Luke 1:5-25 · The Birth of John the Baptist Foretold
The Dayspring From On High
Luke 1:5-25
Sermon
by Maxie Dunnam
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A little boy was preparing for the Annual Christmas pageant in his church, and the beginning of white gifts to the King. As his mom was helping him with his part, he interrupted the rehearsal of his lines, saying, "Mom, can't we change the story this year. It's the same story every year."

Well it is! But what a story. We have to guard against our familiarity with the story blinding us to the richness of it.

There was a young missionary couple who were going out on their first assignment to take over a pair from a pair of retiring veteran missionaries. Among the pieces of advice given the rookies was this: "Take whatever pictures you are going to take in the first six months you are here; after that you will forget what the folks back home would like to see. You will become so accustomed to this place that you will lose your capacity to marvel at it. Familiarity has a way of doing that to you."

Some take it so far as to say, "Familiarity breeds contempt." But that's too strong. Familiarity does blind us. We think we have seen it, so our eyes are only half open. Familiarity also makes us dull in our attention.

Will you guard against that during this Advent-Christmas season? Let's stay awake – take all the heart and mind pictures we can and not lose our capacity to marvel at this unique breaking in of God into human life.

This season I'm going to be preaching from Luke's gospel. This gospel is arranged in two great movements: "First, the Coming of the Lord from Heaven to Earth; and then his Going from Earth to Heaven. The turning point between them stands at Chapter 9, verse 51.

"An unforgettable scene marks the beginning of the Coming: When Mary and Joseph arrive in Bethlehem to have their names registered in the census-list of the then world-empire, there is no room in the inn for the world's Savior to be born. Nonetheless the Coming ends in Glory: at the Transfiguration, Christ appears supreme and central in the coming universal Kingdom of God.

An equally unforgettable scene marks the beginning of the Going (see 9: 51-56): certain Samaritans refused to receive him into their village. Rebuking his disciples' revengeful anger, Christ later reminds them (see 10:20) that their names are already registered in the citizen-list of a more glorious city. Appropriately, the climax of the Going shows the Man, Jesus, rejected and crucified on Earth, but now risen and ascending, being received up into Glory.

"The Coming and the Going: Between them they sum up Luke's message of Salvation. The pre-existent and eternal son of God came to our world and became a man like us so that he might secure for us here in this world forgiveness, wholeness, peace with God and the certainty that God's will shall eventually be done on earth, even as it is in Heaven." (David Gooding, According to Luke, Intervarsity Press, Leicester, England, 1987, p. 9).

We're not going to deal with all the material even of his Coming -- only the part about his Arrival -- the first two chapters.

Luke tells 10 stories in his first two chapters to tell of Jesus' birth and infancy. I put an outline of these stories in the bulletin today for you to use for your own study.

The last of these stories is at the close of Luke 2 -- the story of Mary and Joseph taking Jesus to Jerusalem for Passover -- you remember the story. When he was 12 years old, he was taken by his parents for that most significant experience of all Jews -- the Passover. When it was time to go home, Jesus could not be found -- in fact they were out on the road beyond the city when they missed him, and they went back to find him and discovered him in the Temple, conversing with the Elders.

I have only three Sundays to preach this Advent-Christmas message -- so I want us to look at those other nine stories in the first two chapters of Luke's Gospel. Certain persons play central roles in each of these stories, so we will be focusing on them.

We begin today with Zachariah in the Temple. We read the story a moment ago. Before we are finished we will go to another story of Zachariah -- his prophecy about Jesus which closes the first chapter of Luke's Gospel. In that prophecy he refers to Jesus as the "Dayspring from on high". That's the King James version. The New English Bible has that verse, verse 78, "The morning sun from Heaven will rise upon us." The Jerusalem Bible has it, God from on high "will bring the rising Sun to visit us."

