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Can you imagine God looking upon you as a “favoured one?” Maybe not, because you know you don’t live up to Mary’s example and her ability to say yes to whatever God is asking of her. It’s easy to dismiss even the possibility that God would come to us like the angel Gabriel came to Mary. Okay, it’s true, the angel Gabriel won’t come to our town and ask us to birth God’s son, but that doesn’t mean God looks on us as any less worthy of favour. The Scriptures tell us in many ways that God looks upon us all as “favoured ones,” that the Lord is with us now, and that we need not be afraid of whatever life’s circumstances are. Jesus went out of his way to spend time with those whom most of society considered unworthy. Isn’t that one way of telling them that they were favoured? He travelled all over Galilee on foot with a rag-tag crew he called friends-poor, illiterate fishermen whom most people wouldn’t have considered “favoured.” As he did so, he stopped to heal and teach and remind his listeners that God loves them beyond the capacity for humans to love them. Jesus also repeated what angels in the Old Testament and the angel Gabriel said to Mary. “Do not be afraid,” they all said, when the people they addressed had every reason to be troubled or afraid. Then there are all the times Jesus praised the people he taught, healed, and met. He praised their simple faith, their honesty (“I believe. Help my unbelief,” one man told Jesus), their courage in challenging him (the Syro-Phoenician woman), and their willingness to help their friends (those who lowered the paralytic man through the roof). In Jesus’ appreciation and amazement at other people, wasn’t he telling them they had found favour with God too? Rather than distancing ourselves from Mary in this reading, what if we imagine ourselves being addressed by an angel, Jesus, or God in this way? God calls us favoured ones and tells us the Lord is with us. God encourages us to not be afraid and tells us we have found favour with him. Can we believe it?
Questions of the week
• What is your response to this idea of being personally addressed by God as favoured?
• When in your life have you felt yourself particularly blessed or favoured by God somehow?