Wednesday, April 1, 2015

Mary and Easter

During the Christmas season I spoke on Mary and why we should not venerate (or worship) her but that we should hold her memory in great honor, as that is what the Scripture teaches. (Luke 1:42) One of the reasons that I tried to highlight as grounds for her deserving honor is her example of faith in the word of God. This is evident in how she received the message delivered her by the angel Gabriel. Her response was one of great faith as she submitted to God’s plan, “May it be done unto me as you have said.”(Luke 1:38)

As I began to study in preparation for Easter Sunday I was again reminded of Mary and the honor due her as the faithful mother of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. I was struck by the events involving Mary that played out leading up to the crucifixion, and how these events, and Mary’s experience, provides us with the heart wrenching reality of the price our sin demands.

The first scene we are given to imagine is in Luke 2:22-35 where the priest Simeon blesses the baby
Jesus and prophesies over both the child’s mission and the mother’s experience in relation to it. The child, as we know, is destined for greatness beyond compare, and the mother’s heart will be pierced as a result. But the piercing is not without purpose. There will be those who will stan
d against Jesus’ purpose in providing salvation, and this opposition that reveals the division between those who are looking for God’s saving work and those who do not see the need for it will break Mary’s motherly heart. This effect on Mary I think illustrates God’s own heart in the division. Jesus said in Luke 13:34, in reference to Jerusalem and her resistance to those whom God sends her, “How often would I have gathered your children together as a hen gathers her brood under her wings, and you were not willing!” I believe that Mary experiences this heart break as she stands weeping beside the Apostle John as Jesus breaths His last breath on Good Friday.

But Mary’s experience of her Son’s purpose in saving the world is not all heartache. About 21 years prior to His crucifixion they were in Jerusalem for Passover as a family. You can imagine Joseph and Mary with Jesus and all the brothers and sisters in tow heading up the hill to worship, as they did every year, for this most important of holidays. The service is reverent, the fellowship is uplifting, and the reminder of God’s faithfulness to save His people is inspiring, and as they are heading back home to Galilee, they realize they have forgotten something. Jesus is nowhere to be found. He’s not out playing football with His cousins or wrestling with His brothers, so it’s back to Jerusalem they go to find Jesus. Finally they locate Him in the Temple, and He is amazing. No one can believe the depth of understanding in the twelve year old boy. Luke 2:46 says that He was with the priests asking questions and listening. Often the most impressive intellect is that of one who asks the right questions, and Jesus thinks and digs deep into the Scriptures in this way. Aside from the frustration of losing your Son in the crowds of people while heading back to their lives after the holiday feast Mary must have been filled with pride and wonder. I know when my little girl comes home to show me an award she has earned I am filled with pride over this beautiful, intelligent little angel. At the same time I wonder how I am so blessed, because it isn’t because of me that she is so amazing.

Luke reports, after this story that “Jesus increased in wisdom and in stature and in favor with God and man.” (Luke 2:52, ESV) And Mary, as His mother, was the recipient of the blessing of the increase in Jesus. This was some of the joy that filled her heart, as Jesus came into His purpose, and nothing can match the joy of His return from the grave and the realization of the extent of salvation He came to provide. He, as it turns out, is the very mediator of peace between God and all men. How do other mothers top that when they are all boasting of their child’s accomplishments around the water cooler!?

And we could go on to talk about Mary pressing Jesus to turn water to wine at
the wedding in Cana (John 2), or how Jesus, even while suffering on the cross for every crime ever committed (that He had no part in), was thinking of His mother and set John up to take His place and responsibilities as the eldest son (John 19:26-27). The point is Mary’s experience illustrates the normal Christian experience in some manner. We all must come to grips, as Mary did, that Jesus had to suffer for our sake, because we cannot save ourselves. We all, as Christians, experience the joy of Jesus increasing in stature and wisdom through us as we mature in the faith. We all, as Mary did, need to come to know the joys of the progression from glory to glory even while holding ever so close to the reality that Christ died for us who were His enemies. We all as Christians must come to the place where we behold the beauty of the cross of Christ even while having an acute awareness to the horror of it. And then, we can truly give our lives as worship, because He bore the burden so that we don’t have to. We are spared from experiencing the hell of the cross ourselves, even though it would be justice for us to do so. We celebrate Easter as we witness the mercy of God in one another as a changed people of God. And we can declare the unsurpassed mercy and love of God in Christ Jesus to a lost world as we move out from our pews this Sunday morning.
Easter morning, and every Sunday morning, is an opportunity to come together to witness the sorrow and the joys of the cross, and to recognize that while Mary’s sorrow in the experience turned to rejoicing so too can ours. It is our sorrow that it is our sin that put Jesus on the cross, but it is our joy too. We rejoice because our Father in Heaven put Him there instead of us. Mary’s heart was pierced by the opposition Jesus faced, and our hearts should be pierced at the realization that we were the ones who opposed Him. And Mary rejoiced at the news of His resurrection, and so too must we as we partake in the benefits of His victory this Easter.