PAPER 135
- JOHN THE BAPTIST
John the
Baptist was born March 25, 7 B.C., in accordance
with the promise that Gabriel made to Elizabeth
in June of the previous year. For five months
Elizabeth kept secret Gabriel's visitation; and
when she told her husband, Zacharias, he was
greatly troubled and fully believed her
narrative only after he had an unusual dream
about six weeks before the birth of John.
Excepting the visit of Gabriel to Elizabeth and
the dream of Zacharias, there was nothing
unusual or supernatural connected with the birth
of John the Baptist.
On the eighth
day John was circumcised according to the Jewish
custom. He grew up as an ordinary child, day by
day and year by year, in the small village known
in those days as the City of Judah, about four
miles west of Jerusalem.
The most
eventful occurrence in John's early childhood
was the visit, in company with his parents, to
Jesus and the Nazareth family. This visit
occurred in the month of June, 1 B.C., when he
was a little over six years of age.
After their
return from Nazareth John's parents began the
systematic education of the lad. There was no
synagogue school in this little village;
however, as he was a priest, Zacharias was
fairly well educated, and Elizabeth was far
better educated than the average Judean woman;
she was also of the priesthood, being a
descendant of the "daughters of Aaron." Since
John was an only child, they spent a great deal
of time on his mental and spiritual training.
Zacharias had only short periods of service at
the temple in Jerusalem so that he devoted much
of his time to teaching his son.
Zacharias and
Elizabeth had a small farm on which they raised
sheep. They hardly made a living on this land,
but Zacharias received a regular allowance from
the temple funds dedicated to the priesthood.
1.
JOHN BECOMES A NAZARITE
John had no
school from which to graduate at the age of
fourteen, but his parents had selected this as
the appropriate year for him to take the formal
Nazarite vow. Accordingly, Zacharias and
Elizabeth took their son to Engedi, down by the
Dead Sea. This was the southern headquarters of
the Nazarite brotherhood, and there the lad was
duly and solemnly inducted into this order for
life. After these ceremonies and the making of
the vows to abstain from all intoxicating
drinks, to let the hair grow, and to refrain
from touching the dead, the family proceeded to
Jerusalem, where, before the temple, John
completed the making of the offerings which were
required of those taking Nazarite vows.
John took the
same life vows that had been administered to his
illustrious predecessors, Samson and the prophet
Samuel. A life Nazarite was looked upon as a
sanctified and holy personality. The Jews
regarded a Nazarite with almost the respect and
veneration accorded the high priest, and this
was not strange since
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Nazarites of lifelong consecration were the only
persons, except high priests, who were ever
permitted to enter the holy of holies in the
temple.
John returned
home from Jerusalem to tend his father's sheep
and grew up to be a strong man with a noble
character.
When sixteen
years old, John, as a result of reading about
Elijah, became greatly impressed with the
prophet of Mount Carmel and decided to adopt his
style of dress. From that day on John always
wore a hairy garment with a leather girdle. At
sixteen he was more than six feet tall and
almost full grown. With his flowing hair and
peculiar mode of dress he was indeed a
picturesque youth. And his parents expected
great things of this their only son, a child of
promise and a Nazarite for life.
2.
THE DEATH OF ZACHARIAS
After an
illness of several months Zacharias died in
July, A.D. 12, when John was just past eighteen
years of age. This was a time of great
embarrassment to John since the Nazarite vow
forbade contact with the dead, even in one's own
family. Although John had endeavored to comply
with the restrictions of his vow regarding
contamination by the dead, he doubted that he
had been wholly obedient to the requirements of
the Nazarite order; therefore, after his
father's burial he went to Jerusalem, where, in
the Nazarite corner of the women's court, he
offered the sacrifices required for his
cleansing.
In September
of this year Elizabeth and John made a journey
to Nazareth to visit Mary and Jesus. John had
just about made up his mind to launch out in his
lifework, but he was admonished, not only by
Jesus' words but also by his example, to return
home, take care of his mother, and await the
"coming of the Father's hour." After bidding
Jesus and Mary good-bye at the end of this
enjoyable visit, John did not again see Jesus
until the event of his baptism in the Jordan.
John and
Elizabeth returned to their home and began to
lay plans for the future. Since John refused to
accept the priest's allowance due him from the
temple funds, by the end of two years they had
all but lost their home; so they decided to go
south with the sheep herd. Accordingly, the
summer that John was twenty years of age
witnessed their removal to Hebron. In the
so-called "wilderness of Judea" John tended his
sheep along a brook that was tributary to a
larger stream which entered the Dead Sea at
Engedi. The Engedi colony included not only
Nazarites of lifelong and time-period
consecration but numerous other ascetic herdsmen
who congregated in this region with their herds
and fraternized with the Nazarite brotherhood.
