Thursday, December 19, 2024

Thursday of the Third Week of Advent

(Judges 13:2-7.24-25a; Luke 1:5-25)

At thirty-five years old and married for years without having a child, the couple was planning to take consolation in travel and other perks of professional life.  Then she became pregnant with their first child. The following year she gave birth again, this time to twins.  The third year there were another pregnancy and another set of twins.  The couple, who were ready to have a life of relative leisure, now had to screw up energies to care for five children.  Zachariah in today’s gospel might not have believed that such a development was possible.

It is asked why Zechariah is punished for doubting that he and Elizabeth could have a child while Mary, apparently with a similar question after Gabriel’s announcement, is not.   Part of the answer may lie in that although Zachariah and Elizabeth are old, they may not be beyond child-bearing age.  The other part of the answer is that Mary asks only a prudent question of how she might have a child without sinning given that she is a virgin.

There is much to be learned in this part of the Christmas narrative.  First, we should never question the Lord’s power to make things happen, even if it is apparently impossible.  Then we are wise to question situations where it seems like we need to do something wrong.  Doing evil, even to achieve a supreme good, is never a moral option.  Finally, and most importantly, we should trust in God’s love for us.  He wants to bring our lives to fulfillment.

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