What We Heard

Father Bill reflects on the fierce joy of the Magnificat: "The promises Mary carried in her body become the ministry Jesus embodies in the world."

The texts for the day (Advent 3, Year A) are Isaiah 35:1-10, Canticle 15 (Book of Common Prayer), James 5:7-10, and Matthew 11:2-11. Full texts can be found at The Lectionary Page.

Preached at St. Andrew's Episcopal Church (Ojai, California) on December 14, 2025.

What is What We Heard?

A weekly sermon podcast from Ojai, California. Grounded in scripture and open to the world, these reflections invite you to listen, wonder, and live the story.

There’s a small shimmer of joy woven into this Sunday --
a softness in the liturgical color,
a break in Advent’s purple.
Some churches bring out rose vestments today,
[some priests wear pink Converse All-Stars, both]
a reminder that even in a season of waiting, a lighter note breaks through.

It is Gaudete Sunday. "Gaudete" means "rejoice."
Not rejoice because all is well,
but rejoice because God’s joy refuses to wait for the end of the story.
It shows up early.
It arrives like dawn leaking through the cracks.

And today, that joy arrives through Mary.

Her Magnificat is perhaps the earliest Advent proclamation we have.
Before Jesus speaks a word, Mary is already preaching him into the world.

"My soul proclaims the greatness of the Lord,
my spirit rejoices in God my Savior…
He has lifted up the lowly…
He has filled the hungry with good things…"

This is not a polite song.
It is not small.
It is a song that rearranges the world.
A song that dares to say God is already tipping creation toward justice,
already breathing life into dry places,
already lifting up those who have been pressed down.

Mary sings as if Isaiah’s vision were happening right inside her.
Isaiah spoke of a wilderness beginning to rejoice,
a desert that blossoms like a crocus,
a land learning to sing again.

And Mary -- young, vulnerable, unnoticed by the powers of her day --
steps into that vision with her whole body.
Her yes is the first green shoot in a barren landscape.
Her voice is the first tremor of the world God is bringing to birth.

Isaiah imagines waters breaking forth in the wilderness,
streams in the desert,
burning sand becoming a pool.
If you listen closely to Mary’s song,
you can hear that same water moving underneath each line:
dry places softening…
fear loosening its grip…
joy rising not as something we manufacture,
but as a gift moving toward us.

For joy is not a mood.
It is a sign -- water in the desert,
green where you did not expect green.

That is why Mary’s joy is fierce.
It is joy as resistance.
Joy as prophecy.
Joy as the quiet but unshakeable knowing
that God is already stirring the soil of creation.

And that joy is not naïve.
It knows the world’s wounds.
It knows the long work of waiting.

James speaks to that today --
the patience of the farmer who trusts the soil
even when nothing shows on the surface.
Mary carried that same patience:
nine slow months of ordinary days,
trusting the hidden work of God.

Some of us know that kind of waiting --
waiting for healing,
for clarity,
for peace,
waiting for the world to become more whole than it is.

Gaudete doesn’t ask us to pretend everything is fine.
It asks us to notice
that God is already moving beneath the surface,
already greening ground we had assumed was barren.

If you want to see this visually,
go to our little chapel and look at "Mary of the Ventura Coast."

In that image,
Mary stands where land and sea meet --
her posture steady and open,
her face calm,
her body rooted in California earth and Pacific light.
She looks like someone who knows both vulnerability and courage,
someone who could sing a world-changing song
and mean every word.

When I first saw her, I thought:
This is the Magnificat translated into our landscape.
This is the road Isaiah saw --
the Holy Way running alongside the waters of our own coast.

This is joy rising in local colors:
joy that lifts the lowly,
joy that remembers the forgotten places,
joy that honors those who heal the land and tend the watershed.

Her image is not decoration.
It is invitation.
An invitation to let Mary stand near us as we learn to wait with hope,
to trust the greening work of God
even when it is still hidden.

In today’s Gospel,
we hear Jesus answering John’s question:
“Are you the one?”

Jesus doesn’t answer with argument,
but with restoration:
the blind see,
the lame walk,
the poor receive good news.

These are the reversals Mary sang about
long before anyone else recognized them.
Her Magnificat becomes the blueprint of his compassion.
The promises she carried in her body
become the ministry he embodies in the world.

Grace begins in the womb,
but it grows into feet that walk toward the forgotten,
hands that touch the untouchable,
eyes that see the unseen.

Mary knew this before anyone.
She held the child who would hold the world.
She felt the weight of hope in her own body
long before others recognized it.

So perhaps this is why the Church
gives us a rose-colored Sunday
in the middle of Advent:
not to deny the darkness,
but to remember that even now,
something holy is unfolding.

Mary shows us what it looks like to welcome that unfolding --
to trust the greening of dry ground,
to let joy rise like a low flame in the heart,
to magnify Love rather than fear,
to let God’s promise take up real space inside us.

And so on this Gaudete Sunday:
May joy come to you like water in a thirsty place.
May Mary’s song widen the chambers of your heart.
And may you discover --
even now, even here --
that Love…
Love is already holding the world together.

Amen.