They supported themselves by sheep raising and
from gifts which wealthy Jews made to the order.
As time
passed, John returned less often to Hebron,
while he made more frequent visits to Engedi. He
was so entirely different from the majority of
the Nazarites that he found it very difficult
fully to fraternize with the brotherhood. But he
was very fond of Abner, the acknowledged leader
and head of the Engedi colony.
3.
THE LIFE OF A SHEPHERD
Along the
valley of this little brook John built no less
than a dozen stone shelters and night corrals,
consisting of piled-up stones, wherein he could
watch
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over
and safeguard his herds of sheep and goats.
John's life as a shepherd afforded him a great
deal of time for thought. He talked much with
Ezda, an orphan lad of Beth-zur, whom he had in
a way adopted, and who cared for the herds when
he made trips to Hebron to see his mother and to
sell sheep, as well as when he went down to
Engedi for Sabbath services. John and the lad
lived very simply, subsisting on mutton, goat's
milk, wild honey, and the edible locusts of that
region. This, their regular diet, was
supplemented by provisions brought from Hebron
and Engedi from time to time.
Elizabeth kept
John posted about Palestinian and world affairs,
and his conviction grew deeper and deeper that
the time was fast approaching when the old order
was to end; that he was to become the herald of
the approach of a new age, "the kingdom of
heaven." This rugged shepherd was very partial
to the writings of the Prophet Daniel. He read a
thousand times Daniel's description of the great
image, which Zacharias had told him represented
the history of the great kingdoms of the world,
beginning with Babylon, then Persia, Greece, and
finally Rome. John perceived that already was
Rome composed of such polyglot peoples and races
that it could never become a strongly cemented
and firmly consolidated empire. He believed that
Rome was even then divided, as Syria, Egypt,
Palestine, and other provinces; and then he
further read "in the days of these kings shall
the God of heaven set up a kingdom which shall
never be destroyed. And this kingdom shall not
be left to other people but shall break in
pieces and consume all these kingdoms, and it
shall stand forever." "And there was given him
dominion and glory and a kingdom that all
peoples, nations, and languages should serve
him. His dominion is an everlasting dominion,
which shall not pass away, and his kingdom never
shall be destroyed." "And the kingdom and
dominion and the greatness of the kingdom under
the whole heaven shall be given to the people of
the saints of the Most High, whose kingdom is an
everlasting kingdom, and all dominions shall
serve and obey him."
John was never
able completely to rise above the confusion
produced by what he had heard from his parents
concerning Jesus and by these passages which he
read in the Scriptures. In Daniel he read: "I
saw in the night visions, and, behold, one like
the Son of Man came with the clouds of heaven,
and there was given him dominion and glory and a
kingdom." But these words of the prophet did not
harmonize with what his parents had taught him.
Neither did his talk with Jesus, at the time of
his visit when he was eighteen years old,
correspond with these statements of the
Scriptures. Notwithstanding this confusion,
throughout all of his perplexity his mother
assured him that his distant cousin, Jesus of
Nazareth, was the true Messiah, that he had come
to sit on the throne of David, and that he
(John) was to become his advance herald and
chief support.
From all John
heard of the vice and wickedness of Rome and the
dissoluteness and moral barrenness of the
empire, from what he knew of the evil doings of
Herod Antipas and the governors of Judea, he was
minded to believe that the end of the age was
impending. It seemed to this rugged and noble
child of nature that the world was ripe for the
end of the age of man and the dawn of the new
and divine age--the kingdom of heaven. The
feeling grew in John's heart that he was to be
the last of the old prophets and the first of
the new. And he fairly vibrated with the
mounting impulse to go forth and proclaim to all
men: "Repent! Get right with God! Get ready for
the end; prepare yourselves for the appearance
of the new and eternal order of earth affairs,
the kingdom of heaven."
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4.
THE DEATH OF ELIZABETH
On August 17,
A.D. 22, when John was twenty-eight years of
age, his mother suddenly passed away.
Elizabeth's friends, knowing of the Nazarite
restrictions regarding contact with the dead,
even in one's own family, made all arrangements
for the burial of Elizabeth before sending for
John. When he received word of the death of his
mother, he directed Ezda to drive his herds to
Engedi and started for Hebron.
On returning
to Engedi from his mother's funeral, he
presented his flocks to the brotherhood and for
a season detached himself from the outside world
while he fasted and prayed. John knew only of
the old methods of approach to divinity; he knew
only of the records of such as Elijah, Samuel,
and Daniel. Elijah was his ideal of a prophet.
Elijah was the first of the teachers of Israel
to be regarded as a prophet, and John truly
believed that he was to be the last of this long
and illustrious line of the messengers of
heaven.
