“For with God nothing is ever impossible and no word from God shall be without power or impossible of fulfillment.” Luke 1:37.
Gabriel visits Mary and shares the news of her relative’s expectant motherhood. She and Elizabeth have something in common. A miracle. Mary has the pregnancy of God’s own son by the Holy Spirit. Elizabeth becomes pregnant beyond childbearing years. Impossibilities by man’s perspective, yet, opportunities to prove God’s power from divine perspective.
Such hope the two of these ladies had. Such difficulties they’d endure when they both lost their sons in years ahead.
I was thinking how much the female in her childbearing time is like the Bride of Christ, the Church––the difficulties, trials, tribulations, sometimes losses, miscarriages, stillborn and multiple births. Through all the difficulty, body changes and pain, she remains full of expectation and hope. Likewise the Bride of Christ never wavers in her trust for the Living Lord and the eventual wedding day and banquet feast. You may not see what I see, but what a legacy this time of year should bring to mind as we celebrate our Savior’s birth.
Just as the pain of giving birth to our Savior was to Mary, we–His Church, go through our own pain when we continually yield to the new birth of Christ in our lives. As we allow Him to rule in our hearts, we give up ourselves, we die to our sins that seek to enslave us in a pregnancy of fear, worry, conflict and pride.
“Nothing is impossible with God. No word from God is without power or impossible of fulfillment.” “Upon this rock I will build my church and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it.”
As we fret and worry over our methods, the logistics, the validity, it’s influence in society, the voice of God’s people—His church—He sits and laughs at the enemies and adversaries who seek to destroy it. He shakes His head at our faithlessness. We should take heart. He has overcome the world. selahV
[copyrighted, SelahV Today, 2007]
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