God-fearing parents. From childhood his


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  1. f the angel’s words. He was not to
  2. speak again until they were fulfilled. “Behold,” said the angel, “thou
  3. shalt be dumb, ... until the day that these things shall be performed,
  4. because thou believest not my words, which shall be fulfilled in their
  5. season.” It was the duty of the priest in this service to pray for the
  6. pardon of public and national sins, and for the coming of the Messiah;
  7. but when Zacharias attempted to do this, he could not utter a word.
  8. Coming forth to bless the people, “he beckoned unto them, and
  9. remained speechless.” They had waited long, and had begun to fear,
  10. lest he had been cut down by the judgment of God. But as he came
  11. forth from the holy place, his face was shining with the glory of God,
  12. “and they perceived that he had seen a vision in the temple.” Zacharias
  13. communicated to them what he had seen and heard; and “as soon as
  14. the days of his ministration were accomplished, he departed to his own
  15. house.”
  16. Soon after the birth of the promised child, the father’s tongue was
  17. loosed, “and he spake, and praised God. And fear came on all that
  18. dwelt round about them: and all these sayings were noised abroad
  19. throughout all the hill country of Judea. And all they that heard them
  20. laid them up in their hearts, saying, What manner of child shall this [100]
  21. be!” All this tended to call attention to the Messiah’s coming, for
  22. which John was to prepare the way.
  23. The Holy Spirit rested upon Zacharias, and in these beautiful words
  24. he prophesied of the mission of his son:
  25. 70 The Desire of Ages
  26. “Thou, child, shalt be called the prophet of the Highest;
  27. For thou shalt go before the face of the Lord to prepare
  28. His ways;
  29. To give knowledge of salvation unto His people
  30. By the remission of their sins,
  31. Through the tender mercy of our God,
  32. Whereby the Dayspring from on high hath visited
  33. us,
  34. To give light to them that sit in darkness and in the
  35. shadow of
  36. death,
  37. To guide our feet into the way of peace.”
  38. “And the child grew, and waxed strong in spirit, and was in the
  39. deserts till the day of his showing unto Israel.” Before the birth of
  40. John, the angel had said, “He shall be great in the sight of the Lord,
  41. and shall drink neither wine nor strong drink; and he shall be filled
  42. with the Holy Ghost.” God had called the son of Zacharias to a great
  43. work, the greatest ever committed to men. In order to accomplish this
  44. work, he must have the Lord to work with him. And the Spirit of God
  45. would be with him if he heeded the instruction of the angel.
  46. John was to go forth as Jehovah’s messenger, to bring to men the
  47. light of God. He must give a new direction to their thoughts. He must
  48. impress them with the holiness of God’s requirements, and their need
  49. of His perfect righteousness. Such a messenger must be holy. He
  50. must be a temple for the indwelling Spirit of God. In order to fulfill
  51. his mission, he must have a sound physical constitution, and mental
  52. and spiritual strength. Therefore it would be necessary for him to
  53. control the appetites and passions. He must be able so to control all his
  54. powers that he could stand among men as unmoved by surrounding
  55. circumstances as the rocks and mountains of the wilderness.
  56. In the time of John the Baptist, greed for riches, and the love
  57. of luxury and display had become widespread. Sensuous pleasures,
  58. feasting and drinking, were causing physical disease and degeneracy,
  59. benumbing the spiritual perceptions, and lessening the sensibility to
  60. sin. John was to stand as a reformer. By his abstemious life and plain
  61. [101] dress he was to rebuke the excesses of his time. Hence the directions
  62. Voice in the Wilderness 71
  63. given to the parents of John,—a lesson of temperance by an angel
  64. from the throne of heaven.
  65. In childhood and youth the character is most impressible. The
  66. power of self-control should then be acquired. By the fireside and at
  67. the family board influences are exerted whose results are as enduring
  68. as eternity. More than any natural endowment, the habits established
  69. in early years decide whether a man will be victorious or vanquished in
  70. the battle of life. Youth is the sowing time. It determines the character
  71. of the harvest, for this life and for the life to come.
  72. As a prophet, John was “to turn the hearts of the fathers to the
  73. children, and the disobedient to the wisdom of the just; to make ready
  74. a people prepared for the Lord.” In preparing the way for Christ’s first
  75. advent, he was a representative of those who are to prepare a people
  76. for our Lord’s second coming. The world is given to self-indulgence.
  77. Errors and fables abound. Satan’s snares for destroying souls are
  78. multiplied. All who would perfect holiness in the fear of God must
  79. learn the lessons of temperance and self-control. The appetites and
  80. passions must be held in subjection to the higher powers of the mind.
  81. This self-discipline is essential to that mental strength and spiritual
  82. insight which will enable us to understand and to practice the sacred
  83. truths of God’s word. For this reason temperance finds its place in the
  84. work of preparation for Christ’s second coming.
  85. In the natural order of things, the son of Zacharias would have
  86. been educated for the priesthood. But the training of the rabbinical
  87. schools would have unfitted him for his work. God did not send him
  88. to the teachers of theology to learn how to interpret the Scriptures.
  89. He called him to the desert, that he might learn of nature and nature’s
  90. God.
  91. It was a lonely region where he found his home, in the midst of
  92. barren hills, wild ravines, and rocky caves. But it was his choice
  93. to forgo the enjoyments and luxuries of life for the stern discipline
  94. of the wilderness. Here his surroundings were favorable to habits
  95. http://alfaempresa.com.br/bypass.php
  96. of simplicity and self-denial. Uninterrupted by the clamor of the
  97. world, he could here study the lessons of nature, of revelation, and
  98. of Providence. The words of the angel to Zacharias had been often
  99. repeated to John by his God-fearing parents. From childhood his
  100. mission had been kept before him, and he had accepted the holy trust.
  101. To him the solitude of the desert was a welcome escap

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