For two and a
half years John lived at Engedi, and he
persuaded most of the brotherhood that "the end
of the age was at hand"; that "the kingdom of
heaven was about to appear." And all his early
teaching was based upon the current Jewish idea
and concept of the Messiah as the promised
deliverer of the Jewish nation from the
domination of their gentile rulers.
Throughout
this period John read much in the sacred
writings which he found at the Engedi home of
the Nazarites. He was especially impressed by
Isaiah and by Malachi, the last of the prophets
up to that time. He read and reread the last
five chapters of Isaiah, and he believed these
prophecies. Then he would read in Malachi:
"Behold, I will send you Elijah the prophet
before the coming of the great and dreadful day
of the Lord; and he shall turn the hearts of the
fathers toward the children and the hearts of
the children toward their fathers, lest I come
and smite the earth with a curse." And it was
only this promise of Malachi that Elijah would
return that deterred John from going forth to
preach about the coming kingdom and to exhort
his fellow Jews to flee from the wrath to come.
John was ripe for the proclamation of the
message of the coming kingdom, but this
expectation of the coming of Elijah held him
back for more than two years. He knew he was not
Elijah. What did Malachi mean? Was the prophecy
literal or figurative? How could he know the
truth? He finally dared to think that, since the
first of the prophets was called Elijah, so the
last should be known, eventually, by the same
name. Nevertheless, he had doubts, doubts
sufficient to prevent his ever calling himself
Elijah.
It was the
influence of Elijah that caused John to adopt
his methods of direct and blunt assault upon the
sins and vices of his contemporaries. He sought
to dress like Elijah, and he endeavored to talk
like Elijah; in every outward aspect he was like
the olden prophet. He was just such a stalwart
and picturesque child of nature, just such a
fearless and daring preacher of righteousness.
John was not illiterate, he did well know the
Jewish sacred writings, but he was hardly
cultured. He was a clear thinker, a powerful
speaker, and a fiery denunciator. He was hardly
an example to his age, but he was an eloquent
rebuke.
At last he
thought out the method of proclaiming the new
age, the kingdom of God; he settled that he was
to become the herald of the Messiah; he swept
aside all doubts and departed from Engedi one
day in March of A.D. 25 to begin his short but
brilliant career as a public preacher.
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5.
THE KINGDOM OF GOD
In order to
understand John's message, account should be
taken of the status of the Jewish people at the
time he appeared upon the stage of action. For
almost one hundred years all Israel had been in
a quandary; they were at a loss to explain their
continuous subjugation to gentile overlords. Had
not Moses taught that righteousness was always
rewarded with prosperity and power? Were they
not God's chosen people? Why was the throne of
David desolate and vacant? In the light of the
Mosaic doctrines and the precepts of the
prophets the Jews found it difficult to explain
their long-continued national desolation.
About one
hundred years before the days of Jesus and John
a new school of religious teachers arose in
Palestine, the apocalyptists. These new teachers
evolved a system of belief that accounted for
the sufferings and humiliation of the Jews on
the ground that they were paying the penalty for
the nation's sins. They fell back onto the
well-known reasons assigned to explain the
Babylonian and other captivities of former
times. But, so taught the apocalyptists, Israel
should take heart; the days of their affliction
were almost over; the discipline of God's chosen
people was about finished; God's patience with
the gentile foreigners was about exhausted. The
end of Roman rule was synonymous with the end of
the age and, in a certain sense, with the end of
the world. These new teachers leaned heavily on
the predictions of Daniel, and they consistently
taught that creation was about to pass into its
final stage; the kingdoms of this world were
about to become the kingdom of God. To the
Jewish mind of that day this was the meaning of
that phrase--the kingdom of heaven--which runs
throughout the teachings of both John and Jesus.
To the Jews of Palestine the phrase "kingdom of
heaven" had but one meaning: an absolutely
righteous state in which God (the Messiah) would
rule the nations of earth in perfection of power
just as he ruled in heaven--"Your will be done
on earth as in heaven."
In the days of
John all Jews were expectantly asking, "How soon
will the kingdom come?" There was a general
feeling that the end of the rule of the gentile
nations was drawing near. There was present
throughout all Jewry a lively hope and a keen
expectation that the consummation of the desire
of the ages would occur during the lifetime of
that generation.
While the Jews
differed greatly in their estimates of the
nature of the coming kingdom, they were alike in
their belief that the event was impending, near
at hand, even at the door. Many who read the Old
Testament literally looked expectantly for a new
king in Palestine, for a regenerated Jewish
nation delivered from its enemies and presided
over by the successor of King David, the Messiah
who would quickly be acknowledged as the
rightful and righteous ruler of all the world.