"If the birth of Christ, to borrow Zachariah's metaphor, was "the dawn from on high", then Chapter 1 of the Gospel covers the last few hours before the sunrise. The night had been long and, for Israel, at times very dark. But through it all -- through times of national success and disaster, through the conquest and the monarchy, through the exile and return -- hope had persisted that the night would at last end, and as Malachi put it, "the sun of righteousness would arise with healing in his wings" (4:2).

Isaiah had prophesied (40: 3-8) that before the "glory of the Lord" should "be revealed", a forerunner would be sent to prepare the way of theLord. Malachi had added that before the day of the Lord came, the prophet Elijah would be sent to "turn the hearts of the fathers to the children and the hearts of the children to their fathers, lest I come and spite the earth with a curse" (4:5-6).

And now, more than four hundred years after Malachi, the seemingly interminable night was coming to its end: The dawn was about to break. Great preparations were afoot, and plans laid in the eternal paths began to swing into action. The forerunner had to be born. A certain Zachariah and his wife, Elizabeth, long since chosen to be his parents, had now to be advised of the coming birth, and told how to bring up the child in the strict discipline appropriate to the unique Elijah-like ministry that he was destined to fulfill. (See 1:13-17).

And so in the last few months before sunrise, the Angel Gabriel was sent to tell Zachariah that he and his wife were soon to have a child, and Zachariah refused to believe the angel!" (Gooding, Ibid., pp. 33-34).

That's the setting and the story. Let's look at it in detail and implication.

II.

Note the first response of Zachariah to the visitation of the Angel. Verse 12: "And Zachariah was troubled when he saw him, and fear fell upon him." That's the Revised Standard Version. Phillips translates the verse: "When Zacharias saw him, he was terribly agitated and a sense of awe swept over him."

The New International Version says he was "startled and gripped with fear". Does that say something to us? Two emotions are suggested in Zachariah's response: surprise and fear. Think about it. Zachariah was a priest in the temple -- functioning there at the altar day in and day out as his tour of duty arose. Did he not expect God to be present there -- or, did he expect God to be present there -- but not to do anything, not to say anything, not to break in with any sort of startling interruption to life, or startling news about life?

In his novel, The Clowns of God, Morris West has Jean-Marie, a former pope, say, "The biggest mistake we have made through the ages is to try to explain the ways of God to men. We shouldn't do that. We should just announce him. He explains himself very well!"

Well He does. God explains Himself in his action, and Zachariah knew that as we do. Zachariah knew about the mighty acts of God in the history of his people -- the deliverance from Egyptian captivity -- the miraculous crossing of the Red Sea -- the gift of God of the promised land -- and God's activity through judges , kings, prophets. Zachariah knew the story. He knew that God acted -- that God intervened and sometimes that intervention was dramatic -- sometimes very personal.

Yet, here the Angel was speaking to him, and he was startled.

It is no less true with us. Flannery O'Connor, the South Georgia novelist, was a semi-invalid. She was confined to her home and she raised peacocks. One day a repairman came to her farm and she invited him to stop his work to watch his peacocks in the barnyard. She was enthralled with their beauty and she wanted to share it. She described how "the bird turned slightly to the right and the little planets above him hung in bronze, then he turned to the left and they were hung in green." As the peacocks walked away, she asked the repairman, "Well, what did you think of that?", to which he responded, "Never saw such long ugly legs! I'll bet that rascal could outrun a bus!"

Some people look and listen, but they don't really see. And that's the way it is with us, isn't it? Others, Jesus said, "listen, but they don't really hear."

Bishop Gerald Kennedy used to tell about a time he arrived in a city for a preaching engagement. Tired and exhausted, all he really wanted was some peace and quiet before the services began. He had just settled into his hotel room when he heard the screeching of a violin in the room next door. He was about to complain to the violinist when the maid said, "Aren't you lucky! You get to hear Jascha Heifetz play and you don't even have to buy a ticket!" Sometimes we listen, but we don't hear.

Zacharaiah was startled -- surprised – that the angel would speak to him.

