Gospel of Luke

That's What She Said: Elizabeth

Luke 1:39-45

In those days Mary set out and went with haste to a Judean town in the hill country, where she entered the house of Zechariah and greeted Elizabeth. When Elizabeth heard Mary’s greeting, the child leaped in her womb. And Elizabeth was filled with the Holy Spirit and exclaimed with a loud cry, “Blessed are you among women, and blessed is the fruit of your womb. And why has this happened to me, that the mother of my lord comes to me? For as soon as I heard the sound of your greeting, the child in my womb leaped for joy. And blessed is she who believed that there would be a fulfillment of what was spoken to her by the Lord.”


Like Hannah from last week, Elizabeth plays an important part in Mary’s story – and so the story of Jesus, too. However, Elizabeth, John the Baptist’s mother, is a contemporary of Mary and Jesus, less obscure, and more familiar to most of us than Hannah was. Still, Mary’s Aunt Elizabeth, for whatever reason, doesn’t make it into any of the other Gospels. And the two seem an unlikely pair.

Elizabeth was old. Mary … young. Elizabeth had been married for years to Zechariah, the priest. Mary was merely betrothed to a carpenter named Joseph. Elizabeth had tried and prayed and hoped to become pregnant but, unsuccessful, decided she was too old and barren for childbearing. Mary may very well have believed herself too young even to get pregnant – not to mention the whole issue of her virginity. This isn’t something she would have wanted, but there she was, “in the family way,” as they used to say; at least if what that angel said was true.

So you can’t help but wonder why Mary would want to visit with Elizabeth out there in the hill country. (Remember, that’s where we heard John the Baptist was, just this past Sunday, baptizing people out in the wilderness of Judea – apparently not far from where he was born and raised.)

- Maybe Mary was frightened of what her own parents might say, but knew she had this cool Aunt Elizabeth who would understand.

- Maybe Mary – in spite of all her best intentions to do the right thing by God – had thoughts of disappearing so that all of this might be kept a secret somehow.

- Maybe she wanted to confirm what the Angel told her: if her aunt really was pregnant after all these years, then perhaps what the angel had said about Mary really was going to happen after all, too.

- Maybe Mary hoped her Aunt Elizabeth could offer advice about what to expect and about what she could do to get ready for whatever was to come.

We may never know or be able to imagine all the things running through the mind of a young, pregnant, unmarried, first-century peasant girl as she made her way to visit Elizabeth, out in the wilderness of those hills. But I suspect at some level – no matter what her fears and plans might have been when it came to explaining all of this to her friends and family – Mary just needed to share it with someone who she knew would understand and who would love her, even if others might not.

See, I like to imagine Aunt Elizabeth – the wife of Zechariah … the priest, remember – was the kind of woman who laughed too loudly in polite company, and said more than she was supposed to sometimes; that maybe she even cussed a little – that she was a bit rough around the edges, for the wife of a priest, anyway. And I imagine the people in Judea loved her for it – and that so did Mary.

So I like to imagine Elizabeth was the cool aunt who explained things to Mary that she hadn’t learned at home, yet, about birds and bees, and babies – and about how all of this would have, should have, could have happened, had her lost virginity not been such a mystery.

And I like to imagine Aunt Elizabeth was a first century feminist, too – had there been a word or a way for such a thing in those days – who helped Mary see and even sing about the power a woman could hold – the power they both held, actually – alive in their wombs, growing in their bellies, that they would cradle in their arms, that they would gift to the world. The power to raise up their boys, I mean, to “cast the mighty down from their thrones,” “to raise up the lowly,” “to send the rich away, empty” and all the things Mary sings about and likely learned from Hannah, as we wondered about last week. Maybe Elizabeth was the one who prayed and unpacked and pointed all of that out to Mary during that visit.

Anyway, I imagine Mary had her suspicions about that angel and his promise to her – who wouldn’t?! – and that she wanted Elizabeth to tell her … to assure her … to promise her … that there was more than she could see about all of this at the moment.

See, that angel never told Mary to go and visit Elizabeth but I believe all of that is why Mary ran to see her: for camaraderie, for support, for encouragement, for someone with whom she could share common ground – for hope. I believe their visit was about one woman seeking another when she needed help, advice, a life-line, perhaps; someone to tell her this would be okay, in the end; that she could do this, after all; that she wasn’t as alone or as in danger or as unprepared and incapable as she must have felt … when she wasn’t talking to angels, anyway.

