Year B Advent 4 December 21, 2014 The Conduit of Grace
Transcription
Year B Advent 4 December 21, 2014 The Conduit of Grace
Year B-Advent 4 Decernber 2L,2AL4 All Saints Episcopal Church The Rev. Laura C. Truby The Conduit of Grace The fourth Sunday of Advent always brings us to the Annunciation to a Virgin. The angel greeted a young woman, who was perplexed by and pondered his words-"The Lord is with you...you have found favor with God. And now, you will conceive and bear a son, and you will name him Jesus." How astonishing! And Maq/s reply equally astonishing! lt is impossible to overestimate what hung on the answer of this young woman. When Mary said to the angel Gabriet, "let it be with me according to your word," the indeterminate waiting of humanity ended and the precise, personal waiting of the Virgin began. Maqy's willingness to say, "Here I am, the servant of the Lord," was the opening that would change all human life, for God's humble non-violence, the Prince of Peace entered the world. The true character of God would be "the mystery that was kept for long ages but was now disclosed." God asks Mary if she wishes to do this; God will never impose or do violence to another. Mar1y's "yes" was a trustful handing over of her future without conditions. Through her willingness, God crossed the impossible barrier between divinity and humanity. lt happened very quietly, in a small house, in a smalltown, in a smal! country. With her "fiat" (her let it be) the incarnation began.....a mystery beyond all understanding that was about to be disclosed. No one saw the Annunciation, yet no event has been painted by so many artists. There is a very large and ancient icon (c.1120) of the Annunciation that was taken from the cathedra! in Novgorod which now hangs in an art gallery. lt has lost none of its sacred aura, and draws us into the holy silence of this wonderful encounter. It portrays the archangel Gabriel as a figure of calm solemnity. He raises one arm gently, but emphatically in blessing. Mary is not seated, as if to signify her continual state of attention to the messages of God. She does not look at the angel. Her head is bowed as she listens intently. ln a L5th century painting of the Annunciation, El Greco wanted to show that this worldy insignificance and quietness existed only on one level. On the high heavenly level, the annunciation aroused the most intense of jubilations. The skies were alive with music when Jesus was born, conceived I but El Greco depicts the Nazareth skies being just as lyrical when Jesus was The angels cannot fully understand the incarnation, but they know absolutely that this is a triumph of God's goodness and grace. Heaven is in a state of jubilation. Jesus is grace made visible. Mary, the conduit of grace, is immersed in the radiant light spilling down from the outspread wings of the Holy Spirit. Gabriel folds his hands; his part is done. Mary opens hers; her part is beginning. As Sister Wendy Beckett, the art nun says, "There is a connection, surely, between the silence of Mary and the overwhelming jubilation of heaven. When we are quiet, steadying our mind, looking at the things that matter, the Lord can give himself to us. Advent urges us to be still and let heaven rejoice." Whenever we look toward God, toward that mystery of his Son, we discover God's startling grace is just as eager to invade our lives. Since the third century A.D.there have been monastics praising God at the foot of Mount Sinai. The Monastery of 5t. Catherine is the oldest inhabited place of Christian prayer in the world. lt was here that Moses Iooked at the mystery of the burning bush that was not consumed. ln their meditations, the monks came to see the burning bush as an image of the Virgin Mother. There is an icon that conveys that confluence of ideas. The bush burned but was never consumed, and this too seemed almost a prophery of Mary's virgin motherhood, two contradictions resolved in one. Mary's unimaginable closeness to her son fills us with wonder. Yet she was a simple human being, just as we are. God could do great things in her because she gave God absolute freedom. The Church has constantly been drawn to praise Our Lady in poetic terms. Perhaps we come close to the poetry if we just dwell silently in our hearts on the thought of the desert and the bush alight with flames, and yet still green and fruitful. When the monks at St. Catherine Monastery at Mt. Sinaidepicted Mary as the burning bush, they painted a bright circle at her heart, in which stood Jesus. This simple and sober icon of The Virgin of the Sign, as it is called, from the mid-16th century is not meant realistically. Mary is not holding her child. This is the mystical image of Christ Emmanuel. This is the Word who existed from the beginning and who came into our time through his Holy Mother, a living sign given that "God is with us." ln this beautiful icon, Our Lady's face is impassive. She seems eager only that we should look at Jesus-Emmanuel. Her very essence is prayer, is intercession, is surrender of all that she is to the grace of God. We tend to think that none of us can expect to reach this ideal of complete trust. Yet when we were baptized, the Trinity itself took up residence in our spirit; and the Word of God is always present, to be spoken through our lives, as he was so perfectly through Mar/s. It is not because we are holy that the Lord gives himself to us, but simply because he loves us. He wants to draw us into the happiness and freedom that his mother knew. We see her here motionless, holding up her arms in intercession, the palms of her hands turned towards heaven. This figure was called an Orante: it represented prayer, hope and faith that could sustain one through any adversity. Mary became identified with this figure of prayer that began with her fiat, "Let it be to me according to your Word." ln what aspect of your life might God be calling you to do the same? To trust him completely? To surrender your purposes? This is how you become a conduit of 6od's grace. willto his "Our Lady of the Sign" is a sign of the constant presence of God with us, and the gift that has been given to us, to live within the brightness of that sign, Jesus. We notice how Our Lady in this icon does not look at her son. She looks obliquely out at the world. She does not ask to see. She accepts that her hands are empty. lt is because they are empty that she can receive so much. Her body and her heart are Amen. full. This is our noble mother, Mary.