"Where Let It Be Leaves Off"
Fourth Sunday in Advent
December 18, 2011
Luke 1:26-38

Apparently even young people are fans of the Beatles so it’s possible
that most everyone knows the song “Let It Be.” Though it’s a great
song, at least for those who like the Beatles, there’s a reason we
won’t be singing it in our worship service this morning. Where Let It
Be leaves off is with, well, just letting it be. If you just let
things be you are left without any certainty. There has to be more to
letting things be than simply letting them be.

As Mary said in the Gospel reading, the ‘more’ is ‘according to your
word’. That is, according to the Word of God. We must let it be but
according to God’s Word.

Paul McCartney’s lyrics in the song Let It Be give us some helpful
wisdom. But not much more than that. Ultimately they leave us without
hope, without certainty. He tells of how he came up with the lyrics
for the song. During a difficult time in his life he had a dream where
his mother, whose name was Mary, spoke to him to give him comfort. He
relates that she told him, “It will be all right, just let it be.”
Again, that’s really good advice and there is tremendous wisdom in it.
How often do we kick against the goads? How many times do we make
matters worse by taking things into our own hands when we should just
let things go and leave them be?

But there is another Mary who understood that there is no real
certainty in leaving things at just letting them be. Her response to
Gabriel was, “Let it be to me according to your word.” Mary trusted
that what the angel Gabriel was telling her was the Word of God. She
submitted to this Word; this Word that came from God. She let things
be. But she let them be according to God’s way. I don’t doubt for a
moment that Paul McCartney had a dream in which his mother Mary
whispered words of wisdom to him. What I believe, though, is that the
Mary we should be taking our cue from is the Mary who spoke words of
wisdom in saying that she was the servant of the Lord, that she would
let it be according to the Lord’s word.

Think for a moment what Mary was talking about. She was talking about
the one she would give birth to. She was submitting to one who was yet
unborn. One who would be born from her very womb, though she was a
virgin. No wonder she was confused. But even when we are confused we
can take God at His word. Even when we don’t understand we can let it
be according to His Word.

This Saturday evening we will enter into the Christmas season. What so
many people in December celebrate as the Christmas season is often
something very different from what today’s Gospel reading shows us.
Gabriel speaks of what Christmas actually is. “You will conceive in
your womb and bear a son, and you shall call His name Jesus. He will
be great and will be called the Son of the Most High. And the Lord God
will give to Him the throne of His father David, and He will reign
over the house of Jacob forever, and of His kingdom there will be no
end.” When you see what God says Christmas is you begin to see how
submitting to His way is the way to go.

Not that the lights and the parties and the malls should have no part
of our Christmas festivities. We are free to enjoy these things as a
society and with our families. At the same time, what we see from Mary
is that there is so much more. If we just let it be then our
celebration of Christmas will miss what Christmas really is about. For
Mary it was now about nine months of waiting and pondering the amazing
visit from an angel who told her she would conceive of a son in a
miraculous way, by the Holy Spirit. She now saw that anything she
might think or do could not bring about such an amazing thing as the
promises of God being fulfilled in a common Galilean girl. We can
safely assume she probably never had thought that the promises of the
Kingdom of God would be carried out in her womb.

But she saw who she was. She wasn’t simply an ordinary girl. She was a
servant. She was a servant of the Lord. Despite what appeared to be,
she would let it be according the Lord’s word. She didn’t simply let
it be; she let it be according to His Word.

The Holy Spirit inspired Luke to write these things down. This is more
than just a story, just as the account of the birth of Christ is more
than just a story. What we learn here from Mary’s response to Gabriel
is something that should not only put our Christmas celebration in
perspective but our life, and our eternity. We are servants. We should
let it be according to the Word of the Lord.

What this meant for Mary was nine months of pregnancy, giving birth to
Jesus, the Son of God, and raising this child in a Christian home. It
meant also believing in Him, her Son, the Savior of the world. When
she was submitting to the Word of the Lord she was submitting to her
unborn Son. If it is going to be, it is best for it to be according to
His Word. What we’re really talking about here is not how wonderful
Mary was in submitting to God’s Word, but what a Savior we have in God
submitting Himself to be born of a virgin and going the path of the
cross. Mary’s point was not that she was such a wonderful servant of
God but that she was unworthy of God’s favor but nevertheless rested
in it. She rejoiced in His grace and mercy and so let it be according
to His Word.

It’s not about Mary, but that doesn’t mean that we don’t get from this
passage in the Word of God what we need to learn of Mary. In her our
Lord is giving us a picture, even an example, of who we should be as
Christians. We should submit to the Word of the Lord. We are His
servants and we should let it be according to His Word.

Mary was rightly puzzled at Gabriel’s pronouncement. You’re going to
have a child! How could this be?, she hadn’t broken the Sixth
Commandment. What strange thing was God pulling here? Okay, so it was
strange, or at least out of the ordinary, but as we see from the
Scriptures, God likes to work out of the ordinary. But He does so in
ordinary means. Here, through an ordinary girl. She’s the one who’s
going to give birth to the Messiah, God in the flesh. And the Sixth
Commandment? God is the author of that and He can take care of things
in such a way that she won’t be committing adultery. The Holy Spirit
will work His power and she will conceive of a son. The Holy Spirit
works when the Word of God is spoken. Gabriel spoke it, it was so.

You and I are just like Mary. We have heard the Word of the Lord. We
also wonder how it can be. The world celebrates Christmas with its
lights and its parties and its malls. Hey, we know a good thing when
we see it, so we join in with them. But we are also like Mary and see
so much more. We let it be according to God’s Word and actually
believe that God was born. That God was actually curled up in the womb
of a girl who lived in a small area of the globe. That God actually
was born and needed to be fed and hugged and tickled. We are servants
of the Lord, of this one, the one who became a man and went the way of
the cross.

And it doesn’t stop there. As servants of the Lord we continue to hear
our Lord speak to us. When our Lord says, “Take and eat, this is My
Body,” we wonder, “How can this be since it is bread that I am
eating?” He speaks back to us, “The Holy Spirit is at work. He works
when My word is spoken. He brought about My conception in the womb of
Mary and brings about My body in and with this bread.” May we speak
with Mary, “Behold, I am the servant of the Lord, let it be to me
according to Your word.”

When our Lord says, “Take and drink, this is My Blood,” we wonder,
“How can this be since it is wine that I am drinking?” He speaks back
to us, “The Holy Spirit is at work. He works when My word is spoken.
He brought about My conception in the womb of Mary and brings about My
blood in and with this wine.” May we speak with Mary, “Behold, I am
the servant of the Lord, let it be to me according to Your word.”

The Bible isn’t just a bunch of stories. It is the Word of God. The
Lord’s Supper isn’t just a ritual. It is the Lord’s Supper. God came
in the flesh, conceived in the womb of Mary. He comes in the flesh to
us today, in and with the bread and wine. Yeah, we wonder how it can
be, but we also give thanks that our Lord grants us the faith to
rejoice that we are His servants and simply let it be according to His
word. Amen.

SDG

--
Pastor Paul L. Willweber
Prince of Peace Lutheran Church [LCMS]
6801 Easton Ct., San Diego, California 92120
619.583.1436
princeofpeacesd.net
three-taverns.net

It is the spirit and genius of Lutheranism to be liberal in everything
except where the marks of the Church are concerned.
[Henry Hamann, On Being a Christian]
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