Elizabeth, Mother of John

Similar documents
Seventh Sunday after Epiphany Sunday, February 19, 2017 The Collect:

Title: Frederick Douglass Footsteps Developed by: Sari Bennett & Pat Robeson: Maryland Geographic Alliance.

Faithfulness in the midst of God s silence

JOHN S BIRTH FORETOLD

PART A OF THE NATIVITY NARRATIVE

GOSPEL OF LUKE Chapter 1: The Announcement of the Births of John and Jesus

THE PROMISE IS FULFILLED IN CHRIST

34 How will this be, Mary asked the angel, since I am a virgin?

Christmas: God Reverses the Standing of His People Text: Luke 1:46-55 Scripture Readings: 1 Samuel 1:1-20; 2:1-11 Luke 1:39-56 Rev.

A Miraculous Birth Unit 1: Why Did Jesus Come?

International Bible Lesson Commentary Luke 1:26-38

THE BIRTH & EARLY LIFE OF JESUS & JOHN THE BAPTIST

Variance in the Life of Slaves. of the different owner s views towards treatment of their slaves, as well as how large the area

THREE LITTLE WORDS A Study by Bob Reid, University Place Presbyterian Church, Tacoma WA By Robert Stephen Reid Scholar-in-Residence THE FIRST

Christmas is a time when we hear lots of music, some of it good, some not so good. My wife dislikes some it so much that she s been

International Bible Lesson Commentary. Luke 1:26-45 International Bible Lessons Sunday, December 1, 2013 L.G. Parkhurst, Jr.

The Life of Frederick Douglass

ZACHARIAS: VOICE OF DISBELIEF. SCRIPTURE READING: Luke 1: Max Thompson

International Bible Lessons Commentary Luke 1:26-38

Elizabeth and Zechariah. Luke 1:5-25 by Patty Friesen (First Advent, Nov. 29/15)

1 Ted Kirnbauer Luke 1:1-25 1/24/16

Luke s Christmas Carols: Benedictus December 15, 2013 Luke 1:5-25, 57-80

THE LIFE AND MINISTRY OF JOHN THE BAPTIST SAMUEL WHITEFIELD. Session 2: The Birth of John the Baptist. IHOP-KC Missions Base

Face To Face With The Ashamed. Mitchel Lee

The Birth of Jesus Foretold

He never wrote a book. He never held an office. He never had a family or owned a house. He didn't go to college. He never visited a big city.

John The Baptist No. 103

Assignments from God Luke 1:5-17

Luke 1:26-31, 2:22, New International Version December 23, 2018

LECTIO DIVINA Luke 1:57-66, 80 The Nativity of St. John the Baptist Fr. Michael Brizio, IMC

International Bible Lessons Commentary Luke 1:57-58, 67-79

4. And then after Malachi, it seemed as if God had gone totally silent!!! B. In Our Last Lesson We Studied The Intertestamental History.

Joint Heirs Adult Bible Fellowship Luke, Week 2, Luke 1:5-25 May 7, 2017 Tim Powell, Teacher

I. There s Something About Mary. The Staggering Promise of God. A. Picture of Mary shrine in Wyoming. B. Many Protestants uncomfortable with Mary

WHY DID JESUS COME? SESSION 4. The Point. The Passage. The Bible Meets Life. The Setting. Jesus came to remove our sin.

Advent Devotional Do Not Be Afraid: Defeating Fear with Hope, Peace, Love, Joy and a Wholehearted Life

God s promised Messiah is Jesus Christ, His Son.

In many African-American communities across the United States, the last day of

Luke 1: your word. Then the angel departed from her. 26 In the sixth month the angel Gabriel was sent by God to a town in Galilee called

Lesson 42: God Foretold the Birth of John and Jesus

What Happens When the Angels Leave -- Zechariah Luke 5:1-25 INTRODUCTION TO THE SERIES

WHY DID JESUS COME? SESSION 4. The Point. The Passage. The Bible Meets Life. The Setting. Jesus came to remove our sin.

Be Still and Know (Luke 1:5-25) by Rev. Dan McDowell November 25, 2018

Famous Speeches: Frederick Douglass' "The Hypocrisy of American Slavery"

REDEEMED FROM CRIPPLING DOUBT

The Birth of Jesus. The Shepherds and the Angels. 2 In those days a decree went out from Emperor Augustus that all the world

+ Festival of Lessons and Carols +

12/17/17 Advent 3 Have Yourself a Mary Christmas Luke 1:39-55 Pastor Doug Scalise, Brewster Baptist Church

setting Stage For Fluency

Christmas Scripture Readings. A Seven-Day Compilation of Scripture about the Birth and Purpose of Christ

THE LETTER TO THE HEBREWS: 15. Jesus our Great High Priest: In the Order of Melchizedek Hebrews 7:9 10

Against his better judgment, he peeled back a little bit of the wrapping paper and saw he had received the Transformers figure just as he had hoped.

