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The Boy Who Is Lord By Mark DriscollSample

The Boy Who Is Lord By Mark Driscoll

DAY 9 OF 45

A really, really big day

The old priest enters the temple, carrying his incense. Alone. In the next moment, God breaks his 400 years of silence when the angel Gabriel—a messenger from the LORD—appears to Zechariah right there in the temple. “Zechariah was troubled when he saw him, and fear fell upon him,” the Bible tells us, which means we’re lucky the old guy didn’t die of a heart attack (Luke 1:12). The angel delivers the good news: Zechariah and Elizabeth are going to have a baby boy. His name is to be John (“God is gracious”), and he will have a special calling on his life: “And he will turn many of the children of Israel to the Lord their God, and he will go before him in the spirit and the power of Elijah . . . To make ready for the Lord a people prepared” (Luke 1:16–17).

This is an amazing day. Not only is Zechariah going to have a son, he is going to have a son who will fulfill Malachi’s prophecy, one of the most significant prophecies in the history of the world. He will lead the prophetic welcoming committee for God’s entrance into human history as the boy who is Lord. Zechariah’s response? “How shall I know this? For I am an old man, and my wife is advanced in years” (Luke 1:18).

Let’s review. This is mind-boggling, history altering, and soul encouraging. Zechariah has been praying for a child for decades. The presence of God is right there in the temple, a few yards away. An angel is speaking to him. What else does he need?

Angels are worshippers of God who are ministers and messengers on his behalf. There are only two angels named in the Bible: Gabriel and Michael. Their credentials are unparalleled—“I stand in the presence of God,” Gabriel tells Zechariah (Luke 1:19). And yet the old man doubts the news, which means he gets to learn a lesson. Gabriel basically tells him to go home, be patient, and keep quiet. Zechariah has just had this incredible experience and he won’t be able to tell anyone about it because God renders him mute until John’s birth. Not long after Zechariah’s service at the temple, Elizabeth conceived and enjoyed a few months of worship, reflection, and preparation (with a silent husband as a consequence for him and perhaps a nice break for her) as she praised the Lord for his incredible, unexpected gift.

Where have you grown weary in prayer? Can you think of examples from your own life when God granted a request after years of answering “later”?

Scripture

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About this Plan

The Boy Who Is Lord By Mark Driscoll

Every Christmas the entire world stops to celebrate the birth of the most important person in the history of the world - Jesus Christ! In "The Boy Who Is Lord" daily devotional, we will study the great details surrounding this life-changing, history-altering, and soul-saving entrance of God into human history as recorded in Luke 1-2. 

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