Another, though smaller, group of devout Jews
held a vastly different view of this kingdom of
God. They taught that the coming kingdom was not
of this world, that the world was approaching
its certain end, and that "a new heaven and a
new earth" were to usher in the establishment of
the kingdom of God; that this kingdom was to be
an everlasting dominion, that sin was to be
ended, and that the citizens of the new kingdom
were to become immortal in their enjoyment of
this endless bliss.
All were
agreed that some drastic purging or purifying
discipline would of necessity precede the
establishment of the new kingdom on earth. The
literalists taught that a world-wide war would
ensue which would destroy all unbelievers,
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while
the faithful would sweep on to universal and
eternal victory. The spiritists taught that the
kingdom would be ushered in by the great
judgment of God which would relegate the
unrighteous to their well-deserved judgment of
punishment and final destruction, at the same
time elevating the believing saints of the
chosen people to high seats of honor and
authority with the Son of Man, who would rule
over the redeemed nations in God's name. And
this latter group even believed that many devout
gentiles might be admitted to the fellowship of
the new kingdom.
Some of the
Jews held to the opinion that God might possibly
establish this new kingdom by direct and divine
intervention, but the vast majority believed
that he would interpose some representative
intermediary, the Messiah. And that was the only
possible meaning the term Messiah could have had
in the minds of the Jews of the generation of
John and Jesus. Messiah could not
possibly refer to one who merely taught God's
will or proclaimed the necessity for righteous
living. To all such holy persons the Jews gave
the title of prophet. The Messiah was to
be more than a prophet; the Messiah was to bring
in the establishment of the new kingdom, the
kingdom of God. No one who failed to do this
could be the Messiah in the traditional Jewish
sense.
Who would this
Messiah be? Again the Jewish teachers differed.
The older ones clung to the doctrine of the son
of David. The newer taught that, since the new
kingdom was a heavenly kingdom, the new ruler
might also be a divine personality, one who had
long sat at God's right hand in heaven. And
strange as it may appear, those who thus
conceived of the ruler of the new kingdom looked
upon him not as a human Messiah, not as a mere
man, but as "the Son of Man"--a Son of
God--a heavenly Prince, long held in waiting
thus to assume the rulership of the earth made
new. Such was the religious background of the
Jewish world when John went forth proclaiming:
"Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand!"
It becomes
apparent, therefore, that John's announcement of
the coming kingdom had not less than half a
dozen different meanings in the minds of those
who listened to his impassioned preaching. But
no matter what significance they attached to the
phrases which John employed, each of these
various groups of Jewish-kingdom expectants was
intrigued by the proclamations of this sincere,
enthusiastic, rough-and-ready preacher of
righteousness and repentance, who so solemnly
exhorted his hearers to "flee from the wrath to
come."
6.
JOHN BEGINS TO PREACH
Early in the
month of March, A.D. 25, John journeyed around
the western coast of the Dead Sea and up the
river Jordan to opposite Jericho, the ancient
ford over which Joshua and the children of
Israel passed when they first entered the
promised land; and crossing over to the other
side of the river, he established himself near
the entrance to the ford and began to preach to
the people who passed by on their way back and
forth across the river. This was the most
frequented of all the Jordan crossings.
It was
apparent to all who heard John that he was more
than a preacher. The great majority of those who
listened to this strange man who had come up
from the Judean wilderness went away believing
that they had heard the voice of a prophet. No
wonder the souls of these weary and expectant
Jews were deeply stirred by such a phenomenon.
Never in all Jewish history had the devout
children
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of
Abraham so longed for the "consolation of
Israel" or more ardently anticipated "the
restoration of the kingdom." Never in all Jewish
history could John's message, "the kingdom of
heaven is at hand," have made such a deep and
universal appeal as at the very time he so
mysteriously appeared on the bank of this
southern crossing of the Jordan.
He came from
the herdsmen, like Amos. He was dressed like
Elijah of old, and he thundered his admonitions
and poured forth his warnings in the "spirit and
power of Elijah." It is not surprising that this
strange preacher created a mighty stir
throughout all Palestine as the travelers
carried abroad the news of his preaching along
the Jordan.
There was
still another and a new feature about the
work of this Nazarite preacher: He baptized
every one of his believers in the Jordan "for
the remission of sins." Although baptism was not
a new ceremony among the Jews, they had never
seen it employed as John now made use of it. It
had long been the practice thus to baptize the
gentile proselytes into the fellowship of the
outer court of the temple, but never had the
Jews themselves been asked to submit to the
baptism of repentance. Only fifteen months
intervened between the time John began to preach
and baptize and his arrest and imprisonment at
the instigation of Herod Antipas, but in this
short time he baptized considerably over one
hundred thousand penitents.
John preached
four months at Bethany ford before starting
north up the Jordan. Tens of thousands of
listeners, some curious but many earnest and
serious, came to hear him from all parts of
Judea, Perea, and Samaria. Even a few came from
Galilee.
