The title of my homily
for this feast of the Immaculate Conception is, “Afraid.”
That word is found in two of the three readings we heard
today: Genesis and Luke.
Adam is afraid. Mary
is afraid.
AFRAID - THE WORD
Afraid: meaning
frightened, scared, hesitant, nervous,
concerned, worried, tense, fearful ….
Afraid: I always try
to hear reasons why a word sounds the way it sounds. Listen to the word "afraid". Hear the
sound of friction - and fray in it. The letter “f” - the second letter and key
sound in this word “afraid” - brings together our lower teeth and lower lip - as
in biting one’s lip. That’s something we do when we are afraid or tense or
feeling an “Uh oh!” To be afraid is to be bit or pulled or rubbed against by frightening
forces. Something is biting us. OOOOOOhhhhhhhh! Uh oh!
Luke 1: 26-38 - today’s gospel - uses the
Greek word “phobos” for “afraid”. We
know the English word “phobia” from that Greek word - as in "phobias". We have heard about dozens and dozens of
phobias people can have: from autophobia [fear of being alone ] to zoophobia
[fear of animals]. Does anyone here today have “chionophobia” - which is fear of
snow?
So the word “afraid” is an interesting word to explore.
ADAM AND MARY
In today’s first reading from Genesis 3: 9-15 - we hear about Adam disobeying
God. He and Eve did not listen to God and ate the forbidden fruit.
Non-listening to God - as well as others - is often the root
of many of our problems.
Communicating and questioning - what Mary does - can be the key to many of our
solutions.
When Adam and Eve bit into and ate the forbidden fruit, uh oh, they became afraid. Why? Well they heard
God’s voice in the garden. Next they hid. They felt exposed. They felt naked - disobedient
- caught in their sin with only their skin. They were afraid.
Mary was afraid when she heard the Word of God. She had
Joseph - but she was not married yet. When she was approached by God’s Message
and Messenger - to do something for God that seemed impossible - she must have
felt an “Uh oh!” - because the story teller has the angel say, “Do not be afraid!”
And I’m sure you’ve heard a dozen times from us preachers: “This
message of 'Don't be afraid!' is a constant in the Bible - when God reaches out to us!”
In fact, we have here in these stories the beginnings of
religion. Often it is fear -
afraidness - falls - and wanting to drop out and hide - that bring us to God - to a power greater than our weakness.
Questioning and questions can also bring us to God.
Being open or being closed? Now that’s a question. Now that’s
a life choice.
Adam hid. Mary questioned.
Adam did "No". Mary said, "Yes!"
THE ORGINAL CHOICE: TO BE THE OLD OR NEW ADAM AND EVE.
I’m assuming that our scripture readings place these 2
people: Mary and Adam - or these 4 people - before us: Adam and Eve, Mary and
Jesus - as we come to this feast of the
Immaculate Conception. In theology, Mary
and Jesus, are called, “The New Adam” and “The New Eve.”
They are placed before us as choices - on how to live life -
how to live it to the full - or how to hide in the dark.
In fact, is that the original sin: choosing darkness instead of choosing the
light?
Hey Lucifer - means “Light Bearer!” It’s the name of the
great fallen angel. [1] In today’s first reading
he’s pictured as a serpent, a snake in the grass, crawling along - hissing sin - dismissing God - trying to bring down to his
level God’s first people - Adam and Eve. The Serpent tries to bring them down
to the dust from which they were sculpted and created by God. This is a push for the horizontal - when our call is to be vertical - to evolve upwards - to rise up - to stand up straight - be tall upon the earth.
I loved the joke about a person who dies and wants into
heaven - but Peter is not sure if they should get a pass through the Golden
Gates. “Well,” says Peter, “If you can find Adam or Eve in 20 minutes you’re
in.” The person comes back with them in
5 minutes. Peter astonished says, “How did you find them so fast?” “Simple!" says the person, "They were the only ones without belly buttons.”
So Adam and Eve started from scratch - with no belly buttons - with no history - but
with all the gifts of paradise. They could have everything they wanted - except
the fruit from one tree.
Hey there’s always a catch….
There’s always forbidden fruit ….
That’s our origins story. That’s what makes the story so original.
Otherwise the story would be boring….
Question: Why?
Answer: Mystery....
So they bit - the snake’s story …. and the rest is our
history.
Afraid - and sin - and darkness - and hiding - entered our world with them - but then sin became no longer that original.
Well, Mary grew up in that world - but with one original catch.
Because of Christ - because of the New Story to come - she was born without the original sin.
And that’s what we celebrate
today.
The Immaculate Conception is an original concept. It's a mysterious teaching from our Church - which took a long time to be articulated - agreed upon - and promulgated. As I was trying to put this into words, I realized how difficult it is to state what the Immaculate Conception means. It certainly is one of a kind - original - and obviously a mystery.
Let me say this. Mary had a
belly button from her mom - and Christ had a belly button from Mary. That’s us.
We don’t start from scratch. We are
connected. We have background. We are part of a history. We are called to be in communion with each other
and our history. We begin with Adam and Eve’s story - and in time we can
embrace Mary and Christ’s story.
Mary is conceived without sin so she can bring Christ - who is without sin - Christ who is light - without any darkness - into our world.
Mary does not have a Divine Nature.... Christ does.
This feast of the Immaculate Conception brings us smack into the great struggles and controversies and heresies on how Christ is.
Mary is without sin, but this doesn't mean she is not one of us. She felt fear - was afraid -
questioned - but then Mary said, “Behold, I am the handmaid of the Lord. May it be done to me according to your word.”
CONCLUSION
Maybe that original “Yes” is the message here - to say that rather than the original “No” of Adam
and Eve. We have the choice each day to
say “Yes” or “No!”
OOOOOOO
NOTES:
Painting on top: Master of Moulins - c. 1500, Coronation of the Virgin Mary
[1] In The New Jerome Biblical Commentary - one can read the following
when looking at Isaiah 14: 12-15: “How!:
Hebrew ‘ek parallels the ‘ek that opens verse 4b and probably
intends to mark a major division. The poet applies to the king a non-Israelite
myth of a god (the ‘shining star, son of the dawn’ [verse 12], conceals a proper
name, Helel ben Shahar) who aspired to ascend the mountain of the gods and make
himself equal to Elyon, for which presumption he was cast down to the netherworld.
In the Latin Bible helel was rendered
lucifer (‘light-bearer’) and since
some Patristic writers saw in this piece an account of the fall of Satan,
Lucifer came to a dame for the devil.” [Confer page 239 for this comment by
Joseph Jensen, O.S.B.]The New Jerome Biblical Commentary, Isaiah 1-39, Prentice
Hall, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, 07632, 1990.