Saturday, December 11, 2010

Advent...Candle Three


Why did He choose a northern maid
From Nazareth, who had to trade
Her Galilee for Judah just
To get Messiah where He must
Be born? A strange and roundabout
Procedure for a God, no doubt,
Who values His efficiency
And rules the world from sea to sea!
Why not a girl from Bethlehem?
Well half the girls in town would stem
From David's line. And carpenters
Aplenty there could bear the slurs
And gossip on a virgin got
with child, who blushed and said she'd not
Once kissed her man this whole year past.
Why not? Because God's power is vast,
And in one little virgin birth
His sovereign joy and mighty mirth
In saving us from evil bent
Could never, never rest content.
Instead He turned and set His sight
To spangle Rome with all His might;
And took a girl from Galilee
To magnify His sovereignty.
And made the Roman king conspire
With God, to serve a purpose higher
Than he or any in the realm
Could see—a stroke to overwhelm
A few with faith and cause their heart
To know the truth, at least in part,
That, though God loves efficiency
And rules the world from sea to sea,
He does not go from here to there
By shortest routes to save His fare.
He'd rather start in Galilee,
Then pass a law in Rome, you see,
To get the child down south at length,
And magnify His sovereign strength.
God rules the flukes of history
To see that Micah's prophecy
Comes true. Why did He choose a maid
From Nazareth? Perhaps she prayed
That endless mercy might abound
And take the longer way around.
The mighty mercy we adore
As we light advent candle four. 
God loves to "magnify His sovereign strength." This is the answer to the question John Piper poses in the poem "Mighty Mercy": Why did God choose such "strange and roundabout" providence "[t]o get Messiah where He must be born?" This poem exalts God's absolute sovereignty in the "flukes of history."

~John Piper  Mighty Mercy @ Desiring God 

2 comments:

Barbara H. said...

I've often wondered at "God's efficiency" in situations where one person received something and gave it to another who in turn gave it to someone who had great need. I've thought -- why didn't God give it to the one neediest person directly? Perhaps we saw more of His glory and working in the "roundabout" way of working, and perhaps the two who gave needed to give. But things like that have made me think that God's idea of efficiency is different than ours.

Pastor D said...

Great poem!

I recognized Piper's style before I knew it was Piper. It reminds me of a poem he included in an anniversary edition of Desiring God.

It reminds me of God's rebuke of rebels in Psalm 50 where He says, "you thought I was exactly like you."

God is SO great and SO good and SO creative that we are just a pale shadow compared to Him.