46-55. A magnificent canticle, in which the strain of Hannah's ancient
song, in like circumstances, is caught up, and just slightly modified
and sublimed. Is it unnatural to suppose that the spirit of the blessed
Virgin had been drawn beforehand into mysterious sympathy with the ideas
and the tone of this hymn, so that when the life and fire of inspiration
penetrated her whole soul it spontaneously swept the chorus of this
song, enriching the Hymnal of the Church with that spirit-stirring
canticle which has resounded ever since from its temple walls? In both
songs, those holy women, filled with wonder to behold "the proud, the
mighty, the rich," passed by, and, in their persons the lowliest chosen
to usher in the greatest events, sing of this as no capricious movement,
but a great law of the kingdom of God, by which He delights to
"put down the mighty from their seats and exalt them of low degree."
In both songs the strain dies away on
CHRIST; in Hannah's under the name
of "Jehovah's King"--to whom, through all His line, from David onwards
to Himself, He will "give strength"; His "Anointed," whose horn He will
exalt
(1Sa 2:10);
in the Virgin's song, it is as the "Help" promised to Israel by all the
prophets.
My soul . . . my spirit--"all that is within me"
(Ps 103:1).
JFB.
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