The angel answered, “The Holy Spirit will come on you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you. So the holy one to be born will be called the Son of God.”
Luke 1:35 (NIV)
Yesterday we finished our trek through the story of Esther in which God providentially works through two unassuming individuals to save the Jewish people from genocide. Mordecai and his niece Esther were exiles and foreigners in Persia. Mordecai was a bureaucratic paper pusher. Esther was just a young girl.
God loves to work through unassuming people of faith.
As we begin our Lenten trek through Luke’s biography of Jesus, we see this same paradigm again.
An old priest and his wife who live in the back-country hills of Judah.
A young girl in the backwater town of Nazareth.
These are nobodies. Simple people living faithfully where life has planted them. But through them, God is going to begin a new creation.
When Mary asks the angel Gabriel how she could be pregnant, since she was a virgin, he said that God’s Spirit would “overshadow” her. That’s a fascinating word to use. The Greek word means “to overshadow,” the language used when God’s presence fills the tabernacle. It also echoes the opening chapter of the Great Story in which God’s Spirit “hovers” over the chaos and creation begins. Gabriel is announcing that through Mary a new creation is about to begin, and Mary will become like an Ark of the New Covenant.
The Ark of the Covenant was the most sacred object in Israel.
Inside it were three things:
- The stone tablets of the Law
- A jar of manna
- Aaron’s priestly staff
Above it rested what was known as the mercy seat, and God’s glory—the Shekinah—was said to dwell there. In other words, the Ark represented the place where God’s presence touched the earth. And when the Ark was placed in the tabernacle, Scripture says the cloud of God’s glory “overshadowed” it — and there’s that word again.
Now watch what Luke does.
Luke structures Mary’s visit to Elizabeth so that it mirrors an earlier story in Israel’s history.
The story appears in 2 Samuel, when King David brings the Ark to Jerusalem.
Let’s compare the passages.
| Ark Story | Mary Story |
|---|---|
| David travels to the hill country of Judah | Mary travels to the hill country of Judah |
| David asks: “How can the ark of the Lord come to me?” | Elizabeth asks: “Why am I so favored that the mother of my Lord should come to me?” |
| The Ark stays in the house of Obed-Edom three months | Mary stays with Elizabeth about three months |
| David leaps/dances before the Ark | John leaps in Elizabeth’s womb |
Now, let’s compare what was in the Ark of the Covenant and what is inside of Mary…
| Ark Contents | Fulfillment in Mary |
|---|---|
| Stone tablets of the Law | Jesus — the living Word |
| Jar of manna | Jesus — the bread of life |
| Aaron’s priestly staff | Jesus — the ultimate High Priest |
Luke begins his version of Jesus’ story by telling us that God’s glory no longer lives in a golden box inside a temple.
Instead, it lives:
- in the womb of a teenage girl
- in a stable outside Bethlehem
- in the life of a wandering rabbi with the calloused hands of a carpenter
God has moved out of the temple and into the neighborhood.
And what neighborhood?
Not the Temple Mount in Jerusalem, nor in glorious Rome— but to a back water town in Galilee. A rural nowhere where you’ll find simple people of faith living quiet, every day lives.
The kind of unassuming people God loves to use.
The same Spirit who overshadowed:
- the waters of creation
- the tabernacle in the wilderness
- Mary in Nazareth
now chooses to dwell in ordinary lives that say yes to Him.
In the quiet this morning, my heart is mulling over the reality that God tends to create the most world-changing things in hidden places. The very theme I saw all over the place in Esther’s story.
Before creation, there was dark water.
Before redemption, there was a quiet womb.
The Spirit doesn’t only move in thunder.
Sometimes He hovers.
Over a life.
Over a calling.
Over a slow, unseen work of grace.
And when He does, creation happens all over again.
“Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, the new creation has come: The old has gone, the new is here!”
2 Corinthians 5:17 (NIV)

If you know anyone who might be encouraged by today’s post, please share.



