Blessed Is the Fruit of Your Womb

Happy Fourth of July! As we celebrate America, please also help support our efforts to contend for the freedom to proclaim the faith.

The Bible is an earthy, fleshy book. God forms Adam from dirt. He fashions Eve from Adam’s rib. They eat forbidden fruit and use animal skin for covering. There are pillars of smoke and fire, roasted lambs and bitter herbs, bloody sacrifices and clouds of temple incense. And not only in the Old Testament — the New Testament continues with such physicality. Jesus heals with spit and dirt, fingers in ears, and caskets touched. A bloody cross culminates in bodily resurrection. Finally, He promises the resurrection of our bodies and a renewed physical earth.

Biblical salvation is not an offer to escape the body into some disembodied realm, whether platonic, gnostic, Eastern, transhumanist or anything else. Rather, the Bible deeply anchors redemption itself to the body. God carries out His redemptive deliverance through intense bodily realities from creation to consummation.

The Christmas story is also grounded in physicality: a pregnancy. There is not much that is more utterly human than giving birth and being born. This fact — that God has taken on flesh in the virgin’s womb — is like a diamond held up to the light. The more you behold its mysteries, the more facets of beauty and wonder you perceive, and the more implications for life emerge in the blessings of birth and embodiment. The Christmas story reflects the subversive and compelling role for the church and the family in a society that has forgotten what it means to be human.

The Visitation: The Wombs of Elizabeth and Mary

The meeting of Mary and Elizabeth overflows with the physicality and joyful anticipation of birth. Echoing an Old Testament theme with women like Sarah, aging Elizabeth — who is beyond childbearing age — nevertheless bears John, the man who would plunge Christ into the waters of the Jordan. Then there is young Mary, the virgin, who bears Jesus, the God-man who came to plunge people into His life-giving kingdom waters. These bookends of maternity — the elderly mother of the greatest born of women under the old covenant, and the virgin mother of the incarnate mystery of the ages — embed the great acts of redemption in the family, much like God’s promise to Abraham that through his offspring “shall all the nations of the earth be blessed” (Gen. 22:18).

The bodily realities of birth are central to the redemptive work of God in Christ. The forerunner and the King both await their destinies as helpless babes in the watery wombs of their mothers. The greatest of the old age and the Ancient of Days meet from inside the bodies of another in a mystery that is visceral and real, enchanting and wonderful. No wonder John leapt for joy. No wonder Elizabeth exclaimed, “Blessed is the fruit of your womb!” (Luke 1:42). And no wonder Mary magnified the Lord (Luke 1:46–56).

John and Jesus are not isolated bodies, but bodies in relation to other bodies — bodies situated in family structures. Elizabeth and Zechariah and Mary and Joseph nurture and raise John and Jesus, as we see the complementarity of men and women in the blessed Trinity’s work of redemption. Christ’s coming in this specific way — birthed through the waters of Mary, nursed at her breast, raised in a family, trained as a craftsman by Joseph — elevates and sanctifies all births and all aspects of life.

This article was first published in and is reprinted here by permission of The Lutheran Witness. Click here to read more.

Be Informed
Discover why there’s been a rise in the U.S. birth rate by listening to a recent Issues, Etc. podcast with Tim Goeglein of Focus on the Family.

Be Equipped
“The solution [the Founding Fathers] came up with is famously stated in the Declaration of Independence: ‘the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God.’ This revolutionary truth, combining human reason and divine revelation, provided the basis for establishing religious liberty for the first time in human history.” Learn more in this transcript from talk given at Hillsdale College explaining Christianity in America today.

Be Encouraged
“There is no joy like the joy of welcoming another child into your life. You will marvel anew at how perfectly formed your little one is and over how quickly you will fall head over heels in love with him. You will be enchanted with every tiny aspect of her appearance. The color of her hair, the shape of her nose, and the winsomeness of her smile will occasion endless happy debates about from which side of the family (yours, of course) she got that adorable trait.” –Steve Mosher, Population Research Institute, author of “Ten Great Reasons to Have Another Child”

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August Bulletin Insert