And isn’t that something all of us have felt at some time or another? Uncertain, overwhelmed, out of our element … afraid, alone, certain no one understands or has traveled this road before … unprepared, over our head, out of faith …

Like Mary, don’t we want to share questions with someone who’s asking them too? Don’t we want to name our fears with someone who’s been scared, just like we are? Don’t we want to be free to wonder, to dream, and to ask hard questions with a like-minded soul – with someone who’ll feel free to wonder and dream and ask hard questions, without judgment, right along with us?

Don’t we all long for someone – filled with the Holy Spirit, if we’re lucky, like Elizabeth was – to remind us how blessed we are; inside and out, even when it doesn’t always feel that way? Someone who’s always glad to see us coming, no matter what or when, and who welcomes us without reservation? Someone who can’t be shocked or surprised by whatever news we have to share – good, bad, something to celebrate or to be ashamed of, even. Someone to affirm that we’ve made the right, faithful choice – even when it’s hard, even when no one else is likely to agree? Someone to remind us of God’s place in our midst and God’s power in our life? Someone to show us how loved we are, not just to say it?

That’s who Elizabeth was to Mary, I believe. And I don’t think it’s too much to say that Elizabeth was a picture of Christ for Mary – and for all of us, still. Elizabeth was to Mary who Jesus means to be for each of us and for all people.

When we want someone who understands the questions we ask – God promises us Jesus.

When we want someone who knows about the things that scare us most – God promises us Jesus.

When we want someone who shares our pain and our joy and our dreams and our destiny – God promises us Jesus.

When we want someone to confirm and promise that we are, indeed, blessed in the eyes of our Maker – God promises us Jesus.

And, in the meantime, all of us need – or maybe we need to be for someone else – an Aunt Elizabeth.

Maybe we need – or need to be – one who listens without judgment.

Maybe we need – or need to be – one who believes the unbelievable on behalf of someone we love.

Maybe we need – or need to be – the one who encourages when others won’t, who loves when others don’t, who abides, who hopes, helps, comforts, commiserates; who shows up, sits with, supports, and stands by, no matter what.

Because that’s what she said… and what she did - Elizabeth for Mary, thanks be to God.

Because who knows what might have come of Mary, had Elizabeth not come through for her in the first place? Would she have found the practical help she was looking for? Would she have mustered the courage required to endure what was coming? Would she have found the faith it took … to answer her call … to do God’s bidding … to sing her song so that we could, too?

Amen. Come, Lord Jesus.

Christ the King 2022

Luke 23:33-43

When they came to the place that is called The Skull, they crucified Jesus there with the criminals, one on his right and one on his left. Then Jesus said, “Father, forgive them; for they do not know what they are doing.” And they cast lots to divide his clothing. And the people stood by, watching; but the leaders scoffed at him, saying, “He saved others; let him save himself if he is the Messiah of God, his chosen one!” The soldiers also mocked him, coming up and offering him sour wine, and saying, “If you are the King of the Jews, save yourself!” There was also an inscription over him, “This is the King of the Jews.”

One of the criminals who were hanged there kept deriding him and saying, “Are you not the Messiah? Save yourself and us!” But the other rebuked him, saying, “Do you not fear God, since you are under the same sentence of condemnation? And we indeed have been condemned justly, for we are getting what we deserve for our deeds, but this man has done nothing wrong.” Then he said, “Jesus, remember me when you come into your kingdom.” He replied, “Truly I tell you, today you will be with me in Paradise.”


For what it’s worth, Pope Pious XI established what we call “Christ the King Sunday” back in 1925, which is to say it’s relatively new as a Christian tradition in the grand scheme of Christianity – I feel like it’s kind of a Hallmark Holiday, some of the time, to be honest – not something the earliest believers would have bothered with or tended to. It’s not worthless or without meaning, though, which is why we play along with it around here. See, the earliest Christians didn’t need a special day like Christ the King Sunday, the way that Pope Pious XI believed modern Christians did, and perhaps, still do. (Or maybe it’s more fair to say our need for such an occasion is different – or maybe that it’s evolved over time.)

Whatever the case, Pope Pious wanted a day, set apart and lifted up, back in his day, as one that would put faith in Jesus Christ very deliberately up against the popular cultural and political movements of his day – stuff like secularism, communism, and fascism. (For those of you in the Wired Word Adult Forum last week, Pope Pious would relish the chance to celebrate Christ the King Sunday, in our day and age, in direct, faithful opposition to movements of Christian nationalism that seem to be blooming in our country these days.)

All of that is to say, all of this “Christ the King” Sunday stuff – and the appointed Gospel for the day – mean to point to the stark opposition to and the profound differences between the politics and powers that be in this world and those of the kingdom of God, made known in Jesus Christ. And we’re meant to wonder about, commit more faithfully to – and find hope in – the notion that our allegiance should lie in the Kingdom of God in Jesus, rather than the kingdoms of this world.

