Archive - October, 2009

Job Loss and Shame

There are lots of people losing their jobs these days, and millions more worried about losing their job. About two years ago, I lost a job, and went without work for about three months.  During this time, I experienced great stress, fear, shame, and anger. I would not wish such a thing on anybody. Thankfully, I now have a good job.

In Luke 1:18-25, Zacharias loses his job. As a priest, he needed to be able to speak, so when he was struck speechless, it was like getting fired. Unless he got his voice back, he would be out of work. I doubt they had much back then in the way of severance pay or social security, and women couldn’t work. Zacharias probably experienced much of the shame, fear, and questions that we feel today. Even more so when a few weeks later, Elizabeth becomes pregnant.  When it rains in poors. He loses his job; she gets pregnant.

Of course, Elizabeth’s pregnancy was also a blessing. It was an answer to prayer for her and Zacharias. Furthermore, as Luke records in Luke 1:25, by getting pregnant, her reproach (or shame) was removed. So while Zacharias gains shame, Elizabeth gains honor. I am not sure if Zacharias intentionally tried to honor his wife, but he certainly had a part in getting her pregnant…

Seek the Honor of Others
Does this mean that when we experience a downturn, we should seek to honor someone else, thereby helping us get out of our slump? Well, I suppose so. It could be taught that when you experience a downturn in your life, and you begin to experience shame, fear, and doubt, one good way to break out of it is to work for the honor of someone else. Seek to make their dreams come true. Try to bring them success. If you are going through a time of shame and disgrace, look around you to see who you can serve and praise. It may be that your shame will result in their honor, which in turn, may bring you honor as well (See Philippians 2).

Grace and Disgrace
But I’m not content with that.  The thing that surprises me in this text is the statement of Elizabeth in Luke 1:25. If possible, read it in a few different Bible translations to get the flavor and passion of her statement. One of them (the NLT) put it this way, “How kind the Lord is!” I wonder if Zacharias was thinking the same thing. One would hope that he was rejoicing with his wife in her pregnancy. But maybe he was thinking, ”How mean the Lord is! To take away my job. To remove from me anything meaningful. I loved to teach Torah, and now, I can’t even talk!” There’s no way to know if he was thinking such things.

But here is what we do know. Priests entered the Holy Place of the Temple with the fear of the Lord, knowing that if they entered with sin that was not taken care of, they could be struck dead. Zacharias certainly went through all the purification rituals, washings, sacrifices, and prayers that were necessary to enter…and then, when he is actually IN the Holy Place, lighting the incense, he blows it all by sinning! If it is one thing to enter with a previous sin, it is quite another to actually sin while you are in there! Truly, Zacharias probably could have been struck dead. But instead, he is only struck mute. From one perspective, that Zacharias lived is one of the greatest examples of grace in this passage. Sometimes, perspective is everything.

The Question of Sin
Of course, then we get into the issue about how Zacharias sinned. All he really did was ask the angel a question. Is it wrong to ask questions? Is it wrong to raise doubts? Is it wrong to express our fears, worries, and confusion? Absolutely not. The Psalms are full of such questions. Mary the mother of Jesus asks an almost identical question later in 1:34. Zacharias sinned because he should have known better. He was praying for a son, he was a Priest, a teacher of Israel, a student of Scripture. He knew the angelic messenger was sent directly from God. So it appears that questions are unwise when all the evidence points in a particular direction, but we still raise questions.

But guess what? Even in this, God’s will was accomplished, and Zacharias was raised again to honor. His nine months of silence only magnified his obedience at the birth of his son when there was a controversy about what to name him, and Zacharias wrote on a tablet, “His name is John” (1:63). And then, he was given his voice back, and the first words out of his mouth were in praise to God.

Are you facing a loss in your life? Recognize that whether it is the result of sin or not, God can use this loss to accomplish His good purposes for your life. The great themes of Scripture (and life) are death and resurrection. Life leads to death, which in turn, gives birth to life. The losses we experience can be resurrected to new life, new directions, new relationships, new experiences. The waiting is hard, but let the loss run its course, looking expectantly for what God will raise up from the ashes.

Where Angels Fear to Tread (or maybe it's just me)

Do you think that when angels are sent by God with a message, they understand the message they deliver?

The reason I ask is that for three weeks now, as I have tried to work on a post for this blog, I have been struggling to make sense of what an angel says in Luke 1:17. Though I wrote an explanation of Luke 1:17 in my commentary, I don’t fully understand it.