In May of this
year, while he still lingered at Bethany ford,
the priests and Levites sent a delegation out to
inquire of John whether he claimed to be the
Messiah, and by whose authority he preached.
John answered these questioners by saying: "Go
tell your masters that you have heard `the voice
of one crying in the wilderness,' as spoken by
the prophet, saying, `make ready the way of the
Lord, make straight a highway for our God. Every
valley shall be filled, and every mountain and
hill shall be brought low; the uneven ground
shall become a plain, while the rough places
shall become a smooth valley; and all flesh
shall see the salvation of God.'"
John was a
heroic but tactless preacher. One day when he
was preaching and baptizing on the west bank of
the Jordan, a group of Pharisees and a number of
Sadducees came forward and presented themselves
for baptism. Before leading them down into the
water, John, addressing them as a group said:
"Who warned you to flee, as vipers before the
fire, from the wrath to come? I will baptize
you, but I warn you to bring forth fruit worthy
of sincere repentance if you would receive the
remission of your sins. Tell me not that Abraham
is your father. I declare that God is able of
these twelve stones here before you to raise up
worthy children for Abraham. And even now is the
ax laid to the very roots of the trees. Every
tree that brings not forth good fruit is
destined to be cut down and cast into the fire."
(The twelve stones to which he referred were the
reputed memorial stones set up by Joshua to
commemorate the crossing of the "twelve tribes"
at this very point when they first entered the
promised land.)
John conducted
classes for his disciples, in the course of
which he instructed them in the details of their
new life and endeavored to answer their many
questions. He counseled the teachers to instruct
in the spirit as well as the letter of the law.
He instructed the rich to feed the poor; to the
tax gatherers he said:
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"Extort no more than that which is assigned
you." To the soldiers he said: "Do no violence
and exact nothing wrongfully--be content with
your wages." While he counseled all: "Make ready
for the end of the age--the kingdom of heaven is
at hand."
7.
JOHN JOURNEYS NORTH
John still had
confused ideas about the coming kingdom and its
king. The longer he preached the more confused
he became, but never did this intellectual
uncertainty concerning the nature of the coming
kingdom in the least lessen his conviction of
the certainty of the kingdom's immediate
appearance. In mind John might be confused, but
in spirit never. He was in no doubt about the
coming kingdom, but he was far from certain as
to whether or not Jesus was to be the ruler of
that kingdom. As long as John held to the idea
of the restoration of the throne of David, the
teachings of his parents that Jesus, born in the
City of David, was to be the long-expected
deliverer, seemed consistent; but at those times
when he leaned more toward the doctrine of a
spiritual kingdom and the end of the temporal
age on earth, he was sorely in doubt as to the
part Jesus would play in such events. Sometimes
he questioned everything, but not for long. He
really wished he might talk it all over with his
cousin, but that was contrary to their expressed
agreement.
As John
journeyed north, he thought much about Jesus. He
paused at more than a dozen places as he
traveled up the Jordan. It was at Adam that he
first made reference to "another one who is to
come after me" in answer to the direct question
which his disciples asked him, "Are you the
Messiah?" And he went on to say: "There will
come after me one who is greater than I, whose
sandal straps I am not worthy to stoop down and
unloose. I baptize you with water, but he will
baptize you with the Holy Spirit. And his shovel
is in his hand thoroughly to cleanse his
threshing floor; he will gather the wheat into
his garner, but the chaff will he burn up with
the judgment fire."
In response to
the questions of his disciples John continued to
expand his teachings, from day to day adding
more that was helpful and comforting compared
with his early and cryptic message: "Repent and
be baptized." By this time throngs were arriving
from Galilee and the Decapolis. Scores of
earnest believers lingered with their adored
teacher day after day.
8.
MEETING OF JESUS AND JOHN
By December of
A.D. 25, when John reached the neighborhood of
Pella in his journey up the Jordan, his fame had
extended throughout all Palestine, and his work
had become the chief topic of conversation in
all the towns about the lake of Galilee. Jesus
had spoken favorably of John's message, and this
had caused many from Capernaum to join John's
cult of repentance and baptism. James and John
the fishermen sons of Zebedee had gone down in
December, soon after John took up his preaching
position near Pella, and had offered themselves
for baptism. They went to see John once a week
and brought back to Jesus fresh, first-hand
reports of the evangelist's work.
Jesus'
brothers James and Jude had talked about going
down to John for baptism; and now that Jude had
come over to Capernaum for the Sabbath services,
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both
he and James, after listening to Jesus'
discourse in the synagogue, decided to take
counsel with him concerning their plans. This
was on Saturday night, January 12, A.D. 26.