And there hasn’t been a more glaring, obvious expression of the contradiction between these two kinds of kingdoms, in recent days, than in the funeral for Queen Elizabeth II, back in September. I’m talking about the 10 days of public mourning, the hours and hours of people lined up for days waiting for a glimpse of the queen lying in state – and of her family’s grief – and all the money and manpower it takes to make something like that happen. Again, the contradiction between the crowns and carriages and coffins of the Queen – and the cross of Christ at Calvary – couldn’t be greater.

And more than that, Queen Elizabeth’s death and the transitions within the royal family that inevitably follow – a King and a consort, Dukes, Duchesses and all the rest – raise long-held and growing questions about a modern day monarchy’s relevance and purpose in the 21st Century. As figure-heads with very little, if any, actual power and authority … is maintaining their status with all of its pomp, circumstance, and exorbitant expense – especially in light of the monarchy’s racist, colonial past – worth all those millions and millions and millions and millions of dollars every year?

And, speaking of transitions, we’ve got our own “changing of the guard” taking place on this side of the pond to wonder about, too. With the results of the midterm elections added up, we know that the Republicans won control of the House of Representatives, so have to figure out who gets to drive that train. And the Democrats kept control of the Senate, but have to figure out who’s going to lead their caucus for a change. And the campaigns for President, which won’t be decided for another two years, have already begun. So, all of those politicians and pundits – their spokespeople and stakeholders – the news anchors and analysts – are working hard to convince us to start stewing about all of it now … already … and all. of. the. time.

So, all of this is to say, I think Pope Pious XI knew what he was doing with Christ the King Sunday, because it’s meant to be all about perspective and priorities for God’s people. Today we are reminded not to conflate or confuse the powers of this world with the power of God made known to us in Jesus.

When we get confused by and sucked into the excesses of life as we know it, we are reminded that Jesus lived simply and generously and calls us to do the same.

When the world pretends that peace and power come by way of oppression and exclusion, we see Jesus loving his enemies and welcoming sinners.

When we find ourselves wondering and worrying and wringing our hands over the state of things and the shenanigans of our leaders on this side of heaven, we are invited to see it all in the shadow of Christ’s cross and in the light of God’s grace and remember that none of those pundits and politicians gets the last word.

Because so much of our time – and so many out there in the world – sing about and celebrate a super-hero kind of Jesus. We celebrate the water-walking, demon-damning, water-to-wine-making, miracle-curing Jesus. This Jesus who might show up with power from on high, a mighty warrior, a military leader, a powerful politician, a king with a cape and a crown, perhaps – someone who would take on the other leaders and rulers of the world and win, with a flash of his sword and flurry of fists.

But God delivers someone altogether different, with the promise that we will be delivered in ways altogether different, too.

God delivers this king, in Jesus, destined for thorns and a cross; destined for nails and whips and struggle and suffering; destined for death and dying and a tomb, too.

God delivers this king, in Jesus Christ – broken, vulnerable, hurting, hopeful, living and dying, just like the rest of us in so many ways. And God did it so the likes of you and I could imagine something more and better and different and holy for ourselves and for others, too.

If we only see Jesus as a King by the world’s standards – bathed in light and robed in white or, heaven forbid, a flag – we’re not recognizing the fullness of God’s grace for the entirety of our human experience, or for the sake of the whole wide world. We’re missing the power of God to be revealed in and through our weakness. We’re missing the power of God to show up in spite of our sin and in the face of those things that scare us and sadden us and that cause us to stumble the most.

But, when we see that Jesus bears our diseases and comes out of them, we know we will, too. When we know Jesus to suffer for our struggles and to weep for our grief, we have hope to endure those struggles ourselves. When we see Jesus’ humility in the face of our pride, his sacrifice in the face of our greed, his love in the face of our warring madness; when we see God’s willingness to come down and enter into the mess of this world – before promising us a way out of it all – then we get a sense of what it means to celebrate Jesus Christ as God’s kind of King – over and against the kings and queens and kingdoms of this world.

Jesus Christ became less so that we’d would know we mean more, in God’s eyes. Jesus Christ became nothing, so we’d know we are something. God so loved the world, that Jesus Christ came for all of it, not just some of us. Jesus Christ, the King, suffered, died and was buried so that, in his resurrection to new life, we could imagine ourselves to be loved and cherished children of God … to see and to celebrate that Truth for others … and to live differently, like God’s kind of humble, hope-filled royalty, because of it.

Amen