LET ALL MORTAL FLESH KEEP SILENT
And Zechariah said to the angel,
"How shall I know this? For I am an old man, and my wife is advanced in
years." And the angel answered him, "I am Gabriel. I stand in the
presence of God, and I was sent to speak to you and to bring you this
good news. And behold, you will be silent and unable to speak until the
day that these things take place, because you did not believe my words,
which will be fulfilled in their time."
Luke 1:18-20 ESV
¶Zechariah
is the perfect representation of his people, the Jews, and of us. When
given the great good news of the Savior, we snag up on the age-old
epistemological question: How can I know this? What justifies us in
believing this hopeful message? Rather than receiving it with joyful
celebration, we tend to compare it with our current situation, and lose
out on the hope being offered right in front of us. This is not how
personal/cultural transformation occurs, and it is not the way of
redemption. Why is the presence of a mighty angel standing right in
front of Zechariah not sufficient evidence of the truth of the message?
What is the splendor around us that remains obscured? What is it in our
current perspective that obscures for us the good news? Pride,
bitterness, worldly idols, narcissistic self-protection? Like his people
Israel, Zechariah was looking in the wrong direction for his redeemer.
Even as he saw the pace of prophetic revelation quickening, now
speechless, the preceding 400 years of prophetic silence enveloped him
as well, until the glory of God was revealed as a tiny baby.
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