Luke 1:67-79
Praise be to the Lord, the God of Israel,
because he has come to his people and redeemed them.
He has raised up a horn[a] of salvation for us
in the house of his servant David
(as he said through his holy prophets of long ago),
salvation from our enemies
and from the hand of all who hate us—
to show mercy to our ancestors
and to remember his holy covenant,
the oath he swore to our father Abraham:
to rescue us from the hand of our enemies,
and to enable us to serve him without fear
in holiness and righteousness before him all our days.
And you, my child, will be called a prophet of the Most High;
for you will go on before the Lord to prepare the way for him,
to give his people the knowledge of salvation
through the forgiveness of their sins,
because of the tender mercy of our God,
by which the rising sun will come to us from heaven
to shine on those living in darkness
and in the shadow of death,to guide our feet into the path of peace.”
To Be Silent!
In
the desert there are these big green thorny trees that have thorns like long
nails a comedian I heard call these wait-a-minute trees. You can be innocently just walking past when
suddenly your shirt will catch on one of these thorns and the tree says “wait a
minute”, You have to stop…untangle
yourself and then be on your way.
In
today’s story Zachariah has a wait- a- minute experience with God which leads
to a spirit filled prophecy.
But
it all begins with..
Silence!
To
be silent, is to respond to sound in a very physical way because you may have
chosen not to speak as in a vow of silence, perhaps one is incapable of speech
or perhaps has never heard speech, without speech our response to sound and
communication becomes something very different; be that sign language, or drawing
a picture or attempting to write, it is very different from what we are used
to.
In
the sound of silence Paul Simon writes;
Hello
darkness, my old friend
I've come to talk with you again
Because a vision softly creeping
Left its seeds while I was sleeping
And the vision that was planted in my brain
Still remains
Within the sound of silence
I've come to talk with you again
Because a vision softly creeping
Left its seeds while I was sleeping
And the vision that was planted in my brain
Still remains
Within the sound of silence
Zachariah
is living in silence before our reading today. An imposed silence but a silence
just the same.
Ken
Gehrls the Pastor of Calvin Christian reformed church writes;
“Silence,
sometimes, as they say, it can be golden.
But
sometimes, well, sometimes, it can be a difficult thing to experience.
Like the silence of the
night.
When you lay in bed, alone, with all the thoughts that roar through your brain
you wish you had someone to share them with, but the entire world is asleep except you.
When you lay in bed, alone, with all the thoughts that roar through your brain
you wish you had someone to share them with, but the entire world is asleep except you.
Or the silence of
distance.
You'd love to be able to communicate with a loved one. But for whatever reason you cannot reach them. You can remember them. And wish you could touch them, and hear their voice.
That kind of silence can
really get to you after a while.
Zachariah’s silence was
altogether different;
Zachariah was a priest
in the order of Abijah which is of the eighth of the twenty-four courses (or
classes) into which David divided the priests, and his wife Elizabeth
was of the house of Aaron. Zachariah as
a priest had duties at the temple in Jerusalem which alternated
between each of the family lines that had descended from those appointed by
king David (1st Chronicles 24:1–19).[1]
The daily blessing of the priests in the Temple serves to open the Heavenly gates of mercy. Through it, the people of Israel merit not only material well-being - including offspring and longevity - but spiritual blessings as well; mercy, Divine protection and the greatest blessing of all... true peace. Since the priests themselves represent the attribute of kindness, their service brings the flow of God's blessing down to His people.
Luke states that
during the week when it was the duty of Zachariah's family line to serve at
"the temple of the Lord", the lot for performing the incense offering
had fallen to Zachariah while Zachariah ministered at the altar of incense, an
angel of the Lord appeared and announced to him that his wife would give birth
to a son, whom he was to name John, and that this son would be the forerunner
of the messiah. Gently reminding the
angel of their advanced age, Zachariah asked with disbelief for a sign whereby
he would know the truth of this prophecy. So the angel identifies itself
as Gabriel, sent especially by God to make this announcement, and added
that because of Zechariah's doubt he would be struck dumb and "not able to
speak, until the day that these things shall be performed". Be careful what you ask for! Consequently,
when he went out to the waiting worshippers in the temple's outer courts, he
was unable to speak the customary blessing (Luke 1:18–22).
