I recently subscribed to an e-mail newsletter from Bible Gateway that focuses on the Advent season. Here is one I particularly enjoyed.
I am the Lord's Servant
by Nancy Guthrie
It's
hard to imagine how frightening it must have been for teenage Mary to
see an angel and hear him speaking to her. The Bible says that "Gabriel
appeared to her and said, 'Greetings, favored women! The Lord is with
you!' Confused and disturbed, Mary tried to think what the angel could
mean. 'Don't be afraid, Mary,' the angel told her, 'for you have found
favor with God!'" (Luke 1:28-30). We can't help but wonder what the angel looked like and what he sounded like.
As
frightening as it must have been to see and hear an angel speaking to
her, it must have been even more frightening for Mary to process what
the angel was telling her--that she was going to become pregnant, even
though she had never been intimate with a man. This would be a scandal
in her village. Everyone would whisper about her. She would be shunned
and perhaps sent away by her fiance, Joseph, because he would think she
had been unfaithful to him. And yet, even though she probably had a
million questions and concerns, Mary responded to the angel by welcoming
whatever God wanted to do. She said, "I am the Lord's servant. May
everything you have said about me come true" (Luke 1:38).
In a sense she said to God, "I'm yours. You can do anything you want
with me," even though she must have known that this situation would be
very hard for her, for Joseph, and for her whole family.
It's
easy to label what we consider "good things" in our lives as gifts from
God and to welcome them with gratitude. But when difficult things
happen, we don't look at them as part of God's good plan for us. Mary's
example shows us we can also welcome those things we would not
necessarily label "good," confident that God's gifts sometimes come in
perplexing and even painful packages. When we belong to God, we know he
will use whatever he allows into our lives for good. Somehow, in God's
hands, these things also become gifts of his grace toward us.
It
takes faith--faith to rest in who God is and his love for us; faith to
be confident that he is doing something good in and through our
difficult circumstances--to see the hard things in our lives as gifts of
God's grace.
Prayer
God,
give us faith to surrender ourselves to you even in the hard places of
life. We want to be your servants. We believe that anything you ask of
us will be good and right because you love us. Fill us with faith to
trust you with whatever you ask of us.
No comments:
Post a Comment