Luke 3:1-20 · John the Baptist Prepares the Way
COMMAND TO SHARE
Luke 3:1-20
Sermon
by Ewart E. Turner
Loading...

There were giants in those days: Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, Moses, David, Isaiah, Jeremiah, Amos, Hosea. Which one of these did Jesus nominate to be the greatest born of women? Not one. In stead he singled out a hairy, harassed desert preacher - John the Baptizer.

Why?

The clue is found in the fragment of the Baptizer’s teaching which Luke preserved for posterity. It revealed John as the pioneer of sharing.

Not only was this John preaching a God of revolutionary morality, based on sharing with the needy, but John had sensed a swiftly oncoming act of God for the redemption of his people. Messiah, God’s anointed one, was at hand. Not the longed-for national conquering hero, but one who came via a lowly manger to minister to the lost and needy.

When the Imprisoned Baptizer, surrounded by biased and malignant reporters of Jesus’ initial activities, sent to ask his cousin for his Messianic credentials, Jesus instructed those courageous couriers to report exactly what they were seeing with their eyes: help and healing were being extended to the needy and the poor were having good news preached to them,

We would like to think that John went to his beheading comforted and confirmed in the thought that indeed Messiah had come. He had not been mistaken. "He who has food, let him share with him who has none" that is exactly the way God would talk, thought John. That would be an authentic credential of the looked-for Messiah. He would meet people at the center of their urgent needs. "Give us this day our daily bread." That is not a prayer interjected arbitrarily into more important inspirational ethereal, and heavenly themes. God is here where people live and gasp for survival. Their pain is his. Their pangs of hunger increase his suffering.

A man was starving in Capri;

He moved his eyes and looked at me;

I felt his gaze, I heard his moan,

And knew his hunger as my own.

God’s Messiah would be sensitive "to the least of these," even to the fallen sparrow.

Worship Is a Beginning

The Bible and the hymnals are full of praise to God. "Sing to him, sing praises to him, tell of all his wonderful works" (Psalms 105:2). But in the Bible it doesn’t stop there. Worship of God is a beginning. The Christian life flows from worship into service and sharing. One Sunday in a church in Syracuse a couple arrived just after the benediction. The time change was their downfall. "Oh dear, the service is over," the wife said. One of our ushers thought fast and replied, "Oh no, the service now just begins." He was right. We leave God’s house to go out and serve God’s children wherever there is human need.

It was the risen Lord who said, "Feed my sheep." Chanting and antiphonals were pleasing to the Master and his disciples as they echoed through the Temple. But this was not all that the gospel brought from God. They were to learn the meaning of the Christian life from one who came not to be ministered unto but to minister, who became a servant (actually ‘slave’ in the original). He taught his disciples that when they give even a cup of cold water in his name, when they clothe the naked, or give bread to the hungry, "as you did it to one of the least of these my brethren, you did it to me" (Matthew 25:40).

Some congregations advertize that they are "full-gospel" churches. Yet they omit Christian service as a part of the biblical witness; for them it bears a forbidding label - it is "social gospel," not commended or commanded in the Bible. They accuse others of trying to be saved by "works." They refuse to cooperate with other Christians in joint community projects or ecumenical worship.

Sharing Brings Right Relations

Not so for the Messiah proclaimed by John the Baptizer. He called for "fruits," - deeds and actions in the daily round that are the results of being spiritually minded. Sharing is a chief sign of being in right relations with God and in right relations with your brother. "He who has two coats, let him share with him who has none; and he who has food, let him do likewise" (Luke 3:11).

A fearless preacher, surrounded by a pious world of legalism, ritual, and racial pride - a fearless preacher who defines the heart of religion as "bearing fruits that befit repentence" - such a preacher is more than just a prophet. He is a long hoped-for emergent in the long history of man’s search for God. He is the pioneer in understanding what kind of character God wants in his followers, what the true requirements of obedience are, and most of all, what are the ethical contents of faith.

John the Baptizer only hinted at the religious revolution soon to be ushered in by the imminent Messiah. It would tell the tax collectors not to extort if they wanted right relations with God. It would command the soldier to treat the civilian as a brother; no violence to obtain favors. But the Baptizer caught the scent of enough for Jesus to call him the greatest born of woman up to that time, and for Jesus to see in him the fulfillment of the words of Malachi (3:1), "Behold, I send my messenger to prepare the way before me."

The Baptizer not only sensed the true nature of true religion. He also sensed that in Jesus of Nazareth this message was incarnate. This new insight into the character and purpose of God was like precious new wine that was not to be poured into old and leaky wineskins. He will be baptized with fire and the chaff of formalized and heartless religion "he will burn with unquenchable fire" (Luke 3:17).

The foregleam of the message and the imminence of the Messiah - those announcements by John carved his greatness in history.

Wait, there is more to come. This great third chapter of Luke and Matthew 11 take us from shock to shock, in chain reaction. "Yet he who is least in the Kingdom of heaven in greater than John the Baptizer," were the words of Jesus. Why? Because John only saw the Kingdom from afar. The disciples heard its full message from the lips of Jesus and experienced in their own lives the power of the Resurrection and the indwelling of the Holy Spirit.

Sharing Interpreted

What this means for our modern witness as Christians we can see in the activity of the Holy Spirit in today’s life-and-death warfare of humanity against the pale horse of the Apocalypse who can kill with famine. Look how the conscience of the world has been galvanized into action to alleviate hunger and the causes of hunger in our generation. No comparable humanitarian uprising is known to history. For example, Roman Catholics in the United States alone have recently raised $5 million for relieving starvation. Families had meatless meals or omitted a meal one day a week. The Division of Church and Society of the West Ohio Conference of the United Methodist Church voted to donate one-half its annual budget to world hunger. Its members drive the long distances to meetings without receiving mileage. They bring sack lunches.

In one year the giving to the United Methodist Committee on Relief has increased by 224%, from $1,418,302 to $4,602,656. Nearly every denomination has similar achievements.

You cannot help but believe In the miraculous working of the Holy Spirit when the rise and expansion of the organization "Bread for the World" is considered. Immediately after the war the Evangelical Church in Germany, though its churches and cities were in ruins, started collections for the starving victims in the countries overrun and devastated by the Nazi hordes. Congregations brought their sacrificial offerings and placed them in the drums (Tonnen, in German) which had brought powdered milk from America under the Herbert Hoover relief action which saved thousands of German babies. "Bread for the World" is now international and interdenominational. It has an office in New York. In Germany this year, in spite of inflation and recession, $19 million has been raised for the starving in the developing nations.

The Blessed Violent

John the Baptizer was accused by the religious leaders of his day of doing violence to established ecclesiastical practice. For instance, he shifted the chief requirements from legal observances to moral fruits. He required his followers to repent of their sins and do deeds of love and mercy to the needy. He declared that the evidence of right relations with God would be sharing bread with the hungry. "He who has food, let him share with him who has none." This was a violent departure from the requirements posted by the establishment, It was a revaluation of all values. It was revolutionary. It gained the fatal hatred of those in high places. John was in prison awaiting execution. Jesus heard the accusations that John was doing violence to the calcified religion of the day. With loving pride the Master commented, "Yes, indeed. From the days of John the Baptist until now, the Kingdom of heaven suffereth violence (according to the endangered hierarchy) and men of violence (John and his militant followers) take it by storm."

Quotation from Renascence. By Edna St. Vincent Millay; Harper & Brothers, New York, 1917. Page 5.

CSS Publishing Co., Inc., Feed My Sheep, by Ewart E. Turner