I didn’t expect to feel so crazy.

The only thing I am sure of is that I am pregnant. That much is clear. Pregnant with who (heavens, or what? Who am I to know how a Messiah would choose to appear?) is a mystery. Mysteries require faith. And waiting. Oh God — an awful lot of waiting.

I pray for more faith.

How I got pregnant … well, that is another mystery. Oddly, not a mystery to the women in the village who point and whisper behind their hands, not a mystery to the men who mock Joseph, laughing and making eyes behind his back — to them it’s really, really clear. Pregnant

Mary. The scoffers have certainly figured it out. I suppose they usually think they do.

I pray for more faith.

Advertisement

I barely remember the encounter. It was an ordinary afternoon. I can’t remember the weather — except that it couldn’t have been raining because I was outside. Some younger children were playing a game somewhere — I could hear them. I looked at the sky, aware that for the first time that day I was alone, deliciously alone and I could finally consider this betrothal to Joseph.

And then suddenly I wasn’t alone. I was surrounded by a Presence. What could I call it? Light? Love? It wasn’t like anything I could name. The Presence called himself the angel Gabriel. And here is the strange part, the part that comforts me at night, holding the memory to my expanding middle like a warm blanket: in that sweet encounter the world and all that is in it seemed half real — even secondary. What was real, what was true was not the trees or the grass or even the children laughing in the distance — what was real was that which surrounded me, asking for my consent in a scandalously visible and common state that somehow, this time, is supposed to be holy.

I pray for more faith.

I couldn’t have imagined it, fleeting as it was. Because I am sure that I am pregnant, as the neighbors remind each other when they think I can’t hear.

Perhaps I am more that they say at this moment. Perhaps the angel was right, that I am blessed, that I have found favor with God. Perhaps as God’s law appears to be broken, it is fulfilled. Perhaps by losing my life, I will find it?

Oh Lord, my heart never wants to sacrifice. I want comfort and answers. I want to know how on earth (heaven?) You think this could possibly use me to accomplish anything at all. Give me eyes to see what I can remember, and show me how to treasure it in my heart. I am frightened.

ABIGAIL KILLEEN attends Grace Episcopal Church in Bath and is an assistant professor of theater in the Department of Theater and Dance at Bowdoin College in Brunswick.



Comments are not available on this story.

filed under: