Our readings from St. John’s Gospel these last weeks of Lent picture Jesus teaching and working wonders in Jerusalem during the Jewish feasts. We’re coming to the Passover feast when he died and rose again. John’s Gospel emphasizes the divine nature of Jesus.
The ancient feast of the Annunciation of the Lord, March 25th, seems to interrupt the lenten story, but does it?
The feast of the Annunciation of the Lord reminds us that Jesus Christ was human as well as divine. God willed his Son become flesh in Mary’s womb and live a human life and die a human death. This feast celebrates the mystery of the Incarnation of the Son of God.
The Letter to the Hebrews on this feast says that in coming into the world Jesus Christ said “ a body you prepared for me…behold, I come to do your will, O God.’
For nine months, the Word of God, was silent and unknown in the womb of Mary. For almost thirty years, the Word of God was known as Jesus of Nazareth, the carpenter’s son. For most of his life, subject to Mary and Joseph, Jesus belonged to an ordinary Jewish community, with all that went with it. He lived a human life. He shared ordinary human experiences, simple or complicated as they are. The Son of God was human all his life.
The Feast of the Annunciation originated in the early church in Jerusalem. That church was influenced by the rich symbolism of Jewish tradition. March 25, for example, the date chosen for this feast, is the time of the spring equinox, when light begins to conquer darkness. The Jews associated March 25 with their Exodus from Egypt, when they were released from the powers of darkness and brought into a land of light. March 25 was when God created the world and Adam and Eve. It was a time of their fall and their banishment from the garden.The Christian church in Jersalem saw March 25th in the same perspective.
The day Mary accepted the invitation of the angel was the day Word was made flesh for the recreation of the world. A new Adam became flesh in her womb. Nine months from March 25, December 25th, she gave birth to her Son. Influenced by that same way of thinking some Christians then believed that Jesus died on this date and descended to the nether world where, as the New Adam, he brought life to the dead.
We tend today to think about time in a linear way, but the Feast of the Annunciation of the Lord reminds us there are other ways of thinking about time. The rich symbolism of this feast sees the whole of God’s plan unfolding in this great day of the year.
A beautiful way to think.


