The Choir of the Ordinary
In 2019, a video went viral of a young cashier at a Walmart in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, quietly singing hymns while scanning groceries. She wasn't performing. She wasn't even aware anyone was recording. But an elderly woman in her checkout line — a retired music teacher named Dorothy — stopped mid-transaction, tears streaming, and said, "Child, do you know what God has put in your voice?"
That cashier, making minimum wage on the night shift, had no stage, no platform, no audience. But her song carried something that made a stranger's spirit leap.
When Mary arrived at Elizabeth's door, she was an unwed teenager from a backwater village, carrying the most extraordinary secret in human history. She had no credentials, no status, no reason anyone should listen. But when she spoke her greeting, Elizabeth's baby leaped, and the older woman cried out, "Blessed are you among women!"
And then Mary sang. The Magnificat wasn't performed in a temple or a palace. It poured out in a modest hill-country home between two pregnant women whom the world had every reason to overlook. Yet Mary's song declared that the Almighty was overturning everything — scattering the proud, pulling rulers from thrones, filling the hungry, and lifting the forgotten.
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