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Our principal sources of information about John
the Baptist are
references to his birth in the first chapter of Luke,
references to his preaching and his martyrdom in the Gospels, with a few references in Acts, and
references in Josephus to his preaching and martyrdom, references which are consistent with the New Testament ones, but sufficiently different in the details to make direct borrowing unlikely.
According to the Jewish historian Josephus (who wrote after 70 Ad), John the
Baptist was a Jewish preacher in the time of Pontius Pilate (Ad 26-36). He
called the people to repentance and to a renewal of their covenant relation
with God. He was imprisoned and eventually put to death by Herod Antipas
(son of Herod the Great, who was king when Jesus was born) for denouncing
Herod's marriage to Herodias, the wife of his still-living brother Philip.
In order to marry Herodias, Herod divorced his first wife, the daughter of
King Aretas of Damascus, who subsequently made war on Herod, a war which,
Josephus tells us, was regarded by devout Jews as a punishment for Herod's
murder of the prophet John.
In the Book of Acts, we find sermons about Jesus which mention His Baptism
by John as the beginning of His public ministry (see Acts 10:37; 11:16;
13:24). We also find accounts (see Acts 18:24; 19:3) of devout men in Greece
who had received the baptism of John, and who gladly received the full
message of the Gospel of Christ when it was told them.
Luke begins his Gospel by describing an aged, devout, childless couple, the
priest Zechariah and his wife Elizabeth. As Zechariah is serving in the
Temple, he sees the angel Gabriel, who tells him that he and his wife will
have a son who will be a great prophet, and will go before the Lord "like
Elijah." (The Jewish tradition had been that Elijah would herald the coming
of the Messiah = Christ = Annointed = Chosen of God.) Zechariah went home,
and his wife conceived. About six months later, Gabriel appeared to the
Virgin Mary, a kinswoman of Elizabeth, and told her that she was about to
bear a son who would be called Son of the Most High, a king whose kingdom
would never end. Thus Elizabeth gave birth to John, and Mary gave birth six
months later to Jesus.
After describing the birth of John, Luke says that he grew, and "was in the
wilderness until the day of his showing to Israel." The people of the Qumran
settlement, which produced the Dead Sea Scrolls, sometime use the term
"living in the wilderness" to refer to residing in their community at Qumran
near the Dead Sea. Accordingly, it has been suggested that John spent some
of his early years being educated at Qumran.
All of the gospels tell us that John preached and baptized beside the Jordan
river, in the wilderness of Judea. He called on his hearers to repent of
their sins, be baptized, amend their lives, and prepare for the coming of
the Kingship of God. He spoke of one greater than himself who was to come
after. Jesus came to be baptized, and John told some of his disciples, "This
is the man I spoke of." After His baptism by John, Jesus began to preach,
and attracted many followers. In fact, many who had been followers of John
left him to follow Jesus. Some of John's followers resented this, but he
told them: "This is as it should be. My mission is to proclaim the Christ.
The groomsman, the bridegroom's friend, who makes the wedding arrangements
for the bridegroom, is not jealous of the bridegroom. No more am I of Jesus.
He must increase, and I must decrease." (John 3:22-30)
John continued to preach, reproving sin and calling on everyone to repent.
King Herod Antipas had divorced his wife and taken Herodias, the wife of his
(still living) brother Philip. John rebuked him for this, and Herod, under
pressure from Herodias, had John arrested, and eventually beheaded. He is
remembered on some calendars on the supposed anniversary of his beheading,
29 August.
When John had been in prison for a while, he sent some of his followers to
Jesus to ask, "Are you he that is to come, or is there another?" (Matthew
11:2-14) One way of understanding the question is as follows: "It was
revealed to me that you are Israel's promised deliverer, and when I heard
this, I rejoiced. I expected you to drive out Herod and the Romans, and
rebuild the kindom of David. But here I sit in prison, and there is no
deliverance in sight? Perhaps I am ahead of schedule, and you are going to
throw out the Romans next year. Perhaps I have misunderstood, and you have a
different mission, and the Romans bit will be done by someone else. Please
let me know what is happening."
Jesus replied by telling the messengers, "Go back to John, and tell him what
you have seen, the miracles of healing and other miracles, and say, 'Blessed
is he who does not lose faith in me.'"
He then told the crowds: "John is a prophet and more than a prophet. He is
the one spoken of in Malachi 3:1, the messenger who comes to prepare the way
of the Lord. No man born of woman is greater than John, but the least in the
Kingdom of God is greater than John."
This has commonly been understood to mean that John represents the climax of
the long tradition of Jewish prophets looking forward to the promised
deliverance, but that the deliverance itself is a greater thing. John is the
climax of the Law. He lives in the wilderness, a life with no frills where
food and clothing are concerned. He has renounced the joys of family life,
and dedicated himself completely to him mission of preaching, of calling
people to an observance of the law, to ordinary standards of virtue. In
terms of natural goodness, no one is better than John. But he represents
Law, not Grace. Among men born of woman, among the once-born, he has no
superior. But anyone who has been born anew in the kingdom of God has
something better than what John symbolizes. (Note that to say that John
symbolizes something short of the Kingdom is not to say that John is himself
excluded from the Kingdom.)
Traditionally, the Birth of Jesus is celebrated on 25 December. That means
that the Birth of John is celebrated six months earlier on 24 June. The
appearance of Gabriel to Mary, being assumed to be nine months before the
birth of Jesus, is celebrated on 25 March and called the Annunciation, and
the appearance of Gabriel to Zechariah in the Temple is celebrated by the
East Orthodox on 23 September. At least for Christians in the Northern
Hamisphere, these dates embody a rich symbolism. (Note: Listmembers living
in Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, southern South America, or
elsewhere in the Southern Hemisphere, press your delete keys Now!) John is
the last voice of the Old Covenant, the close of the Age of Law. Jesus is
the first voice of the New Covenant, the beginning of the Age of Grace.
Accordingly, John is born to an elderly, barren woman, born when it is
really too late for her to be having a child, while Jesus is born to a young
virgin, born when it is really too early for her to be having a child. John
is announced (and conceived) at the autumnal equinox, when the leaves are
dying and falling from the trees. Jesus is announced (and conceived) at the
vernal equinox, when the green buds are bursting forth on the trees and
there are signs of new life everywhere. John is born when the days are
longest, and from his birth on they grow steadily shorter. Jesus is born
when the days are shortest, and from his birth on they grow steadily longer.
John speaks truly when he says of Jesus, "He must increase, but I must
decrease."
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