There is also a legend that Mary was not the first young woman to whom the angel came. But she was the first one to say yes.
And how unsurprising it would be for a fourteen-year-old girl to refuse the angel. To be disbelieving. Or to say:
“Are you sure you mean —
but I’m unworthy —
I couldn’t anyhow —
I’d be afraid. No, no,
it’s inconceivable, you can’t be asking me —
I know it’s a great honour
but wouldn’t it upset them all,
both our families?
They’re very proper, you see.
Do I have to answer now?
I don’t want to say no —
it’s what every girl hopes for
even if she won’t admit it.
But I can’t commit myself to anything
this important without turning it over
in my mind for a while
and I should ask my parents
and I should ask my —
Let me have a few days to think it over.”
Sorrowfully, although he was not surprised
to have it happen again,
the angel returned to heaven.
from “And It Was Good: Reflections on Beginnings” (Wheaton, Ill.: Harold Shaw Publishers, 1983), pp 250-51.
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