Living by Faith – January 4, 2017
Before Relinquishing the Christmas Season to the new year…
Let’s consider the second of the four “Do Not Be Afraid’s” relating to the Christmas story. Four appearances of angels, four “Fear Not’s”, and four admonishments to respond in faith.
The second time we see an angel appear, we find the young virgin, Mary, alone, maybe working around the house, maybe quietly praying in her bedroom, maybe harvesting wheat out in the field, maybe heading to the well to draw water for her family. We don’t know where she was that day, but when the angel addressed her, we know she was startled and frightened. She had no idea what to do with this angel’s salutation,
“Rejoice, highly favored one, the Lord is with you; blessed are you among women!”
She may have looked around for who the angel might be talking to. When she realized no one else was there, she must have thought to herself, “Who? Me? I’m just a poor girl under Roman rule with no real hope for any significance in my life.”
And then came the angel’s comforting yet confusing words, amazing yet frightening promise!
“Do not be afraid, Mary, for you have found favor with God.”
It’s interesting that Mary responded with a question, similar to the question of Zacharias a few verses before. “How can this be, seeing I do not know a man?” (Zacharias wanted to know how it was possible since he and his wife were too old to have a child.)
What was the difference? I believe it is in Mary’s response of faith, of belief in the impossible, of trust in her God. Zacharias asked for a sign, a response of unbelief. Zacharias wanted “proof”. Mary wondered “how”.
For Mary, who did not ask for proof, the angel gave assurance when he sent her to Elisabeth’s house while it was too early in Mary’s pregnancy for her to know for sure that there was a baby growing inside of her. The unrequested proof came, when the baby inside Elisabeth, “leaped in her womb for joy” and when Elisabeth prophesied, commending Mary’s faith. “Blessed is she who believed, for there will be a fulfillment of those things which were told her from the Lord.”
For Zacharias, God gave proof as well. He would not be able to speak until John was born.
For Zacharias, he lacked a submission to God’s miraculous answer to his prayer, and in so doing he missed the joy and blessing of sharing his incredible news with Elisabeth and with the world.
As for Mary, she submitted to God’s plan for her,
“Behold the handmaid of the Lord! Let it be unto me according to your word.”
And she sang with joy proclaiming the miracle:
“My soul magnifies the Lord, and my spirit has rejoiced in God my Savior…”
Living by Faith – January 3, 2017
Before Relinquishing the Christmas Season to the new year…
Let’s consider the four “Do Not Be Afraid’s” relating to the Christmas story.
Four appearances of angels, four “Fear Not’s”, and four admonishments to respond in faith…
Today, we will consider the first “Do Not Be Afraid”. This first one involves a certain priest named Zacharias, who was going through his daily responsibilities at the temple, old and tired, disappointed with life because he probably felt God had ignored his prayers. He had prayed for many years for a child, until finally he gave up when Elisabeth got too old to have a baby. I’m sure her barrenness had caused embarrassment for him and for Elisabeth. In the Jewish, tight-knit community where he lived, it appeared that God disapproved of them for some unknown reason, when He refused to answer the prayers of Zacharias by withholding His blessing of children. His neighbors and all who knew him most likely whispered, wondering what bad things Elisabeth or Zacharias must have done to deserve childlessness. Now as he mechanically carried out his duties, Zacharias had obviously given up on ever having a baby and, I suspect, on anything of significance ever happening in his life. Surely, he experienced feelings of being abandoned by God, wondering what he had done to cause God’s disfavor. What was the point of all those years of service to His God?
But God had a plan. It was a good plan. It was miraculous, amazing plan. In fact, Zacharias might have even imagined it, as he studied the prophesies of the Old Testament Scriptures. God had not forgotten Zacharias and Elizabeth, nor had He forgotten those years of fervent prayer. Because, suddenly, God came bursting into Zacharias’s mundane life of priestly service. As Zacharias carried the incense into the Temple to place it on the burning coals left by the previous priest who had entered and exited before him, Gabriel, an angel of the Lord, appeared, terrifying him. I wonder if he dropped the incense as fear consumed his whole being.
But the first words from the mouth of the angel of the Lord were these: “DO NOT BE AFRAID, ZACHARIAS, for your prayer is heard…and you will call his name, John…”
Don’t be afraid…You asked…God listened…Now it’s up to you! Go and do what is necessary…When the child is born name him, “John”. (No gender reveal party required for this pregnancy!)