The scripture says he was also filled with fear. Well, that may not necessarily be an improper response. Sensing that, J. B. Phillips, instead of saying he was fearful, said, "A sense of awe swept over him." We'll come back to that in another sermon -- but it helps to register it now. Anytime God is around -- anytime we get close to Him, or He gets close to us -- we might better be afraid -- afraid not in a negative sense -- but aware of the awesome situation in which we are -- that the Almighty is visiting us.

III.

Note this second thing about Zachariah's response: He didn't believe the Angel's message. And you know, I believe that's the reason Luke tells the story, and why he goes into such detail about it. Now to be sure, we need the story of Zachariah because Zachariah is the father of John, and John is the forerunner of Jesus. But it would have been easy for Luke to tell that story – to record that fact -- without going into such detail about this visit of the Angel and Zachariah's temporary lapse into unbelief.

We can understand Zachariah's fear -- we can understand how he would have been overcome by this sudden Divine intervention in his life.

Now it would have been one thing for him to be surprised and to respond in humility -- as did Mary when the Angel visited her and told her that she was going to bear the son, Jesus – she responded in humility -- "Behold, the handmaiden of the Lord." And it would have been one thing for Zachariah to do that -- but did you note the basis of his disbelief. He asked the question in verse 18: "How shall I know this? For I am an old man and my wife is advanced in years."

This was his real difficulty -- how could his wife have a child -- they were far beyond child-bearing age.

"This was his real difficulty: For him and his wife to have a child would mean a miracle of divine intervention; and Zachariah considered such a miracle to be so extremely unlikely that even if it was an Angel of God who announced it – and Zachariah did not dispute that -- he was not prepared to believe it, not at least unless he was given some stronger grounds for belief than the bare word of an Angel." (Gooding, page 34).

I believe Luke includes these details of the story for that very reason. For Elizabeth to conceive, God would have to perform a miracle. God would have to intervene and put "the processes of ageing and decay into reverse."

So, Zachariah was not believing that possible, and Luke is saying to us that in not believing that, Zachariah was denying the bases of the Gospel in its entirety.

"If God could not restore the processes of nature in Elizabeth's body, what hope was there that Creation itself should ever be delivered from its bondage to corruption? If God could not revivify Elizabeth's ageing and dying body, how should he ever raise from the tomb the body of Jesus already three days dead? And if that resurrection were impossible, no resurrection would ever be possible. The grounds which Zachariah gave for his disbelief were, without his knowing it, utterly subversive of the entire Gospel.

"We are told that the angels struck him dumb. The action was neither vindictive nor arbitrary. In a few minutes Zachariah was expected to go outside, and, as priest on duty for the day, in God's name, pronounce God's blessing on the waiting people. But a priest who cannot believe the authoritative word of an angel of God, because he cannot accept the possibility of divine intervention to reverse the decay of nature, has lost faith in the basic principle of redemption. Without redemption, he has no gospel. Without a gospel, any blessing he pronounced upon the people would be the emptiest of professional formalities. If Zachariah could not believe the angel's gospel, it were better that he did not pretend to bless the people. Fittingly the angel struck him dumb.

And doesn't that speak to us? Not only to us preachers, who are in the line of Zachariah, as prophets of God and are called to foretell his redemption. But it speaks to lay Christians – it speaks to all of us. Do we really believe that God is sovereign -- that God is in control?

Think about it as it relates to your praying. Scripture tells us that Zachariah and his wife had been praying for a child. The first thing the angel said to him was, "Do not be afraid, Zachariah, for your prayer is heard, and your wife Elizabeth will bear you a son, and you shall call his name John."

Perhaps they had ceased praying for a child, now that Elizabeth was well beyond child-bearing age. When they were praying in then -- when she could get pregnant -- they were "asking the Creator to participate with what was nature's design -- to give nature a little push to get on with the job of which the Creator had designed her to do."

But now -- it would mean far more than just God participating in nature's design -- it would require that God intervene in nature.

