Homily for December 19th, 2013: Judges 13:2-7,
24-25a; Luke 1:5-15.
When the angel
Gabriel visited the young Jewish teenager, Mary, to tell her that God wanted
her to be the mother of his Son, Mary asked, quite naturally, how such a thing
could be possible. To which the angel responded: “Nothing is impossible with
God” (Luke 1:37).
Both of our
readings today show God doing the impossible. In today’s first reading, the
recipient of a gift impossible for anyone but God is identified simply as “the
wife of Manoah.” The Bible nowhere gives her name. She is unable to conceive a
child. Numerous contemporary articles and books by unfruitful wives testify
eloquently to the grief experienced by women whose dreams of motherhood remain
unfulfilled. Manoah’s wife is visited by
an angel who tells her that she will have a son who will free his people from
their enemies.
The woman in
today’s gospel reading is named: Elizabeth, wife of the Jewish priest Zechariah. Both are far beyond childbearing age. This time the angel bringing the news that
she will conceive and bear a son appears not to Elizabeth but to her husband. Zechariah is
unable to believe that such a thing is possible. In consequence, the angel tells
him, he will lose the power of speech until the promised boy is born.
In one of his
sermons (293:1-3) St. Augustine
uses a play on the two Latin words vox
(voice) and verbum (word) to explain
the reason for this. Zechariah’s son, John the Baptist, was called, Augustine
says, to be a voice: vox – for the
word, verbum: Jesus, God’s personal
utterance and communication to us. While still in his mother’s womb, John was voice was silent. Only when John, the voice for the Word, was born, was his father’s
power of speech restored.
In a different but similar way, we
too are called to be voices for God’s Son, the Word: at least by the witness of
our lives. St. Francis of Assisi has said it best:
“Preach always. If necessary, use words.”
“Preach always. If necessary, use words.”
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