At first, the verse seems rather straight forward. But if you check the average commentary, and you will see that nobody really knows what to do with it, or what it means. Oh sure, everybody agrees that the general thrust of the verse is that John, when he comes, will help prepare Israel for the Messiah. That is clear from the last phrase of the verse, “to make ready a people prepared for the Lord.” But what does the rest of the verse mean?

First, the angel states that John will be a prophet like Elijah, one of the greatest Hebrew prophets. Then he quotes from Malachi 4:6, the last verse in the English Old Testament (but NOT the last verse in the Hebrew Scriptures, which is 2 Chronicles 36:23). But the angel doesn’t quote all of Malachi 4:6, but only part of it. Instead, he says something odd about wisdom and righteousness, and then moves on to the point everybody understands, that John will prepare the way for the Messiah.

1:17a
The more you dig, the more questions you uncover. In the first part of the verse, who goes before whom? Does John go before the Messiah, or does the Lord God go before John 9 (cf. 1:16)? Furthermore, why does the angel say that John will be a prophet like Elijah, but John never does any miracles like Elijah? At least, none that are recorded in Scripture. And why does John later deny that he is the Elijah that was to come (John 1:21), but then Jesus later says that John was this Elijah (Matt 11:14; 17:12)?

1:17b
And why does the angel quote from Malachi 4:6, but only part of the verse? Does he mean to recall the whole verse, or just the part he quotes? For example, Malachi 4:6 talks about a curse on the land. By leaving this out, was the angel implying that it was to come, or purposefully excluding it? Maybe he was saying that the curse depended on how the people responded.

1:17c
And how are we to understand the reference to children and fathers? Does this refer simply to families, such as something you might get from James Dobson at Focus on the Family, or it is figurative language for how John will call the children of Israel back into faithful obedience to God, in the same manner as their forefathers (cf. 1:16)? But this seems backwards, for the angel says that John will turn the hearts of the fathers to the children. Furthermore, if this verse really is about how John is going to bring families back together, and reinforce family values, how does this fit with passages like Micah 7:5-6, Luke 12:51-53, 14:25-27, and 18:29 which reveal that Jesus, in some sense, came to tear apart families? Is John supposed to bring families together just to prepare them for Jesus who will tear them apart?

Maybe it not about families exactly, but the “family of Israel.” The children would be those Israelites alive at the time of John, while the fathers would be the forefathers. But if the angel is talking about the children of Israel and their forefathers, how can people who are dead turn their hearts back to their descendants? It doesn’t make sense.

1:17c
Does the statement in 1:17 about wisdom and righteousness shed any light on how the angel is using Malachi 4:6? If so, is it by parallellism or contrast? In other words, does fathers=disobedient and children=the just, or is it vice versa? Maybe the angel is explaining the second (unquoted) line of Malachi 4:6, in which case the children=disobedient, and the fathers=the just. Or maybe this comparison is completely off track, and it has nothing to do with families or ancestors, but simply about wise and foolish people. Or maybe God is the wise father, and the Israelites are the disobedient children, and they need to return to God? But if so, then again, how does this fit with the quote from Malachi 4:6? In what way is the heart of God turning back to His children?

And the questions go on and on. I have found commentators and pastors who have stated all of the above ideas in one way or another, and have attempted answers in their own fashion. But what really is the angel saying?

One possible solution, which I don’t remember reading anywhere, is that the angel is referring specifically to Zacharias. He is a man who is about to be a father. For years he has been praying for a child, and now he is about to receive one. Maybe this is specific instructions to Zacharias to raise his son in a way that will enable John to be the prophet who will prepare the people for the coming of the Messiah. Of course, both “fathers” and “children” are plural, so this is probably not the best option.

The Angelic Explanation
Ironically, as I write this, I can’t help wishing that the angel who said this would show up and, shaking his head at me, say, “Here is what I meant…” Or maybe he would just say, “Sheesh! Don’t read so much into it! Forget all your questions, and just read the dang story!”

Yeah, that’s probably good advice, but I just can’t let it go. So rather than depend on an angel to explain to me what he meant, I have to depend on something better – You! (cf. Ps 8:5; 1 Cor 6:3; 1 Pet 1:12). In fact, since angels are messengers, speaking the words God has given them to say, maybe this angel didn’t fully understand what he was saying either, and is waiting for someone like you to explain it to him! So mosey on over to the online commentary, register (it’s free), and post your own insights on 1:17.

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