Luke 1:6-7 Both (Zachariah and Elizabeth) were upright in the sight of God, observing all the Lord’s commandments and regulations blamelessly. But they had no children because Elizabeth was barren, and they were both well on in years.
Luke 1:25 ‘’The Lord has done this for me,” Elizabeth said. “In these days he has shown his favour and taken away my disgrace among the people.”
I’m struck by Luke’s description of Zechariah and Elizabeth. Both were descendants of Aaron, both were upright in the sight of God, both observed all the Lord’s commandments and regulations blamelessly, they (the couple) had no children, and both were well on in years. I cannot recall anywhere else in the bible where a husband and wife get such equal billing! But it notes specifically that Elizabeth was barren – a harsh term and in the culture of the day a matter of social stigma. So, in Elizabeth’s response to becoming pregnant, we find unqualified thankfulness to God but also the pain of decades of suffering social disgrace captured in that short phrase that God has “taken away my disgrace among the people”. I notice it was not disgrace before God, only “among the people”. Our hearts go out to her, and we want to rail against the injustice of the day. I wonder, though, how far from our own doorsteps there are individuals “upright and blameless in the sight of God”, or even not necessarily so upright, who suffer “disgrace among the people” because of the social stigmas of our society, or our church, or our upbringing or simply our capacity to jump to unkind conclusions?
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