So imagine now Zachariah
comes out of the temple after performing the ritual with the Incense and here
are the people awaiting the blessing from God through the priest and the priest
cannot announce God’s blessing. The
priest is silent, therefore, God is silent.
Ken Gerhls goes on to write; “Perhaps we don't think about it much, but
between the last page of the Old Testament and the first pages of the New
Testament is a span of some 400 years. 400 years since the last prophet had
declared the divine word of God to His people. 400 years where the space
between earth and heaven seemed absolutely monstrous. 400 years during which
the silence began to thunder.
Remember - these were
the days before the Holy Spirit was poured out.
There were no prophets.
No inner voice of the Spirit.
Just silence.” Now this silence is emphasized by a priest of the ancient line, who is married to the lineage of Aaron, to be struck dumb.
The story goes on to
state that just by looking at him the people could see that he had experienced
a vision. It also goes on to say that
Zachariah keeps motioning at them throughout his time to serve. We don’t know if anyone was able to translate
his gestures or what he was trying to say just that when his time in service
was done he went home.
Zachariah went home to
be silent but, unlike the silence of Yahweh before, this silence was loud and
vibrating through his life. God had
truly awakened him and soon the people of Israel as well but, at this time, he
could do nothing about it. It was his
and his alone to carry.
Now I find kind-of
sacred bracket here, a frame of Holy silence if you will. A prophecy has been
proclaimed in stillness. The silence of
400 years has actually been broken though no one will be aware of it for a nine
months. Yes events of the prophecy start
to manifest but until Zachariah speaks no one will know what has
transgressed. Much like the silence
between Good Friday and Easter morn a prophecy is fulfilled but no one knows it
in the silence in between.
But in this sacred
silence of Zachariah what occurs within him?
I assume it was looked upon as some sort of illness or malady. He probably couldn’t go back to work; he
definitely could no longer serve in the temple for many of the duties required
verbal prayer, chants and or blessings.
All he could do was go home and be silent and reflect.
Renowned author Gerald May,
in Let Your Life Speak,
speaks of some of what I think Zachariah was suddenly called into. In this sacred silence all he could do was
take time to listen, and listen, he had to do. He had to try to understand this prophecy and
what turn his life and generations were to take because of it. He had to try to understand what his life had
been, and now, what it is and will be. To this Gerald may says; “I must listen
to my life and try to understand what it is truly about- quite apart from what
I would like it to be about.” I would add, in Zachariah’s case, what he may
have believed his life to be about.
Zachariah, after a lifetime of service to the temple, to God, and to
Jerusalem, he had to re-evaluate everything.
This is a sacred time a
time of silence and preparation in anticipation of that which is to come in
fulfillment of the prophecy by the angel.
(That sentence applies as well to this story as to today in the midst of
advent.) Now, shortly after Zachariah comes home in
silence his wife Elizabeth goes into seclusion herself as she is pondering the
miracle that has occurred for her. The Gospel states “she stays there for 5
months saying ‘this is what the lord has done for me as God looked favorably on
me and took away my disgrace I have endured among my people.’” The whole house is now in silence waiting for
a birth and for the prophecy to be fulfilled.
In the Advent
Meditations by Henri Nouwen it says :
An awaiting person is a patient person. The word “patience” implies to stay where we
are and live the situation out to the full in the belief that something hidden
there will manifest itself to us.
Patient Living means to live actively in the present and wait
there. Impatient people expect the real
thing to happen somewhere else, and therefore they want to get away from their
present situation and go elsewhere. For
them, the moment is empty. But patient people dare to stay where they are,
waiting.[1]
Here is a whole
Household who has chosen to be in silence and stay, and wait, awaiting the
promise of God. Through the moment of
Silence the promise of God is roaring, moving, changing lives. 2/3rds of the way through this whole process
the angel appears to Mary proclaiming what is to be. No sooner does Mary hear the news then she
runs to visit Elizabeth and at Mary’s greeting the child leaps within her and “Elizabeth is filled with the Holy Spirit”
(Luke 1:41)
Suddenly after 400 years
of silence, of going through the motions, after 400 years of waiting, God is
active physically in their midst. It was
as if their lives had gone form a grey mundane experience to suddenly have
color. It is like Dorothy stepping from
her old tattered and torn farm house in sepia tone out into Oz in full
Technicolor. God is doing amazing
things. Elizabeth is pregnant, Mary is
expecting, and Zachariah is in quiet, patient, prayer waiting, waiting for that
moment when he will be called to do as the Angel said.
