speak hope into lives blighted by
poverty, oppression, iniquity, injustice and I could go on. Think of what words
you might sing.
You’ll
know the hymn, When I survey the wondrous
cross by Isaac Watts, and published three hundred and five years ago, this
hymn ends, as I am sure some of you will know, ‘love so amazing, so divine, demands my life, my soul, my all’. I know
that sometimes all that needs to be ‘done’ in the world can feel overwhelming –
and I imagine that poor Mary, believed to be not much more than a child herself
by our contemporary standards, Mary must have been pretty overwhelmed too when
she was told she was to be the mother of the Messiah – and yet, and yet…
Mary
gave her life, Mary gave her soul, Mary gave her all, to bringing this child to
birth, to raising him, to teaching and training him in the faith, along with
Joseph too – so that when the time was right, Jesus would know he was loved, he
would know he was cherished, he would know he was the Son of God as well as her
son too – and he would be able to give his life, his soul, his all as well.
If
we are overwhelmed with what needs to be ‘done’ to make our world a better
place, then, as Mary did, we need to begin with what it possible for us – and live
with hope that the small things that we do will contribute to the whole. We may
not be called to give birth to the Son of God – can you imagine what to put on
the birth certificate under father – we may not be called to give birth to the
Son of God but we can contribute by bringing his kingdom to birth, by living
with hope: with arms laid down, with open and honest conversation, with
trusting hearts, with a passionate desire for equity and a fulfilling life made
possible for all.
We
have heard these lines today: And they shall live secure, for now he shall be great to the ends of the
earth; and he shall be the one
of peace. They were in our first reading from the Prophecy of Micah,
when he spoke of Bethlehem in Ephrathah being the place from whence the Messiah
would come, and also what the Messiah would be like. Micah was speaking hope to
the people of Israel – the people from whom Mary came, the people from whom Joseph
came, the people from whom Jesus himself came. These people were longing for a
world that was different – where they could live free from oppression and
hatred – and where they would be restored to the presence of God. There are
many people longing for such a world today – we hear of them each day on our
news and read of them in our newspapers.
We
each live with hope in our hearts for a world that is ‘better’. God has given
us the means to make it so – by faith and action. Many of you, I know, give
time, energy, money and prayer to making this world a better place – and I thank
you and encourage you in all that you already do. Can I ask this of you too
though in these coming days: keep alive the gift of hope in your heart, kindle
it and be inspired by it. Listen to hope’s encouragement and hope’s affirmation;
listen to hope’s song and hope’s meaning. Let the hope that belonged to the
people of Israel be your hope too – that our world will be changed and that people
will all live with arms laid down, with open and honest conversation, with
trusting hearts, with a passionate desire for equity and a fulfilling life made
possible for all.
Amen.