Mary's, the mother of Jesus, Profile
Motherhood is a painful privilege. Young Mary of Nazareth had the unique
privilege of being mother to the very Son of God. Yet the pains and pleasures of
her motherhood can be understood by mother's everywhere. Mary was the only human present at Jesus=
birth who also witnessed his death. She saw him arrive as her baby son, and she
watched him die as her Savior.
Until Gabriel's unexpected visit,
Mary's life was quite satisfactory.
She had recently become engaged to a carpenter, Joseph, and was anticipating
married life. But her life was about to change forever.
Angels don= t usually make
appointments before visiting. As if she were being congratulated for winning the
grand prize in a contest she had never entered, Mary found the angel's greeting puzzling and his presence frightening. What she heard next was the
news almost every woman in Israel hoped to hear - that her child would be the
Messiah. God's promised Savior. Mary
did not doubt the message, but rather asked how pregnancy would be possible.
Gabriel told her the baby would be God's Son. Her answer was the one God waits in vain to hear from so many other
people: "I am the Lord's servant . . . May it be to be as you have said@
(Luke 1:38). Later, her song of joy shows us how well she knew God, for her
thoughts were filled with his words from the Old Testament.
Within a few weeks of his birth, Jesus was taken to the temple to be
dedicated to God. There Joseph and Mary were met by two devout people, Simeon
and Anna, who recognized the child as the Messiah and praised God. Simeon
directed some words to Mary that must have come to her mind many times in the
years that followed: "A sword will
pierce your own soul@ (Luke 2:35). A
big part of her painful privilege of motherhood would be to see her son rejected
and crucified by the people he came to save.
We can imagine that even if she had known all she would suffer as Jesus=
mother, Mary would still have given the same response. Are you, like Mary,
available to be used by God?
Mary's, the mother of Jesus,
Strengths and Accomplishments
1. The mother of Jesus, the Messiah
2. The one human who was with Jesus from birth to death
3. Willing to be available to God
4. Knew and applied Old Testament Scriptures
Lessons from Mary's, the mother
of Jesus, Life
1. God's best servants are often
ordinary people who make themselves available to him
2. God's plans involve
extraordinary events in ordinary people's lives
3. A person's character is
revealed by his or her response to the unexpected
Mary's, the mother of Jesus,
Vital Statistics
1. Where: Nazareth, Bethlehem
2. Occupation: Homemaker
3. Relatives: Husband: Joseph. Relatives: Zechariah and Elizabeth. Children: Jesus, James, Joseph, Judas, Simon, and daughters
Key Verse
A
> I am the Lord's servant,= Mary answered.
'May it be to me as you have said.=
Then the angel left her@ (Luke 1:38).
Mary's story is told throughout
the Gospels. She is also mentioned in Acts 1:14.