Tuesday, December 18, 2012

Zacharius & Mary (Luke 1)


Boy! The messenger angel was certainly busy during that first Christmas season! Think about it, he sat around for nearly 400 years waiting to deliver a message to someone. Then suddenly, in a period of a few months, he was speeding up and down the land of Israel, delivering messages to men and women alike.

Two of those messages were to an old priest named Zacharias, and a young virgin girl named Mary. One was in the south of the land, the other in the north. Their messages were quite similar, but their reactions were vastly different, with quite different consequences.

Zacharius (Zachary, today, or Zach, if you please) was an old priest, married to Elizabeth, a barren wife. Here he was,
     ending his days in the priesthood
          with no successor,
               no child,
                    no grandchildren. Not a very promising picture, to say the least. But while in the temple, performing his required services, an angel appears with a message. It was a glorious message, too! (Luke 1:5-23) Not just some ho-hum event, it was a world-changer.
     He would have a son,
          his name would be John,
               and he would go around announcing the coming of the long-awaited Messiah.
Okay, finally after all these years of no children, we have paydirt!!

Here comes the problem: First thing out of his mouth was a wrong question. Did you ever want to grab what you just said and stuff it back in your mouth? Instead, it just hung out there in the air in vibrant neon color. Oh no! He said, "How shall I know this? for I am an old man, and my wife well stricken in years?" (v. 18) ...and the angel struck him dumb, until John was born.

Now, here is Mary.
     She is a very young girl
          (in today's standards),
               unmarried,
                    and no real prospects of a husband. She is just beginning life, unlike Zach, and her whole future is before her. The messenger angel shows up in her room with a glorious message (is there any other kind from heaven?), just for her.
     She would have a son!
          He would be the promised Messiah from heaven. (Luke 1:26-35)
               And she would call him the Son of God.
In so many ways, she was scared spit-less.

Here comes the question, just like Zach, sort of. She asked, "How shall this be, I am not married?" (v. 34) ...and the angel explained it to her, unlike Zacharias.

So what is the difference? They both had good reason to ask a question. Zacharias felt the promise had come too late. Mary felt the promise had come too soon. But Zacharias questioned the fact of the promise, while Mary only inquires as to the mode.

So be watchful this Christmas season. You may not know how Jesus will appear to you, but know for a fact that he will. For he promises, that if we will believe, he will come to us and make his home with us.

Be blessed this Christmas season!

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