Luke 1: 8 – 20
One day Zechariah was doing his work as a priest in the Temple, taking his turn in the daily service. According to the custom followed by the priests, he was chosen by lot to burn incense on the altar. So he went into the Temple of the Lord, while the crowd of people outside prayed during the hour when the incense was burned. An angel of the Lord appeared to him, standing at the right side of the altar where the incense was burned. When Zechariah saw him, he was alarmed and felt afraid. But the angel said to him, “Don't be afraid, Zechariah! God has heard your prayer, and your wife Elizabeth will bear you a son. You are to name him John. How glad and happy you will be, and how happy many others will be when he is born! John will be great in the Lord's sight. He must not drink any wine or strong drink. From his very birth he will be filled with the Holy Spirit, and he will bring back many of the people of Israel to the Lord their God. He will go ahead of the Lord, strong and mighty like the prophet Elijah. He will bring fathers and children together again; he will turn disobedient people back to the way of thinking of the righteous; he will get the Lord's people ready for him.”
Zechariah said to the angel, “How shall I know if this is so? I am an old man, and my wife is old also.”
“I am Gabriel,” the angel answered. “I stand in the presence of God, who sent me to speak to you and tell you this good news. But you have not believed my message, which will come true at the right time. Because you have not believed, you will be unable to speak; you will remain silent until the day my promise to you comes true.”
Picture
Painting by William Blake
Prayer
We depend so much on words, on the ability to share our thoughts and ideas with others – but in this story, Zechariah loses his voice. Our prayer recognises the power of words – and our dependence upon them.
God who spoke creation into being, this story of a man who, for a time, lost his voice, we realise just how much we depend on words to express ourselves. Words have the power to create ideas, to express love and to encourage others. Words have the power to destroy hope, to express hate and to demean others. Forgive us when our words are hasty or unkind; instead help us to choose our words wisely and well so that we, and everyone with whom we share our words, may be enabled to flourish as your beloved children. Amen