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Dec 15, 2023 · Today, Mary’s song is called The Magnificat, meaning “my soul magnifies the Lord” in Latin. In the Gospel of Luke, we find Mary’s song. She is praising the God who has chosen her to be the mother of His only son.
- Ashley Hooker
Dec 19, 2022 · Most striking lyrically is the chorus: “You go down like Holy Mary/Mary on a cross”, a seemingly provocative mash-up of Biblical and sexual imagery. Forge himself has been loathe to strip away the mystery, though he admitted one his daughter’s friends had heard the song was “perverted”.
Dec 13, 2020 · Mary, the singer of the Magnificat, God’s gorgeous justice song. Growing up, I didn’t hear a single sermon about the song Luke attributes to the teenage girl who gave birth to Jesus. No one told me that Mary’s song comprises the longest set of words spoken by a woman in the New Testament.
- Debie Thomas
Mary's Song. “And Mary said, My soul doth magnify the Lord, and my spirit hath rejoiced in God my Saviour.”—Luke 1:46-47. MARY was on a visit when she expressed her joy in the language of this noble song. It were well if all our social intercourse were as useful to our hearts as this visit was to Mary.
Sep 3, 2021 · Mary Magdalene perfectly represents throughout all four Gospels the type of love between the individual soul and God that one should develop as figuratively described in the Song of Songs. The Song of Songs, also known as the Song of Solomon or the Canticle of Canticles, constitutes one of the canonical Old Testament books in both the Jewish ...
Feb 25, 2019 · Please explain Mary’s song of God’s faithfulness in Luke 1:46-55. February 25, 2019. Imagine all the emotions going through Mary’s heart and mind after being told by the angel Gabriel that she would be carrying and giving birth to God’s son!
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The words ‘on a cross’ are themselves ambiguous: are we talking crucifixion here (with Mary replacing Jesus on the Cross), or are we talking about someone forming a ‘cross’ shape with their body, arms and legs spread wide? After all, the song is called ‘Mary on a Cross’, not the (true) Cross.