The Lesson of Zechariah in the Temple
St.
Luke opens his Gospel with a scene that connects the new with the old.
He brings us into the Temple of Jerusalem, the center of the Jewish
religion. It is the time of the evening sacrifice, and there is an old
priest who was chosen by lot to enter the Holy Place and offer incense
in front of the curtain that covered the Holy of Holies. This is where
the message of a new beginning came to Zechariah.
Luke,
the “historian” among the evangelists, knows that new developments are
only healthy when they are rooted in the past. That the Church moves
often slowly, too slowly for many, is because whatever new that comes
has to be born from the old.
Luke
describes the annunciation to Zechariah when he is alone in the Holy
Place of God’s house. It is in the silence of the heart that God speaks.
Recently
somebody asked me, “Father, why did God speak so much in the stories of
the Bible but why does He not speak now, to me, for instance?” I
reflected for a while and answered, “You see, in biblical times the
world was quieter. People communed with nature. There was no radio, no
TV, no computer. There were no movies, no cars — there was just silence.
People could hear God speaking to them. Go to a contemplative monastery
and ask nuns and monks and they will tell you how they “hear” God
speaking to them. Go every day for half an hour, or one hour to an
adoration chapel, calm down and just listen. God will speak to
you.”
In
these days before Christmas, when everything is so noisy and so hectic,
we miss the most important thing in this season: God speaking to us
through the Scripture, speaking to us in the silence of our hearts — as
He spoke to Zechariah in the silence of the Holy Place in the Temple of
Jerusalem. Fr. Rudy Horst, SVD
REFLECTION QUESTIONS: Are
you carried away by the commercialized Christmas season, by the parties
and shopping? Do you look for quiet times to listen to God?
Lord,
once more I thank You for Your fitting message for this hectic,
commercialized season. Lord, remind me again and again that You want to
speak to me in the quietness of my life.
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