Now don't get me wrong. I'm not at all calling for us to test prayer and to test faith by challenging nature. I cannot see myself praying for the dead to be brought to life again. My point is this -- it's not our task to define the limits to which God's power may go -- and often what we think of as nature's law, may not be a law at all. Our power, our task, is not to define the limits of God's power, but to join God, to give ourselves as channels through which his power may work -- but most of all -- to know that He is sovereign.

Let's move to a final point now. Happily, Zachariah's disbelief was only temporary – and certainly his disbelief did not nullify God's purpose. Not long after he had finished his tour of duty in the temple and was back home with Elizabeth, she conceived -- and in her womb grew John -- the forerunner of Jesus.

IV

Luke's fourth and fifth stories of Jesus' coming involve Zachariah also. They are told in verses 57 - 80 of this first chapter of Luke. One is the story of the birth of John -- the other of the prophecy Zachariah pronounced over his son.

We have time just to lift up two brief thoughts from these two stories. One has to do with the naming of the baby. When Elizabeth and Zachariah brought the child to the temple for circumcision and naming, the folks naturally thought that the child would be named Zachariah after his father. But Elizabeth told them, no, his name was going to be John. The people couldn't believe it so they questioned the father -- they questioned Zachariah. And Zachariah took a piece of paper -- because he could still not yet speak -- and he simply wrote on the paper, "His name is John." The people marveled -- and you know what happened. Immediately, Zachariah's tongue was loosed. He was able to speak again, and he began to bless God.

Do you see what had happened? The angel had said to Zachariah in announcing the fact that Elizabeth was going to conceive -- the angel had announced that the child would be named John. So here, now, Zachariah was being faithful. And the sign of his disbelief was taken away because of his expression of faithfulness.

Listen friends, God's faithfulness is not dependent upon our faithfulness -- but God does require obedience. It's hardly possible for us to understand how shocked the people were when Elizabeth insisted that the child was going to be named John. Why was this, they wanted to know. This was a breaking of a family tradition. That was a dramatic action in a Jewish family. They couldn't believe this was the case -- that's the reason they appealed beyond Elizabeth to Zachariah himself. But Zachariah remained faithful – he obeyed.

Sometimes obedience calls us to go beyond tradition. Sometimes it even calls us to loyalties that exceed family loyalties – but always, when we are obedient -- God blesses. Our tongues are loosed, and we have a testimony, we have a witness, we can praise the Lord, and people will be amazed, as the people were amazed when Zachariah began to witness and make his case for God.

Listen to verses 65 and 66: "And fear came on all their neighbors. And all these things were talked about through all the hill country of Judea; and all who heard them laid them up in their hearts, saying, "what then will this child be?" For the hand of the Lord was with him."

Then comes the next story -- and the last word I have time to say. With his tongue now loosed, and filled with the Holy Spirit, Zachariah prophesied. He began to bless the Lord – talking about the fact that God had visited and redeemed his people and had raised up a horn of salvation for Israel out of the house of David. And it's in that exultation of praise and thanksgiving that he speaks that marvelous word in verse 78: "through the tender mercy of our God, when the day shall dawn upon us from on high." Or, as the King James version has it, "through the tender mercy of our God; whereby the dayspring from on high hath visited us."

"The picture that rises before us is that of a group of travelers benighted, bewildered, huddled together in the dark, afraid to move for fear of pitfalls, precipices, wild beasts, and enemies; and so sighing for the day and compelled to be inactive til it comes. That is the picture of humanity apart from Jesus Christ, a darkness so intense, so tragic, that it is, as it were, the very shadow of the ultimate and essential darkness which is death, and in it men are sitting torpid, unable to find their way and afraid to move." (Alexander Maclaren, Expositions of Holy Scripture, St. Luke, Baker Book House, Grand Rapids, Michigan, reprinted 1982, p. 31).

Isn't it a beautiful image -- the Dayspring from on High -- the first light of Heaven -- Heaven's dawn --

Maxie Dunnam, by Maxie Dunnam