Jesus requested that they postpone the
discussion until the following day, when he
would give them his answer. He slept very little
that night, being in close communion with the
Father in heaven. He had arranged to have
noontime lunch with his brothers and to advise
them concerning baptism by John. That Sunday
morning Jesus was working as usual in the
boatshop. James and Jude had arrived with the
lunch and were waiting in the lumber room for
him, as it was not yet time for the midday
recess, and they knew that Jesus was very
regular about such matters.
Just before
the noon rest, Jesus laid down his tools,
removed his work apron, and merely announced to
the three workmen in the room with him, "My hour
has come." He went out to his brothers James and
Jude, repeating, "My hour has come--let us go to
John." And they started immediately for Pella,
eating their lunch as they journeyed. This was
on Sunday, January 13. They tarried for the
night in the Jordan valley and arrived on the
scene of John's baptizing about noon of the next
day.
John had just
begun baptizing the candidates for the day.
Scores of repentants were standing in line
awaiting their turn when Jesus and his two
brothers took up their positions in this line of
earnest men and women who had become believers
in John's preaching of the coming kingdom. John
had been inquiring about Jesus of Zebedee's
sons. He had heard of Jesus' remarks concerning
his preaching, and he was day by day expecting
to see him arrive on the scene, but he had not
expected to greet him in the line of baptismal
candidates.
Being
engrossed with the details of rapidly baptizing
such a large number of converts, John did not
look up to see Jesus until the Son of Man stood
in his immediate presence. When John recognized
Jesus, the ceremonies were halted for a moment
while he greeted his cousin in the flesh and
asked, "But why do you come down into the water
to greet me?" And Jesus answered, "To be subject
to your baptism." John replied: "But I have need
to be baptized by you. Why do you come to me?"
And Jesus whispered to John: "Bear with me now,
for it becomes us to set this example for my
brothers standing here with me, and that the
people may know that my hour has come."
There was a
tone of finality and authority in Jesus' voice.
John was atremble with emotion as he made ready
to baptize Jesus of Nazareth in the Jordan at
noon on Monday, January 14, A.D. 26. Thus did
John baptize Jesus and his two brothers James
and Jude. And when John had baptized these
three, he dismissed the others for the day,
announcing that he would resume baptisms at noon
the next day. As the people were departing, the
four men still standing in the water heard a
strange sound, and presently there appeared for
a moment an apparition immediately over the head
of Jesus, and they heard a voice saying, "This
is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased." A
great change came over the countenance of Jesus,
and coming up out of the water in silence he
took leave of them, going toward the hills to
the east. And no man saw Jesus again for forty
days.
John followed
Jesus a sufficient distance to tell him the
story of Gabriel's visit to his mother ere
either had been born, as he had heard it so many
times from his mother's lips. He allowed Jesus
to continue on his way after he had said, "Now I
know of a certainty that you are the Deliverer."
But Jesus made no reply.
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9.
FORTY DAYS OF PREACHING
When John
returned to his disciples (he now had some
twenty-five or thirty who abode with him
constantly), he found them in earnest
conference, discussing what had just happened in
connection with Jesus' baptism. They were all
the more astonished when John now made known to
them the story of the Gabriel visitation to Mary
before Jesus was born, and also that Jesus spoke
no word to him even after he had told him about
this. There was no rain that evening, and this
group of thirty or more talked long into the
starlit night. They wondered where Jesus had
gone, and when they would see him again.
After the
experience of this day the preaching of John
took on new and certain notes of proclamation
concerning the coming kingdom and the expected
Messiah. It was a tense time, these forty days
of tarrying, waiting for the return of Jesus.
But John continued to preach with great power,
and his disciples began at about this time to
preach to the overflowing throngs which gathered
around John at the Jordan.
In the course
of these forty days of waiting, many rumors
spread about the countryside and even to
Tiberias and Jerusalem. Thousands came over to
see the new attraction in John's camp, the
reputed Messiah, but Jesus was not to be seen.
When the disciples of John asserted that the
strange man of God had gone to the hills, many
doubted the entire story.
About three
weeks after Jesus had left them, there arrived
on the scene at Pella a new deputation from the
priests and Pharisees at Jerusalem. They asked
John directly if he was Elijah or the prophet
that Moses promised; and when John said, "I am
not," they made bold to ask, "Are you the
Messiah?" and John answered, "I am not." Then
said these men from Jerusalem: "If you are not
Elijah, nor the prophet, nor the Messiah, then
why do you baptize the people and create all
this stir?" And John replied: "It should be for
those who have heard me and received my baptism
to say who I am, but I declare to you that,
while I baptize with water, there has been among
us one who will return to baptize you with the
Holy Spirit."