GOD USES ORDINARY PEOPLE Luke 1:39-56

Introduction to the gospel of Luke: Luke 1: 1-4. The foretelling of John the Baptist's birth: Luke 1: The angel's visit: Luke 1: 11-20

Before your group study begins, share your first impressions on the message. Did the message raise any particular questions?

Luke 1:26-31, 2:22, King James Version December 23, 2018

Catechism Bible Mega Quiz 2018 Question Bank: Class 1 Jesus Christ - Birth

What is our only hope in life and death? that we are not our own but belong to God

Whose word have you learned to always trust? #BeautyfromAshes QUESTION 1 BIBLE STUDIES FOR LIFE LifeWay

Mustard Seed Children s Summary for December 2, 2007 Released on November 28, Called to Believe

The Gospel According to LUKE

being Led by the Spirit

MESSAGE NOTES. SERMON: WHAT CHILD IS THIS? The Virgin s Great Son (Luke 1:26-38) Pastor Augie Iadicicco December 9, 2018

LUKE. 1Inasmuch as many have undertaken to compile a narrative. Dedication to Theophilus

Luke 1A. o Of the 4 gospels, two were written by Disciples (Matt & John) and 2 were written by later followers (Mark and Luke)

MARY S TRUST SESSION 3. The Point. The Passage. The Bible Meets Life. The Setting. Embrace God s call on your life. Luke 1:26-38

New International Version

A Spirit-Filled Christmas

Our Almighty Lord is the real wonder!

Scripture & Prayers. for Advent IV, Christmas Eve and Christmas Day. Compiled by Lisa Traylor Prayers from the 1979 Book of Common Prayer

The Nativity Story and Jesus Formative Years

2013 Advent Retreat in Daily Living Prayer Material for Week of December 9 Elizabeth and John: Voice of Blessing and Joy, Voice of Preparation

Christmas I. The First Blessing, the First Promise, and Miracle Babies

O Come, O Come, Emmanuel. Luke 1: There are many ways that Scripture describes our original state because of sin:

THE VOICE IN THE WILDERNESS

Every teenager is thinking: Who can I follow? Copy? Emulate? Who can I watch and become like because I want the same life they have.

Reforming American Society

Middleburg Life, June Story and photos by Caitlin Scott

Happy second Sunday of Advent and happy St. Nicholas Day! The signs of

Lighting the Advent Wreath 2007

The Ascension of Christ. Lord s Day 18: Heidelberg Catechism

Verse 3. God told him, 'Leave your native land and your relatives, and come into the land that I will show you.' Verse 4. So Abraham left the land of

SECOND WEEK OF ADVENT: MARY THE MODEL OF CHRISTIAN SERVICE INTRODUCTION

Subject: The Armour of God Pt 1 - Truth

For our shared or personal reflection: After a brief pause for silent reflection share your answers, ideas or feelings.

Luke 2:25 32 (ESV) 25 Now there was a man in Jerusalem, whose name was Simeon, and this man was righteous and devout, waiting for the consolation of

The Bible Meets Life

Birth of Jesus. The Life of Jesus 3 years that change the world forever Chronology and Harmony

Prayer Topic Two - Pray for the CUFI Leadership and Washington DC Summit

Chapter One. The Setting Y. Prologue

The Nativity of John the Baptist (Year B)

WHO S WHO IN GENESIS?

United States History A Level: 11 th Grade

IN THAT DAY, WHEN JUDAH AND JERUSALEM ARE DESTROYED ISAIAH 4:1-6

"SEEK A FRESH TOUCH FROM GOD" by Rom A. Pegram (12/24/17)

The Gospel of Mark Lesson 2 Mark 1:1 13

Turning Barrenness into Fruitfulness

The Real. Jesus. A study through the Gospel of Luke. BOOK 6: His preparation

Jews For Yeshua.

> PRAY for Pastor Brandon, the upcoming class time, your teaching, your class members, and their receptivity to the lesson.