Finally the day arrives
when Elizabeth gives birth and everyone knows the name of the child is to be
Zachariah but Elizabeth says no it is to be John. All those around are confused for there is no
one in his family named John and tradition holds first born is named after the
father or a grandfather on one side of the family or the other. Zachariah starts shaking his and gesturing
no. Then Zachariah writes; “his name is
to be John.” Now this is when things get
really lively.
For
the Bible states; “Immediately his mouth
was opened, his tongue freed, and he began to speak, praising God.” (Luke1:64)
Praising God for, for what? I believe he
started praising God for his 9 months of silence. For his 9 months to pray, observe and
wait. For His chance to review what his
life had been and what he once saw as mundane and maybe even as a rut now had
meaning and purpose for all of it, everything he had ever done had all led up
to this moment the fulfillment of a prophecy and a story that only he could
tell from the beginning for he is the only one that was in on it from the
beginning.
“Then fear came upon all their neighbors, and all
these matters were discussed throughout the hill country of Judea. All who
heard these things took them to heart, saying, ‘What, then, will this child
be?’ For surely the hand of the Lord was with him.” (Luke 1:66)
I find this odd and yet somewhat expected of human
nature. The initial reaction is
fear. There is no mention of fear when a
priest comes out of the temple fully dumb and gesturing trying to communicate
what had just happened. No mention of
fear when they can see that he truly had some experience of God. No mention of fear when a woman who has been
barren suddenly comes out of seclusion 5 months pregnant.
Yet a man is suddenly relieved of his affliction and
starts to praise God for the miracles he is witness too and now there is
fear! Why, because the name of God is
spoken aloud in Joy? Why because a
prophecy is fulfilled? Or is it more to do with the Prophecy, today’s reading,
the Canticle of Zachariah.
For now God is no longer silent. Zachariah proclaims
and claims all That which the people had read so much about as happening to the
father of faith, patriarch Abraham, and through the generations of prophets and to the people -
- that was now continuing and coming to fruition among them!
- that was now continuing and coming to fruition among them!
And more would be to come. That's what the prophetic
song speaks of - loud and clear for all to hear. No more silence here!
God is redeeming the people. Meaning God is coming
to push their enemy out of the way. God is coming to set them free. God is about
to become God incarnate, the Human One who would bring salvation to all people.
There would be a future without fear where they
could live in the presence of the Holy One, serving the Creator in holiness and
righteousness. Meaning they would have the assurance of belonging to God –
whole-ly and completely. They would be
able to focus on living God’s will and focusing on being a people of God –
living rightly and freely. Nothing would be able to rip them away from God ever
again.
No more silence.
No more distance.
No more silence.
No more distance.
No more waiting for distant prophesies to be
fulfilled.
That's Zechariah's song,
a song of hope, a song of prophecy, a song with which all the events of the
advent season are ignited. Now God is once again active in the world, never to
be silent again. “Blessed be the Lord God of Israel for he has looked favorably
on his people.” (Luke1:68)
In this, our advent time,
we take time to remember how people prepared for the coming of the Christed
One, the anointed one, the One in whom the saving power of God was manifested
in human flesh. We prepare to celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ physically in
this world over 2000 years ago and daily in us. Daily, in moments of silence,
daily in those times when we choose to stop and see God active in our lives and
we can proclaim, because of this, our lives are never mundane and that; “By the
tender mercy of our God, the dawn from on high will break upon us, to give
light to those who sit in darkness and in the shadow of death, to guide our
feet into the way of peace.”
Blessings
[1] Advent
Meditations Fromt He Writings of Henri Nouwen (Fenton, MO: Creative
Communications for the pariash, 2007), 10.
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