Bible Society of South Africa
Xanthe Hancox

People of the Nativity – Day 1

Zechariah

Se(di)ngolwa (t)sa Bibele

LUKA 1

Tsebiso ya tswalo ya Johanne Mokolobetsi

5Mehleng ya Heroda, kgosi ya Judea, ho ne ho ena le moprista e mong ya bitswang Sakariya, wa sehlopha sa Abiya, mohatsa hae e le e mong wa baradi ba Arone, lebitso la hae e le Elisabetha. 6Bobedi ba bona ba ne ba lokile pela Modimo, ba tsamaya melaong le ditaelong tsohle tsa Morena, ho se moo ba ka nyatsuwang teng. 7Feela ba ne ba se na ngwana, hobane Elisabetha e ne e le nyopa, mme bobedi ba bona ba ne ba se ba hodile.

LUKA 1:5-7SSO89SOBula ka mmadi wa Bibele

LUKA 1

11Jwale lengeloi la Morena la iponahatsa ho yena le eme lehlakoreng le letona la aletare ya mokubetso. 12Ha Sakariya a le bona, a tshoha, a tshwarwa ke tshabo. 13Empa lengeloi la re ho yena: “Se tshabe, Sakariya, hobane thapelo ya hao e utlwilwe, mohatsa hao Elisabetha o tla o tswalla mora, mme o tla mo rea lebitso la Johanne.

LUKA 1:11-13SSO89SOBula ka mmadi wa Bibele

What a year this has been. Between an ever-shifting political and economic landscape both in South Africa and abroad and new struggles in my own personal life, I think it’s safe to say it was an unsettling year for me. And I don’t think I’m alone. The constant barrage of bad news and the drama that each day seems to bring has left me reeling.

As Christians, it’s important to remind ourselves that nothing that has happened, or will happen, comes as a surprise to God. We need to make time to take a step back and look at the world from an eternal perspective once more.

Let’s look at that first Christmas and the people who were there. First up is Zechariah.

Things weren’t great for him. He and his wife Elizabeth were getting on in years, and were childless. There was a tremendous stigma attached to being without children and he would have felt the shame keenly.

For most of the year, Zechariah and Elizabeth lived in a small village “in the hill country of Judea,” (Luke 1:39), except when Zechariah’s was on duty in the Temple. He was obscure and insignificant and thought of as something of country bumpkin. Moreover, they lived in dark days during the tyrannical reign of Herod the Great (37 to 4 BC).

Zechariah could have easily stopped praying, became bitter, and stopped working for the God who was not providing a child for him. But this is not how Zechariah’s story ends. We know that God answered his prayers and proved himself faithful by blessing him with a son, John the Baptist, who would announce the coming of Jesus.

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