THE MOTHER OF JESUS
Dr. W. A. Criswell
John 19:25
5-14-89 10:30 a.m.
And once again welcome to
the throngs of you who share this hour on radio and on television. You are now
part of our dear First Baptist Church in Dallas, and this is the pastor
bringing the message entitled The Mother of Jesus. Our background text—and
this is one of the strange coincidences that I've so often found in my
preaching through the Bible—right before me, in the nineteenth chapter of the
Book of John, in which I am preaching through these present days, right before
me is the story of the background of our text, John 19:25, 27:
Now there stood by the
cross of Jesus His mother, and His mother's sister, Mary the wife of Cleophas,
and Mary Magdalene.
When Jesus therefore saw
His mother, and the disciple standing by, whom He loved—John
He saith unto His mother,
Woman—a gracious title—behold thy Son!
Then saith He to the
disciple—John—Behold thy mother!
And from that hour that
disciple took her unto his own home.
Universally, the second
Sunday in May, this Sunday, is designated as Mother's Day. There are
boundaries for families, and states, and nations, and tribes, and peoples. But
there are no boundaries for the love of mother, it is universal. I had one of
the strangest responses that I ever experienced in my life in preaching in the
Baptist church in Moscow, Russia. I was not expecting it and it was just
something happened that overwhelmed me. In the message, I was speaking of the
common denominator of all mankind, whether they live east, west, north or
south; whether they're red, white, pink colored; whether they're rich or
poor. I was speaking of the common denominator of all humanity. And
incidentally referred to the fact that whether it be the tears of an American
mother, or the tears of an English mother, or the tears of a French mother, or
the tears of a German mother, or the tears of a Russian mother, when they bow
over the prostrate form of their son killed in the war, all of those tears are
strangely alike.
Well, sweet people, when I
said that, there was a burst of tears in that throng. And if you've ever
been there and watched them, each one of them will have a large white
handkerchief. Everyone in Divine Presence took out that white
handkerchief and dried the tears from their eyes. Well, after the service was
over, I asked Pastor Zhidkov—I said, “Why was it that, when I spoke of those
men that were lost in this war, that they cried so, burst into tears so?”
“Well,” he said, “There was
nobody present, no one present, but had lost a brother, or a son, or a father
in the war.”
Mother’s tears: how
strangely alike they are throughout all the boundaries that separate mankind.
So the mother of Jesus, sweet virgin Mary—she is presented to us in the first
beatitude in the story of our Lord. You read it just now, “And the angel
said unto her, Hail, thou that art highly favored… Blessed art thou among women”
[Luke 1:28]. And when she went to see her kinsman, Elizabeth, Elizabeth met
her and the babe, John the Baptist, leaped in her womb. And Elizabeth,
filled with the Holy Spirit said, “Blessed art thou among women. And blessed is
the fruit of thy womb…For, lo, as soon as the voice of thy salutation sounded
in mine ears, the babe leaped in my womb.” [Luke 1:42-44] The first beatitude,
“Blessed art thou among women.” And when our Lord began His
ministry, the first Messianic miracle, she was there. And when His life
closed in the days of His flesh, she was there standing by the Cross, the first
and the last, that devoted mother.
And however life may
turn, that Child is always hers. When Eve gave birth to the first child
in the race, she said, “I have gotten a man from the Lord.” Received the life
as from God; and in truth, how much it is. And whatever the course or the
destiny of that youngster—go to college and be a scholar; head to the world of
business and be a rich man, rich woman; enter the world of politics and be a
governor or a president; enter the world of the military and lead an army;
enter the world of religious faith and be a missionary in a far country—but
wherever, that child is still hers, loved and remembered forever.
So it was in the agony of
His death on the Cross: Our Lord remembered His mother standing there in the
infinite sorrow and committing her to the love and care of the loved apostle,
John. When He looked upon her standing at the across, what did He see?
Three things in her: number one, she was plainly a provincial. She spoke
with a Galilean accent. She did not belong to the culture of Jerusalem,
and was certainly not in the family of the Sadducees. She was a
provincial. A second thing about her, she was plainly a poor, peasant
woman. She belonged to that stratum of society that toiled and
labored. She was dressed like a poor peasant. And third: She was old: her
hands were worn with years of toil and her face was lined and wrinkled.
In the Near East and in that long ago day, a woman aged early in life, and
Mary is beyond half a century.
I have never been able to
understand or to enter into the doctrine of the Roman Church: that Mary was a
perpetual virgin and that she was perpetually young. For example, if you
ever go to the Vatican and look inside of Saint Peter's Cathedral, you'll see
that incomparable statuary piece by Michelangelo called [Pietà]. There you will see a girl, 18 years of
age, holding in her arms the corpse of Jesus, who's 33. I cannot understand
why. Why should it be that older age is less appealing to God and to man?
It seems to me, the aging of life carries with it an infinite benedictory
remembrance from heaven.
Do you remember this stanza
from Robert Browning's “Rabbi Ben Ezra?” Come:
Grow old along with me!