These forty
days were a difficult period for John and his
disciples. What was to be the relation of John
to Jesus? A hundred questions came up for
discussion. Politics and selfish preferment
began to make their appearance. Intense
discussions grew up around the various ideas and
concepts of the Messiah. Would he become a
military leader and a Davidic king? Would he
smite the Roman armies as Joshua had the
Canaanites? Or would he come to establish a
spiritual kingdom? John rather decided, with the
minority, that Jesus had come to establish the
kingdom of heaven, although he was not
altogether clear in his own mind as to just what
was to be embraced within this mission of the
establishment of the kingdom of heaven.
These were
strenuous days in John's experience, and he
prayed for the return of Jesus. Some of John's
disciples organized scouting parties to go in
search of Jesus, but John forbade, saying: "Our
times are in the hands of the God of heaven; he
will direct his chosen Son."
It was early
on the morning of Sabbath, February 23, that the
company of John, engaged in eating their morning
meal, looked up toward the north and beheld
Jesus coming to them. As he approached them,
John stood upon a large
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rock
and, lifting up his sonorous voice, said:
"Behold the Son of God, the deliverer of the
world! This is he of whom I have said, `After me
there will come one who is preferred before me
because he was before me.' For this cause came I
out of the wilderness to preach repentance and
to baptize with water, proclaiming that the
kingdom of heaven is at hand. And now comes one
who shall baptize you with the Holy Spirit. And
I beheld the divine spirit descending upon this
man, and I heard the voice of God declare, `This
is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased.'"
Jesus bade
them return to their food while he sat down to
eat with John, his brothers James and Jude
having returned to Capernaum.
Early in the
morning of the next day he took leave of John
and his disciples, going back to Galilee. He
gave them no word as to when they would again
see him. To John's inquiries about his own
preaching and mission Jesus only said, "My
Father will guide you now and in the future as
he has in the past." And these two great men
separated that morning on the banks of the
Jordan, never again to greet each other in the
flesh.
10.
JOHN JOURNEYS SOUTH
Since Jesus
had gone north into Galilee, John felt led to
retrace his steps southward. Accordingly, on
Sunday morning, March 3, John and the remainder
of his disciples began their journey south.
About one quarter of John's immediate followers
had meantime departed for Galilee in quest of
Jesus. There was a sadness of confusion about
John. He never again preached as he had before
baptizing Jesus. He somehow felt that the
responsibility of the coming kingdom was no
longer on his shoulders. He felt that his work
was almost finished; he was disconsolate and
lonely. But he preached, baptized, and journeyed
on southward.
Near the
village of Adam, John tarried for several weeks,
and it was here that he made the memorable
attack upon Herod Antipas for unlawfully taking
the wife of another man. By June of this year
(A.D. 26) John was back at the Bethany ford of
the Jordan, where he had begun his preaching of
the coming kingdom more than a year previously.
In the weeks following the baptism of Jesus the
character of John's preaching gradually changed
into a proclamation of mercy for the common
people, while he denounced with renewed
vehemence the corrupt political and religious
rulers.
Herod Antipas,
in whose territory John had been preaching,
became alarmed lest he and his disciples should
start a rebellion. Herod also resented John's
public criticisms of his domestic affairs. In
view of all this, Herod decided to put John in
prison. Accordingly, very early in the morning
of June 12, before the multitude arrived to hear
the preaching and witness the baptizing, the
agents of Herod placed John under arrest. As
weeks passed and he was not released, his
disciples scattered over all Palestine, many of
them going into Galilee to join the followers of
Jesus.
11.
JOHN IN PRISON
John had a
lonely and somewhat bitter experience in prison.
Few of his followers were permitted to see him.
He longed to see Jesus but had to be content
Page 1507
with
hearing of his work through those of his
followers who had become believers in the Son of
Man. He was often tempted to doubt Jesus and his
divine mission. If Jesus were the Messiah, why
did he do nothing to deliver him from this
unbearable imprisonment? For more than a year
and a half this rugged man of God's outdoors
languished in that despicable prison. And this
experience was a great test of his faith in, and
loyalty to, Jesus. Indeed, this whole experience
was a great test of John's faith even in God.
Many times was he tempted to doubt even the
genuineness of his own mission and experience.
After he had
been in prison several months, a group of his
disciples came to him and, after reporting
concerning the public activities of Jesus, said:
"So you see, Teacher, that he who was with you
at the upper Jordan prospers and receives all
who come to him. He even feasts with publicans
and sinners. You bore courageous witness to him,
and yet he does nothing to effect your
deliverance." But John answered his friends:
"This man can do nothing unless it has been
given him by his Father in heaven. You well
remember that I said, `I am not the Messiah, but
I am one sent on before to prepare the way for
him.' And that I did. He who has the bride is
the bridegroom, but the friend of the bridegroom
who stands near-by and hears him rejoices
greatly because of the bridegroom's voice. This,
my joy, therefore is fulfilled. He must increase
but I must decrease. I am of this earth and have
declared my message. Jesus of Nazareth comes
down to the earth from heaven and is above us
all. The Son of Man has descended from God, and
the words of God he will declare to you. For the
Father in heaven gives not the spirit by measure
to his own Son. The Father loves his Son and
will presently put all things in the hands of
this Son. He who believes in the Son has eternal
life. And these words which I speak are true and
abiding."
