From the desk of Fr. Phil… 4th Sunday of Advent



Immediately following today’s Gospel is the Magnificat – which I printed on the sheet that contains the “O Antiphons.”  I thought it would be helpful for you to briefly explore Mary’s wonderful song of praise, located in the first chapter of the Gospel of Luke, verses 1:46-55. This great worship hymn is called the “Magnificat” because in the Latin Bible it begins with the words "Magnificat Anima Mea Dominum," which mean "My soul glorifies the Lord."
When you open the Gospel of Luke, you notice that  it is filled with music – especially the first two chapters. There you find five hymns: the hymn of Elizabeth (Luke 1:42-45); the hymn of Mary (Luke 1:46-55); the hymn of Zechariah (Luke 1:68-79); the hymn of the angels, "Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace to men on whom his favor rests," (Luke 2:14); and the hymn of Simeon (Luke 2:29-32), which he prayed when he saw the infant Jesus Christ and realized that God’s promise to him had just been fulfilled and that he would not die until he saw God’s salvation.
The Christmas season is a time of singing and rejoicing because of the divine announcement of good news of great joy to all the people of the world. We need a divine Savior, and the message of Christmas is that God has given us such a competent Savior in his Son, our Lord Jesus Christ, who became man for our salvation. After the annunciation, the archangel Gabriel left and Mary got up quickly and traveled to Judea to visit her cousin Elizabeth, who was six months pregnant. When Elizabeth saw Mary, an amazing thing happened: through the Spirit of the living God, she recognized Mary, this unmarried teenage girl, as "the mother of my Lord," and began to prophesy.
When that happened, Mary also began to sing in the Spirit, exalting and worshiping God. It is this song that is recorded as the Magnificat, and at this point I want to note something: Although Mary was just a poor peasant girl she had been brought up in a godly home and for that reason she was thoroughly versed in the Holy Scriptures. Like Zechariah, Simeon, Anna, and others, Mary was looking forward to God’s redemption of Israel. So when she heard Elizabeth’s greeting, she was filled with the Holy Spirit and Scripture came pouring out of her heart.
Listen, then, to Mary’s acknowledgement of God’s greatness as she magnifies the Lord. Psalm 103:1 tells us, "Praise the Lord, O my soul; all my inmost being, praise his holy name," and elsewhere we are told that out of the abundance of our heart, our mouths will speak. Mary was filled with God and his grace; thus, she sang about God and his attributes. There are seven attributes of God that Mary speaks about in her song, the Magnificat:
God Is Mighty…The first attribute Mary speaks of is the might and power of God. He is the mighty God, ho dunatos, and in Luke 1:49 she sings, "For the Mighty One has done great things for me." Mary’s God was the Almighty God, the Creator of the ends of the earth. There is no god mightier than her God. He alone is able to do all things and with him alone nothing is impossible.
 God Is Holy…The second attribute Mary speaks about is God’s holiness. In verse 49 Mary declares, "Holy is his name." Throughout the Scriptures God tells us, "Be ye holy, for I am holy." God is light, and in him there is no darkness at all. He is the One separate from us – that what it means sacred, holy! – the One without sin.
God Is a Judge…The third attribute of God that Mary speaks about in her hymn is that God is a judge. In the latter part of Luke 1:51 she says, "He [God] has scattered those who are proud in their innermost thoughts." Additionally, in verse 52 we find, "He has brought down the mighty rulers from their thrones," and in verse 53, "He has sent the rich away empty."
God Is Merciful…The fourth attribute Mary speaks of is that God is merciful. The word "mercy" appears five times in Luke 1—in verses 50, 54, 58, 72 and 78. Mary reveled in the knowledge of this great attribute of God.
God Is a Covenant God…The fifth attribute of God that Mary speaks of is that God is a covenant God. We must realize that God does not have to enter into a covenant with sinful man. There is nothing in his being necessitating that he stoop down and promise salvation to anybody. But the truth is, God did just that. He entered into a covenant with Abraham, promising to show mercy to him and his descendants by granting them salvation.
God Is Faithful to His Covenant…If God promises through a covenant, he will fulfill it, because he is the God of the covenant. The sixth attribute of God Mary speaks of in this passage is the faithfulness of God to his covenant.
Mary realized that what was happening in her womb was the fulfillment of the age-old promise to Abraham, that God was finally sending the divine Messiah, Jesus the Savior, the eternal God incarnate. So she sang, "He has helped his servant Israel, remembering to be merciful to Abraham and his descendants forever, even as he said to our fathers."
God Is the Savior…The final attribute of God that Mary describes here is that God is her Savior. "My soul glorifies the Lord and my spirit rejoices. . . ." In what is Mary rejoicing? ". . . in God my Savior." …and so we pray together:

Hail Mary, full of grace, the Lord is with thee.
Blessed art thou among women and blessed is the fruit
of thy womb, Jesus. Holy Mary, Mother of God, pray for us sinners now, and at the hour of our death.   Amen