Second Chances
Friday,
the first week of Advent
Today’s
Reading: Jeremiah 23:5 / Malachi 3:1 /
Luke 1:57-80
When I read through the story of the birth of John the Baptist, it is easy for my heart to be suddenly filled with an overwhelming sense of excitement and expectation! As the joyous event unfolds, we find Zechariah’s and Elizabeth’s neighbors and relatives gathering about them because they realize that something special from the Lord is happening. They are astounded when the parents of the baby snub tradition and name their child John. Then they are even more amazed when Zechariah who had been unable to say a word since a mysterious divine visitation a year before, suddenly begins to speak by singing out his praises to God!
The crowd that has gathered begins to ask questions wondering
“What kind of child will this be?”
(Luke 1:66 NKJV), and amazingly enough the Spirit of God falls upon the old
priest and he begins to prophesy the answers to all their questions! Like the song that the young virgin girl Mary
had sung out many months before, Zechariah begins by blessing God and then goes
off into an eloquent dissertation bringing to the remembrance of all within the
sound of his voice, the covenant made to Abraham hundreds of years before,
which told of His promise for the salvation of His people.
Then Zechariah’s attention turns to his eight day old son
and he “proclaims the dignity,
employment, doctrine and success of his son: and the ruin and recovery of the
Jews and the Gentiles.” (Adam
Clarke’s Commentary on the Bible – Luke 1:76)
Talk about the proud Papa!
Zechariah took the first opportunity he could to begin to brag on his
son and as John was to do for Jesus, he spoke out and prepared the way for the
ministry of his child.
To me it is not as important as to the words that Zechariah
spoke that day, but as to what actually was being exhibited in the course of
the events of John’s birth. First we see
the old priest who failed miserably when given the opportunity to demonstrate
his faith when the angel Gabriel appeared to him to announce what was going to
happen on that day. I am pretty positive
that Zechariah must have spent many long hours delineating over what had
happened, and considering how he would do it differently if he had the
chance. Well, God did give him a second
chance and when the priest did not give into the pressure of his friends and
relatives and declared that their child would be named John as the angel of the
Lord had stated, his tongue was instantly loosed and he was mightily used of
God to announce to the world the unfolding of God’s ultimate plan for the
salvation of mankind!
Then within the text of Zechariah’s prophecy, we see our
heavenly Father reinstating the glory of King David’s family name, which had
been trashed through the generations of unbelief and apostasy by the Jewish
people. He declared that God “has raised up a mighty Savior for us in the
family of his servant David.” (Luke
1:69 God’s Word ©) Here another second
chance is given to get back on track to the plan He had promised and had been
cultivating for literally hundreds of years.
Then through the ministry that He had planned for John the
Baptist and was introduced through his elderly father’s prophecy on that
fateful day, we see God giving His people a third-second chance in order to
stop the runaway train that they had been aboard and refocus their undivided
attention back on Him. On His mercy, His
faithfulness, His promises and on His ability to provide a Savior of Whom John
would later declare: “Repent for the kingdom
of heaven is at hand!” (Matthew 3:2 NKJV)
Our heavenly Father is the God of the second chance! As He would eventually demonstrate through
the lives of Peter, Paul, John Mark and countless others throughout the
generations to come, He will do the same for you and me. How exciting and how relevant that He would
express this expectation of his nature to the world at the very beginning of
the culmination of His plan for salvation that was planned before the world
began.
Grab ahold of that excitement and expectation as you
celebrate the Christmas Season this year.
Think on that wonderful time when John came into the world in
preparation for the coming of Jesus. Let
the plans and purposes as well as the second chances of God permeate your
understanding. Focus your attention back
onto Him. Let go of the failures of your
past and allow Him to use you mightily for Him in your future! Have a wonderful weekend.
I would encourage you to take some time this weekend to go and review the past week’s readings. Then jot
down your thoughts and make whatever “rearrangements”
in your lives, in your thinking, or even in your words so that you might better
align yourselves with His plan for you and your family! Stay in tune to His Word, and keep asking
yourself… “What Second Chances am I expecting today?”
No comments:
Post a Comment
Your thoughts are welcomed. Please keep them within the context and flavor of this blog.