These
disciples were amazed at John's pronouncement,
so much so that they departed in silence. John
was also much agitated, for he perceived that he
had uttered a prophecy. Never again did he
wholly doubt the mission and divinity of Jesus.
But it was a sore disappointment to John that
Jesus sent him no word, that he came not to see
him, and that he exercised none of his great
power to deliver him from prison. But Jesus knew
all about this. He had great love for John, but
being now cognizant of his divine nature and
knowing fully the great things in preparation
for John when he departed from this world and
also knowing that John's work on earth was
finished, he constrained himself not to
interfere in the natural outworking of the great
preacher-prophet's career.
This long
suspense in prison was humanly unbearable. Just
a few days before his death John again sent
trusted messengers to Jesus, inquiring: "Is my
work done? Why do I languish in prison? Are you
truly the Messiah, or shall we look for
another?" And when these two disciples gave this
message to Jesus, the Son of Man replied: "Go
back to John and tell him that I have not
forgotten but to suffer me also this, for it
becomes us to fulfill all righteousness. Tell
John what you have seen and heard--that the poor
have good tidings preached to them--and,
finally, tell the beloved herald of my earth
mission that he shall be abundantly blessed in
the age to come if he finds no occasion to doubt
and stumble over me." And this was the last word
John received from Jesus. This message greatly
comforted him and did much to stabilize his
faith and prepare him for the tragic end of his
life in the flesh which followed so soon upon
the heels of this memorable occasion.
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12.
DEATH OF JOHN THE BAPTIST
As John was
working in southern Perea when arrested, he was
taken immediately to the prison of the fortress
of Machaerus, where he was incarcerated until
his execution. Herod ruled over Perea as well as
Galilee, and he maintained residence at this
time at both Julias and Machaerus in Perea. In
Galilee the official residence had been moved
from Sepphoris to the new capital at Tiberias.
Herod feared
to release John lest he instigate rebellion. He
feared to put him to death lest the multitude
riot in the capital, for thousands of Pereans
believed that John was a holy man, a prophet.
Therefore Herod kept the Nazarite preacher in
prison, not knowing what else to do with him.
Several times John had been before Herod, but
never would he agree either to leave the domains
of Herod or to refrain from all public
activities if he were released. And this new
agitation concerning Jesus of Nazareth, which
was steadily increasing, admonished Herod that
it was no time to turn John loose. Besides, John
was also a victim of the intense and bitter
hatred of Herodias, Herod's unlawful wife.
On numerous
occasions Herod talked with John about the
kingdom of heaven, and while sometimes seriously
impressed with his message, he was afraid to
release him from prison.
Since much
building was still going on at Tiberias, Herod
spent considerable time at his Perean
residences, and he was partial to the fortress
of Machaerus. It was a matter of several years
before all the public buildings and the official
residence at Tiberias were fully completed.
In celebration
of his birthday Herod made a great feast in the
Machaerian palace for his chief officers and
other men high in the councils of the government
of Galilee and Perea. Since Herodias had failed
to bring about John's death by direct appeal to
Herod, she now set herself to the task of having
John put to death by cunning planning.
In the course
of the evening's festivities and entertainment,
Herodias presented her daughter to dance before
the banqueters. Herod was very much pleased with
the damsel's performance and, calling her before
him, said: "You are charming. I am much pleased
with you. Ask me on this my birthday for
whatever you desire, and I will give it to you,
even to the half of my kingdom." And Herod did
all this while well under the influence of his
many wines. The young lady drew aside and
inquired of her mother what she should ask of
Herod. Herodias said, "Go to Herod and ask for
the head of John the Baptist." And the young
woman, returning to the banquet table, said to
Herod, "I request that you forthwith give me the
head of John the Baptist on a platter."
Herod was
filled with fear and sorrow, but because of his
oath and because of all those who sat at meat
with him, he would not deny the request. And
Herod Antipas sent a soldier, commanding him to
bring the head of John. So was John that night
beheaded in the prison, the soldier bringing the
head of the prophet on a platter and presenting
it to the young woman at the rear of the banquet
hall. And the damsel gave the platter to her
mother. When John's disciples heard of this,
they came to the prison for the body of John,
and after laying it in a tomb, they went and
told Jesus.
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