And, behold, thou shalt be dumb, and not able to speak, until the day that these things shall be performed, because thou believest not my words, which shall be fulfilled in their season.
Luke 1:20.
Twice in this message of the angel to Zacharias the priest, the angel makes it clear that receiving a promise is not the same thing as the fulfilment of it, even when the promise is as authentic as one from God and as credible as one delivered by no less an angel than Gabriel who stands in the very “presence of God,” the unapproachable presence of Light (Luke 1:19). First, the angel states that the promise would be “until the day” of performance. So, there was an “until” and a marked “day” for fulfilment. It didn’t matter how much in a hurry the priest was. He had to wait for “the day”; wait “until …”; and waiting can be tough, if you have ever been there. Next, the angel reiterated that the good promise had a “season” about it. In other words, it had a clearing date. The point was thus made in two quick and consecutive times in the same sentence, and the beneficiary was not to miss it.