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A couple of weeks ago, Lizanne
and I were in fits of laughter as we watched what I am sure
is destined to be a classic episode of Absolutely
Fabulous. More like Absolutely Hilarious!
Now if you know anything at all about AbFab, you
will know that Eddi is not only a very bad mother, as her
daughter Saffron is never slow to remind her, but now she has
become a nightmare of a grandmother too. If you add into the
equation Eddis outrageous friend Patsy, the scene is
set for all kinds of horror.
So when this terrible pair took Saffrons child to the
zoo, we knew something awful was going to happen. The most
hilarious scene was when the baby needed its nappy changed.
They found the baby-changing facility in the toilet, put the
baby on it, and waited - waited for this magic table to do
its stuff and change the nappy. When nothing happened, they
discussed the possibility that the contraption needed money,
or that perhaps if they tipped it up back into the wall, the
baby would emerge nice and clean.
In they end, they really did change the baby. They arrived
back home with somebody elses!
One of the nightmares every good mother has is that she is
perhaps a bad mother. Something like that is true, I guess,
with fathers as well. How much guilt can we ordinary mortals
carry about our mistakes as parents? I suppose if we are to
be truly good parents, a condition is that we are all too
conscious of our mistakes.
The church has long held up Mary as an icon of motherhood. I
have to say that there isnt really an awful lot of
evidence for this in the Bible either, but it is a thought
which has to come if we are to take on board any notion that
Mary was, for instance, the mother of God. But the church has
never been shy about building on flimsy foundations when it
suits. Leaving that aside, there can be no doubt that
Marys role as a good mother has been very much to the
fore in what little teaching the church has given about
parenthood.
Of course, the other side to the way the church has used Mary
is as a punishment and a form of control. I doubt very much
whether using the Hail Mary as a penance did very
much to endear her to generations of Catholics. Of course,
penance is meant to be good for the soul, but my suspicion is
that for any thinking person, it would produce a double image
of Mary in the penitent.
Of course, there is much more to Mary than all of that. The
words which we have heard this morning, the words of the
Magnificat, are so powerful as to make us flinch
if we stop to think about them. They are, indeed, Kingdom
words - uttered, Luke would have us know, before the Messiah
was even born. Whatever Jesus was about, it was about Kingdom
values, living life in the Kingdom way, the new way,
Gods way. And Mary is really and truly giving a
foretaste of this in these words.
Of course, to be really true, these are not really
Marys words at all. If you look at the Song of Hannah
in the 1st Book of Samuel, you will see that there is more
than a passing resemblance to the Magnificat. This was one of
the Psalms of Judaism, albeit not in the book of that name.
So Mary would have known it as a song of faith, and was
simply singing well known words, applying them to herself as
being taken from lowliness to greatness.
But, once again, there is more. Marys exaltation is
typical of the new order which is to open out for the whole
people of God through the coming of her son. And we, here at
St Johns, Dumfries, at the end of the year 2003, are
the inheritors of that new order. There is still more. Not
only are we the inheritors of the new order. We are also the
guardians of it, committed to making it know that God has
indeed inaugurated a new order for all humanity.
When we sing the Magnificat at Evensong, those who know will
tell you that there are two verses which we always sing with
a greater emphasis, because we sing them in unison - no choir
harmony. The organ gives the signal by its sound, and we
sing:
He hath shewed strength with his arm: he hath scattered
the proud in the imagination of their hearts. He hath put
down the mighty from their seat: and hath exalted the humble
and meek.
That is Gods way, the new way, the new context in which
Christians still are called to live.
Now, to me, that is scary stuff. We are living in a world
which, at present is dominated by the most powerful nation
that ever was. Now I fully realise that there are some,
perhaps even this side of the pond, who think this is a
thoroughly good thing, and that we can all sleep safely in
our beds because of it. But really, what do we, who quite
rightly are being called to fly like eagles- what
do we have to say about that?
In spite of the use of that much vaunted word
justice, I for one am sceptical about whether or
not we live in a world which is ruled justly. Still I do not
see justice for the lowly and the hungry, for the weak and
the downtrodden. I do see very often an arrogance of power
which masquerades as justice, but I also see that it is very
selective. And in this week, when much has been made of the
capture of that most tyrannical and bestial of men, Saddam
Hussein, I fear that even he will not receive justice, but
rather that revenge will prevail, and the two are not
synonymous.
We as Christian people are entrusted with telling the good
news of the Kingdom to a world which, as St Paul reminded us,
is waiting to hear it. If we can pitch it just right, we are
pushing at an open door. Peoples lives can change by
living the Kingdom way. Where there has been misery, there
can be joy; where there is hunger there can be food aplenty;
where there is poverty there can be abundance. But it
wont come by us sitting on our hands and waiting. That
is what theologians call heresy. It will only
come by us coming to our senses, singing Marys song and
meaning it.
It is almost 2004. Make your New Years resolution now,
that you will take the Kingdom message seriously, and that
you will do all you can, under Gods power, to not only
live in that way yourself, but proclaim it to everyone by
action as well as by words. If you are not sure what that
message is, read Lukes gospel, for it is there put
clearly. I do believe that it will make a difference. And
then we really will fly like eagles. |
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