Of all the four appearances by angels who brought messages from God in those first two chapters of Matthew and Luke encompassing the time around Jesus’s conception and birth, Zacharias was the only one who failed to believe and act immediately in faith – Even though he was the only one who was honored by the appearance of an angel who had prayed specifically and gotten what he prayed for!
Instead of believing God was finally answering his prayers, Zacharias started asking questions, doubting the message, doubting God’s messenger. “How will this happen?” I wonder if the angel thought to himself, “Really, does he need me to explain this to him? He’s been married for about fifty years already. He knows more about this stuff than I do!”
Instead of acting in faith, Zacharias began trying to figure it out with human reasoning. “I am an old man and my wife is well advanced in years.” Notice he didn’t say, “Elisabeth is an old woman.” At least he was wise enough to know what not to call his wife!
This account reminds me of Abraham and Sarah, and their lack of faith in God’s promise of a son. They decided to figure it out by human reasoning, too. And oh, how terrible the consequences have been because of their unbelief!
And so, with Zacharias’s lack of faith, the inevitable consequences came. “You will be mute and not able to speak until the day these things take place, because you did not believe my words which will be fulfilled in their own time.” And home he went. I wonder how he told Elisabeth the news…I wonder IF he told Elisabeth. If he didn’t somehow find a way to tell her, I’m sure she wondered what had gotten into the man!
Have you ever prayed and asked God for something, then failed to believe it when he gave you an answer? I have.
What are the consequences of our lack of faith when God tells us He is going to do something through us in our lives or in our ministries? We may not have the consequence of being mute and unable to communicate verbally for nine months, but we may find ourselves mute in other ways, not have the privilege of rejoicing in what God is going to do. We may miss out on expressing the “joy and gladness” of what is about to happen as God accomplishes His purpose in us. At least for a season we might miss out on the blessings and joy, until God has given us time to relinquish our fears and begin acting in faith.
How would things have been different if Zacharias had believed immediately without question? What would that nine months of waiting for the birth of the promised baby have looked like in his household and in the community – if Zacharias had only believed? What rejoicing might have taken place! What a party there might have been!
Do not be afraid! God has heard your prayer!
We should never be afraid of what God is going to do through us and in us as we trust implicitly in His Word and in His love. The results can only be good!
“Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and do not lean on your own understanding. In all your ways acknowledge Him, and He will direct your paths.” (Proverbs 3:5-6)
Tomorrow we will see the second of the four “Do Not Fear” statements made by angels in the Christmas story.
Living by Faith – January 2, 2017
Will We Live in Fear or Will We Live by Faith?
We often imagine that the opposite of faith is unbelief, but Scripture also suggests that the opposite of faith may be fear. Many times we live in fear instead of acting in faith or resting in faith. Maybe because our faith is not placed in the One who is able to meet our needs. Maybe because we don’t believe Jesus will do for us as He has for others. In Mark 5, Jesus is talking with the ruler of the synagogue whose daughter had died. He had heard that Jesus could heal her, but he was afraid. Maybe that Jesus couldn’t perform a miracle so great as raising his daughter from the dead – or that Jesus wouldn’t do it for him! But Jesus could, and He would! He gently spoke to the man, “Don’t be afraid, only believe!” He speaks to us the same words today. “Do not be afraid, believe in Me. Trust Me. Follow Me.”
Living By Faith – January 1, 2017
New Year’s Resolution – December 31, 2016
Christ didn’t come so that we could celebrate a sparkling white Christmas…
He didn’t come so we could give presents to one another or light up a Christmas tree or sing Christmas carols…
or delight in the sweet story of the baby in the manger!
He came to save Israel to bless the world!
God’s chosen people were meant to show God to the world through their lives, but they failed and a Savior was needed. Everyone failed from Adam and Eve to Abraham to Moses to King David. No one could fulfil the law. No one could rescue humanity from her sin…no one, but Jesus, the perfect Lamb of God. But Jesus came not only to save Israel to bless the world…
He came to reveal Himself to the Gentiles…
to die for the sins of the whole world, to rescue all who believe in Him – both Jews and Gentiles, so that those who trust in Him will bless the world and bring Him glory!
Another Christmas is ending and a new year is beginning.
May we bless the world in 2017 as we GO into ALL the world to preach the GOSPEL and MAKE DISCIPLES of ALL nations!
And Jesus came and spoke to them, saying, “All authority has been given to Me in heaven and on earth. Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all things that I have commanded you; and lo, I am with you always, even to the end of the age.” Amen. (Matthew 28:18-20, NKJV)
But you shall receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you; and you shall be witnesses to Me in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the end of the earth. (Acts 1:8, NKJV)