March 27: Friday, March 25, was the Feast of the Annunciation, a little Christmas in March. It’s the day we hear the glorious news that our God becomes Flesh. He became Flesh so that He could know pain and grief, carry our sins, be stricken, smitten and afflicted.
“Behold a virgin shall conceive, and bear a son, and his name shall be called Emmanuel.” Isaiah 7:14
In our house we traditionally eat something with blueberries on this day, usually blueberry muffins but life has been busy, very busy as always, so there were no muffins this year.
From a sermon of Martin Luther’s I thought very fitting for our time as well as his:
“It almost seems as though God is at enmity with the world. Present conditions are so shameful all around us in the world, as God allows murderous mobs and rabble, so much violence and so much misfortune to prevail, so that we might think God is only Lord and God of the angels and that he has forgotten about mankind.
But here in our text (Luke 1:26) we see that he befriends us humans like no other creatures, in the very closest possible relationship, and in turn, we humans have a closer relationship with God than any other creature. Sun and moon are not as close to us as is God, for he comes to us in our own flesh and blood. God not only rules over us, not only lives in us, but personally became a human being.
This is the grace we celebrate today, thanking God that he has cleansed our sinful conception and birth through his holy conception and birth, and removed the curse from us and blessed us.” (HP III:292,293