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A FATHER’S JOY

Luke 1:67–80

His father Zacharias was filled with the Holy Spirit and prophesied like this: ‘Blessed be the Lord, the God of Israel, because he has graciously visited his people and wrought deliverance for them. He has raised the horn of salvation for us in the house of David, his servant – as long ago he said he would through the mouth of his holy prophets – even deliverance from our enemies and from the hand of all who hate us, in that he has shown mercy to us as he did to our fathers and has remembered his holy covenant, the pledge which he gave to Abraham our father, to grant to us that we, being delivered from the hands of our enemies, should fearlessly serve him, in holiness and righteousness before him, all our days. And you, child, shall be called the prophet of the Most High; for you will walk before the Lord to prepare his ways, in order to give the knowledge of salvation to his people together with forgiveness of their sins, through the mercy of our God, in which the dawn from on high has graciously visited us, to shine upon those who sit in darkness and in the shadow of death, and to direct our feet in the way of peace.’

And the child grew and was strengthened by the Spirit; and he lived in the desert places until the day when he was displayed to Israel.

ZACHARIAS had a great vision for his son. He thought of him as the prophet and the forerunner who would prepare the way of the Lord. All devout Jews hoped and longed for the day when the Messiah, God’s anointed king, would come. Most of them believed that, before he came, a forerunner would announce his coming and prepare his way. The usual belief was that Elijah would return to do so (Malachi 4:5). Zacharias saw in his son the one who would prepare the way for the coming of God’s king.

Verses 75–7 give a great picture of the steps of the Christian way.

(1) There is preparation. All life is a preparation to lead us to Christ. When Sir Walter Scott was young his aim was to be a soldier. An accident made him slightly lame and that dream had to be abandoned. He took to reading the old Scottish histories and romances and so became the master novelist. An old man said of him, ‘He was makin’ himsell a’ the time; but he didna ken maybe what he was about till years had passed.’ In life God is working all things together to bring us to Christ.

(2) There is knowledge. It is the simple fact that there was no real understanding of what God was like until Jesus came. The Greeks thought of a passionless God, beyond all joy and sorrow, looking on humanity in calm unmoved detachment – no help there. Jews thought of a demanding God, whose name was law and whose function was that of judge – nothing but fear there. Jesus came to tell that God was love, and in staggered amazement people said, ‘We never knew that God was like that.’ One of the great functions of the incarnation was to bring to men and women the knowledge of God.

(3) There is forgiveness. We must be clear about one thing regarding forgiveness. It is not so much the remission of penalty as the restoration of a relationship. Nothing can deliver us from certain consequences of our sins; the clock cannot be put back; but estrangement from God is turned to friendship, the distant God has become near and the God we feared has become the lover of human souls.

(4) There is walking in the ways of peace. Peace in Hebrew does not mean merely freedom from trouble; it means all that makes for our highest good; and through Christ we are enabled to walk in the ways that lead to everything that means life, and no longer to all that means death.

Gospel of Luke

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