12.13- Breaking the Silence

 12.13-

 

Breaking the Silence                        Luke 1:11-17                               Philip Yancey

    At the end of the Old Testament, God seems to be in hiding. For four centuries, the Jews wait and wonder. God seems passive, unconcerned, and deaf to their prayers. Only one hope remains: the ancient promise of a Messiah. On that promise the Jews state everything. And then something momentous happens. The birth of a baby is announced.

    You can catch the excitement just by reading the reactions of people in Luke. Events surrounding Jesus’ birth resemble a joy-filled musical. Characters crowd into the scene: a white-haired great uncle (Luke 1:5-25), an astonished virgin (Luke 1:26-38), the old prophetess Anna (Luke 2:36). Mary herself lets loose with a beautiful hymn (Luke 1:46-55). Even Jesus’ unborn cousin kicks for joy inside his mother’s womb (Luke 1:41).

    Luke takes care to make direct connections to Old Testament promises of a Messiah. The angle Gabriel even calls John the Baptist an “Elijah” sent to prepare the way of the Lord (Luke 1:17). Clearly, something is brewing on planet Earth. Among the dreary, defeated villagers in a remote corner of the Roman Empire, something good is breaking out.

 

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

6.10- The Power of Keeping a Confidence

9.7- The long prayers about not electing anyone who doesn't support babies in the womb

8.16- Confidence is a good thing. A well trained Olympic athlete is very confident.