The best is yet to be,
The last of life, for which
the first was made:
Our times are in His hand
Who saith, ``A whole I
planned,
Youth shows but half; trust
God: see all, nor be afraid!'
Don't be afraid of the
years that multiply. They bring with them infinite blessings, heavenly
joys, God's presence in the pilgrim way.
And I can think of that for
this wonderful mother, Mary: the psalms that she sang, the prayers that she
prayed, the experiences of the pilgrimage. O God, how wonderful it is,
thus to grow in the depths of life as we grow in the years of our age.
Could I say again I am surprised that she is there; I thought she would be at a
home in Galilee. But here she stands, by the cross in Jerusalem in
Judea. You know what I think? There was an unerring intuition in
that mothers heart of what should come to pass in the days of His atoning love
and grace.
Have you ever seen
that picture of [William] Holman Hunt , [The Shadow of Death -1873] Jesus is
standing in the carpenters shop with His arms extended somehow in the work of
the day, and back of Him as He stands thus, He casts a shadow of a cross against
the wall, and Mary sees it. Somehow she sensed that that Day of Atonement
had come and this prophecy of Simeon was fulfilled in her life, “Yea, and a
sword shall pierce thine own soul also.” [Like 2:35] And there she is,
standing by the cross. To the Romans—brutal, hard—the lifting up of that cross
was an announcement to the world, “This is a malefactor. This is an
insurrectionist. This is a thief, a sinner, rightfully dying by execution,
crucified.” That was the meaning of the Roman “lifting up,” crucifixion.
But to that mother standing by the Cross, this is God's Son, and mother's
love is ever unchanging.
The world asks, “Where did
you come from? What's your status?”
Business asks, “What's your
bank account? What are your assets?””
Society asks, “What is your
privilege?”
The scholastic world asks, “What
are your degrees?”
Mother asks, “Is there
something in which I can help?”
One of the most unusual,
fanciful stories I ever read in my life: there was a cruel, vicious woman and
the man was courting her. And in order for her to accept his proposal of
marriage, she said, “You cut the heart out of your mother and bring that heart
to me.” And he went to his mother and cut out her heart and was carrying it to
that vicious woman in his hands when he stumbled and fell, and the mother's
heart rolled somehow, someplace, away. And the mother's heart said, “Son, did
you hurt yourself? Did you hurt yourself?”
If
I were hanged
On
the highest hill
I
know whose love
Would
follow me still.
If
I were drowned
In
the deepest sea,
I
know whose tears
Would
come down to me.
If
I were damned
In
body and soul,
I
know whose prayers
Would
make me whole.
Mother
of mine,
Sainted
mother of mine.
[“Mother ‘O Mine”; Rudyard Kipling
An angel came down from
God's heaven to bring back to the great Almighty the most beautiful things in
the earth. And the angel chose a fleecy cloud and a beautiful flower and
a baby's smile and a mother's love. And when the angel appeared before the
Lord God in heaven to present the most beautiful things in the earth: first the
cloud, it had dissipated and disappeared; then the flower, it had wilted
and died; then the baby's smile, it had vanished away. But mother's love had
increased in beauty and meaning through the days. In this story of the Cross
of our Lord, there's a sacrifice on the part of the Heavenly Father. He
couldn't see His Son thus suffer and die, He turned His face away, and the
whole universe turned dark. There's the sacrifice of the Son, who is
suffering for our sins on the Cross. There is also the sacrifice of that
mother.
You know, I was going
through Italy one time, up those Apennines, the spine of Italy. And
suddenly—I had no idea of such a thing, came across a large, expansive military
cemetery, an American cemetery. There, in those Apennines, a vast
cemetery, where American soldiers who had fallen in the war were buried.
And I walked among those tombs and read the inscription: “These are our
American soldier boys, who laid down their lives for us.” You know, I thought
in my heart: back home in America there is a mother somewhere who is weeping
over a son, who is lost.
The bravest battle
That 'ere was fought
Shall I tell you
Where and when?
On the maps of the world,
You'll find it not.
It was fought by
The mothers of men.
[“The
Bravest Battle”;
Joaquin (Cincinnatus Hiner) Miller
Their love so constant,
their prayers so faithful, and their remembrance so unending—God be praised for
our sainted mothers! And God be praised for your mother, leading us in
the way of the Lord!
And that is our prayer for
you and our appeal for you who have shared this hour on television. Did
you have a Christian Mother? You could do no thing in this earth that
would please her more either here or in heaven than to give your life in faith
to the Lord Jesus. If you don’t know how to accept Christ as your Savior,
call us. There will be a faithful, devout somebody who will answer the
phone and lead you into the most beautiful relationship you could ever know in
life and someday I’ll see you in heaven.
And to the throng in this
sanctuary, in the balcony round, on this lower floor, “Today, Pastor, I’m
receiving Christa as my Savior, and I’m coming.” Walking down one of
these aisles, walking down one of these stairways, “We have decided for Christ
and we’re on the way!” A thousand times welcome, receiving Him as your
Savior, coming into the fellowship of His dear church, answering the call of
God in your heart—make it now, and may angels attend you in the way.
While we stand and while we sing.