The Gospel story begins.
The story of Jesus . . . the story of the salvation and hope
that He would bring.
The opening of the New Testament, the New Covenant, the New
Agreement between God and Man. A new Era. A new Day. A new and wonderful
beginning where the plan of God would be revealed and reconciliation between
God and Man made possible by a Savior.
And in the very first Act of the drama . . . the Angel of the
Lord is met with doubt!
In the very first chapter of the Gospel of Luke the story
begins by introducing Bible readers to a man named Zachariah.
He is a Hebrew Priest, and he will become the Father of John
the Baptist, and John is foreordained to serve as the Forerunner of the
Messiah, the Promised Deliverer of the Nation of Israel and of the whole
world.
Luke tells us that Zachariah has no idea what is about to
happen. His name has come up in the rotation to serve in the Temple in
Jerusalem, to perform his duties as a priest.
Hebrew priests were all descendants of Aaron, the brother of the
great hero of the faith, Moses. Moses and Aaron were members of the tribe,
Levi. Abraham was the Father of the Hebrew nation – Abraham had a son named
Isaac – Isaac was the Father of Jacob, who fathered twelve sons. The tribal
system was based upon Jacob’s sons – there were twelve tribes, each one named
after a son of Jacob (whom God later renamed, Israel). So, the Nation of Israel
was composed of the Twelve Tribes.
Everyone in the line of descendancy from Jacob’s son Levi, were
called Levites. Not all Levites were priests, but every priest was
required to be a Levite.
Zachariah was born into the Tribe of Levi . . . he was a
descendant of Aaron . . . but in his youth he chose to pursue the priesthood –
he might have claimed that God separated him and called him into the priesthood.
He would have to study, and train, and prepare, and he would have to be
approved and anointed by the Elders and religious leaders of Israel before he
could assume the office of priest.
Zachariah’s father, or Grandfather, and/or Great Grandfather
might have served in the priesthood. He might have been the first of his family
to do so. We do not know.
The priesthood was not a vocation, a job, or a means of
livelihood. Zachariah worked to support and provide for his family by working
at some secular endeavor. The priesthood was his calling to spiritual service.
A priest in Israel might study, train, and prepare for his
entire life in the priesthood, and only be selected or called upon to
actually perform the duties of the priesthood, once in that lifetime.
There were many priests throughout all of the nation of Israel, and they
served by lot, and list, and rotation. This was not what Zachariah did every
day of his adult life. The story that Luke tells about him in his Gospel
happens during a once in a lifetime occasion in the life of this humble servant
of God.
If anything at all could make this part of the Gospel story seem
more important, and more God-ordained than the timing of Zachariah’s
service, I cannot think of what it might be.
Zachariah is the man of God in the right place at the right
time.
During his service in the Temple (how excited, awed, and
overjoyed Zachariah must have already been), the Angel of the Lord (named
Gabriel) appeared to him. (Luke 1:13-17).
13) The Angel Gabriel said to Zachariah: “Do not be afraid, Zechariah; your prayer has been heard. Your wife Elizabeth will bear you a son, and you are to call him John.
13) The Angel Gabriel said to Zachariah: “Do not be afraid, Zechariah; your prayer has been heard. Your wife Elizabeth will bear you a son, and you are to call him John.
14) He will be a joy and delight to you, and many will
rejoice because of his birth,
15) Because he will be great in the sight of the Lord. He
is never to take wine or other fermented drink,and he will be filled with the
Holy Spirit even before he is born.
16) He will bring back many of the people of Israel to the
Lord their God.
17) And he will go ahead of the Lord, in the spirit
and power of Elijah, to turn the hearts of the parents to their
children and the disobedient to the wisdom of the righteous— to prepare
the people, to prepare them for the Lord.”
I have always wondered at the passages like this in the Bible
(there are several). The Angel of the Lord suddenly appears out of nothing (not
just your run of the mill angel, but the Angel of all Angels, Gabriel) and
says, ”Fear not!” What I wonder is, how is that working for you? The not
being afraid part, I mean.
I imagine that Zach was still terrified . . . comforting words
aside.
This is a great deal to take in without warning.
So, Zachariah’s response is not contemplated, measured, weighed
and thought out. What comes out of his mouth is a genuine and unvarnished reply, straight from his shocked heart and mind.
His response is a question, “How can I know that what you have
said is true?” (For Zachariah, knowing and believing were the same).
He does overcome his fear enough to express honest doubt and
uncertainty.
You might tell an
angel anything that you think he wants to hear. You might muster up the
strength to boldly accept what you have heard without question or reserve. But
Zachariah didn’t do that. He shot straight with the Angel of the Lord and said,
“I don’t believe you -- prove it!”
The Gospel story might have fallen onto the rocks at its very
first step. If doubt, hesitation, uncertainty, or unbelief had caused God to
ditch His plan we would never have heard or benefited from the story of Jesus.
The story would have never begun.
Here is the lesson: God knows how difficult it is for us to
believe. He knows how weak we are and how prone we are to question what He is
doing (or about to do) and He is always prepared to help us step forward in
spite of the pitfalls.
EVERYTHING that the Angel promised came to pass . . . AND he
gently tweaked Zachariah for failing to believe from the beginning. The
Father-to-be would not be able to speak a word until the day that his son was
born!
Every single moment that Zachariah was mute was a loving
confirmation that God is faithful!
Think for a moment . . .
“Angel, how am I going to KNOW that what you have just told me
is TRUE?!”
Well, your wife Elizabeth is going to surprise you by telling
you that she is pregnant. And every day for the following nine months you will
be able to look at your beautiful wife of so many years, and see the glow
and joy and wonder of what God has promised as she carries the coming Prophet.
And then . . . you’re going to have a baby! A little, round,
pink, cuddly baby boy (he was to be a little rough and craggy as an adult, but
he was a normal baby boy). That baby is the ultimate proof that God does what
He says that He will do. Every time you hold that baby, feed him, bounce him on
your knee, or play with him you will know that you are touching a promise of
God that has been carried out before your eyes.
Zachariah . . . if you had only been thinking clearly . . . you
would have realized that you would know from the natural proofs of the
circumstances appearing before you . . . you would see the evidence of God
bringing His will to pass.
Personally, I think being stricken mute by the angel is a
humorous touch. Zach may not have thought it was funny, but maybe he did.
Maybe that silent old man smiled knowingly at everyone who looked at him.
“Look at that poor old man,” someone probably said. “If I
couldn’t talk I don’t know if I would be as happy as he appears to be.”
Maybe he enjoyed the little joke -- he was going to be a
Father.
Many people who suddenly lost their voice would feel that it was a tragedy -- the judgment of God. But to this joyful priest, his forced silence was a sign. A sign that God’s plan was going forward, and he and his wife and new son were going to be a part of it.
Many people who suddenly lost their voice would feel that it was a tragedy -- the judgment of God. But to this joyful priest, his forced silence was a sign. A sign that God’s plan was going forward, and he and his wife and new son were going to be a part of it.
Was God pleased with Zachariah’s unbelief? No, but it
didn’t even slow the Creator down.
The story continued . . .