This is from Max Lucado's book, "In the
Manger." It is a great compliment to our Christmas Series, "How
to have a Mary Christmas." May our response to Christmas be like that of
Mary!
Let it be to me
according to your word. - Luke 1:38
The virgin birth is much
more than a Christmas story; it is a picture of how close Christ will come to
you. The first stop on His itinerary was a womb. Where will God go to touch the
world? Look deep within Mary for an answer. Better still, look deep within
yourself. What He did with Mary, He offers to us! He issues a Mary-level
invitation to all His children. “If you’ll let Me, I’ll move in!” All
through Scripture we see this preposition in. Jesus lives in His children.
To His apostles,
Christ declared, “I am in you” (John 14:20, emphasis mine).
Paul’s prayer for the
Ephesians was “that Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith” (Ephesians 3:17, emphasis
mine).
“Christ in
you, the hope of glory” (Colossians 1:27, emphasis mine).
Christ grew in Mary
until He had to come out. Christ will grow in you until the same occurs. He
will come out in your speech, in your actions, in your decisions. Every place
you live will be a Bethlehem, and every day you live will be a Christmas. You,
like Mary, will deliver Christ into the world. God in
us!
You are a modern-day
Mary. Even more so. He was a fetus in her, but He is a force in you. He will do
what you cannot do. Imagine a million dollars being deposited into your
checking account. To any observer you look the same, except for the goofy
smile, but are you? Not at all! With God in you, you have a million resources
that you did not have before.
Can’t stop drinking
or worrying? Christ can. And He lives within you. Can’t forgive the jerk, forget the past, or
forsake your bad habits? Christ can! And He lives in you. Paul knew this.
To this end I also
labor, striving according to His working which works in me
mightily. - Colossians 1:29, emphasis mine
Like Mary, you and I
are indwelt by Christ. Find that hard to believe? How much more did Mary? The
line beneath her picture in the high school annual did not read, “Aspires to be
the mother of God.” No one was more surprised by this miracle than she was.
And no one was more
passive than she was. God did everything. Mary didn’t volunteer to help. She
offered no assistance. She offered no resistance. She could have said, “Who am I to have
God in my womb? I’m not enough.” Or, “I’ve got other plans. I don’t have time
for God in my life.”
Instead, Mary said,
Behold the maidservant of the Lord! Let it be to me according to your word. - Luke 1:38
If she is our
measure, God seems less interested in talent and more interested in trust.
Unlike her, we tend
to assist God, assuming our part is as important as His. Or we resist, thinking
we are too bad or too busy. Yet when we assist or resist, we miss God’s great
grace. We miss out on the reason we were placed on earth —To be so full of Him
that we could say with Paul,
It is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me. - Galatians 2:20
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