Transcription:

Elizabeth, Mother of John We are introduced to Elizabeth, the mother of John the Baptist, in Luke s Gospel. Elizabeth was said to be a descendant of Aaron, Israel s first priest. She, like so many of the great mothers of the Jewish faith (for example, Sarah, Rachel, and Hannah), was old and barren. Luke is clear that her sterility was not on account of impiety; she was described as righteous before God and said to live blamelessly according to all commandments and regulations of the Lord. Her husband Zechariah was serving as priest, offering incense in the temple, when he was informed that Elizabeth would bear a son in her old age. Zechariah expressed disbelief and was rendered mute until the day John the Baptist was presented in the temple. Elizabeth, on the other hand, modeled trust in God s promises and was rewarded with a pregnancy entirely free of snarky comments about the amount of pita and hummus she consumed. Elizabeth lived in seclusion for five months until she was visited by her relative, Mary. At Mary s greeting, the baby leapt in Elizabeth s womb, leading her to praise Mary proclaiming, Blessed are you among women, and blessed is the fruit of your womb. In this moment she acted as prophet, a role her son would take up when he prepared the way of the Lord in the desert. After the boy was born and when he was presented at the temple, since Zechariah was mute, Elizabeth was obedient to God s command and named her son John. He would later be described by Jesus as more than a prophet and that among those born of women no one is greater than John. The Protoevangelium of James narrated how during Herod s murderous rage, Zechariah was killed for concealing Elizabeth and John. God led Elizabeth to a mountain and miraculously protected her and her young son so that John could grow and fulfill the mission 32

God had prepared for him. Elizabeth, now an elderly widow with a young child, faithfully raised John, who was later recognized not only as a great prophet and the forerunner to the savior but also as a holy figure to be emulated in his own right. David Creech Lord God, we remember before you today Elizabeth, mother of John the Baptist. May we be so convicted of the presence of Jesus that, like her, we would proclaim as blessed those who bear him into the world. Grant that we would have the deep faith and abiding peace to rest in your promises for this life, no matter how incredible those promises seem to us, and to have the grace and will to proclaim those promises to the world, for the sake of Jesus. Amen. 33

Frederick Douglass Many people are familiar with Frederick Douglass work as an abolitionist in the nineteenth century. What is not as well-known is the depth of Douglass Christian faith. Douglass love of scripture and his fascination with the apocalyptic writing of Revelation was a guidepost in his quest for personal holiness and social transformation. Born to an enslaved woman and a white slave owner in 1818 on Maryland s Eastern Shore, Douglass was sent to work for a Baltimore shipbuilder following his mother s death when he was seven years old. Over the course of the next eight years, Douglass learned to read and write and developed a love of the Bible. His affinity for the Bible served as a catalyst for his conversion to the Christian faith when he was thirteen. In his well-known autobiography Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, he recalled that after being sent back to Maryland s Eastern Shore, he continued to have abiding hope in God s promises and established a Sunday school for other enslaved men and women. While on the Eastern Shore, Douglass was subjected to numerous whippings and beatings from the plantation s overseer, which left permanent scars on his body. These violent beatings and Douglass prophetic reading of scripture led him to plan his escape to freedom. Although his first attempt was not a success, in 1838 Douglass finally fled to safety in New York, before settling in New Bedford, Massachusetts with his wife. Together, they had five children. In New Bedford, Douglass joined an abolitionist society and an A.M.E. Zion church, where he assumed leadership as the church s preacher. By 1841 Douglass was traveling across Canada and the northern United States rallying support against slavery. Douglass believed that individual holiness was essential to the reformation of society s morals and the work of abolitionists. To this end, Douglass 34

refused to drink alcohol, smoke tobacco, or engage in any other behavior he felt threatened the Christian s call to righteousness. After the Civil War ended, Douglass continued advocating for equality not only on behalf of African Americans, but Native Americans and women. For Douglass, God s justice would not be complete until all were treated with dignity. Douglass published more than ten books and speeches, including the conscienceraising, What to a Slave is the Fourth of July? He died at his Washington, D.C., home in 1895 and was buried in Rochester, New York. His Washington home is currently a national landmark, housing Douglass collection of Bibles, religious books, and angel depictions. Maria Kane Almighty God, whose truth makes us free: We bless your Name for the witness of Frederick Douglass, whose impassioned and reasonable speech moved the hearts of a president and a people to a deeper obedience to Christ. Strengthen us also to be outspoken on behalf of those in captivity and tribulation, continuing in the Word of Jesus Christ our Liberator; who with you and the Holy Spirit dwells in glory everlasting. Amen. 35

How to Use Lent Madness in Your Congregation There are as many ways to use Lent Madness as there are congregations. In other words, there is no right or wrong way to take part in Lent Madness. Here are a few ideas that made their way to Lent Madness Headquarters. Feel free to share your ideas with us online (or scribble them on the back of this book and mail it to us. Just make sure you buy a replacement). Everyone should: Join Lent Madness on its website, www.lentmadness.org. Study up on the saints ahead of time use the Saintly Scorecard! Like us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/lentmadness. Follow us on Twitter @LentMadness. Watch Lent Madness videos at www.vimeo.com/channels/ lentmadness and www.youtube.com/lentmadnesstv. Buy Lent Madness gifts and tchotchkes at the Lentorium, www.lentmadness.org/store or or www.cafepress.com/ forwardmovement. Invite others to take part in Lent Madness. The more the merrier! 72