Isaiah 40:1-31 · Comfort for God’s People
John the Baptizer
Isaiah 40:1-31, Luke 1:67-80, John 1:19-28
Sermon
by Warren Thomas Smith
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Any great event requires preparation. Significant movements do not merely appear. There must be necessary groundwork, anticipation. The Bible sublimely illustrates the way God raised up heralds who announced the coming ministry and message of Christ. Chief among them is John the Baptizer.

We seldom associate John with the birth of Jesus. This is understandable. He was but an infant himself at the time Mary and Joseph journeyed to Bethlehem. Yet, he is so much a part of the announcement and the expectation of Christ, that in a real way he belongs not only to the birth narrative but the full gospel story. John is forerunner of the Savior - and more.

THE HERALD

John’s aged parents, Zechariah and Elizabeth, had long ago abandoned hope of having children. Suddenly the miracle occurred. As the old priest was serving in the Temple at the hour of incense, the angel Gabriel announced,

It will be joy and gladness for you, and many will rejoice over his birth ... he will go in front of him with the spirit and power of Elijah ... to make a people ready and prepared for the Lord.

Because he reacted in honest disbelief, Zechariah was struck dumb.

When Elizabeth realized she was pregnant, she radiantly exclaimed, "The Lord has done this for me." She shared the joyful news with her cousin Mary who had just arrived for a happy visit. "Why, as soon as the sound of your salutation reached my ears, the babe leapt for joy within my womb." It was the sign of life, first stirring of the unborn child.

John was probably born at Hebron, some six months prior to the birth of Jesus. Naturally the neighbors and kinspeople assumed the child would be named Zechariah, for his father. Both parents, however, insisted he bear the name John, for God had so designated to them. "None of your family is called by that name," pleaded the puzzled relatives. Immediately all speculated, "Whatever will this child become?" Zechariah’s speech surprisingly returned, and he gave his fatherly and prophetic blessing. His Benedictus looked to the years ahead; this was to be John’s mission:

... to bring his people knowledge of salvation through the remission of their sins thanks to the tender mercy of our God, who will cause the Dawn to visit us from on high to shine on those who sit in darkness and in the shadow of death to guide our steps into the way of peace. (Luke 1:77-79)

John’s rise was meteoric. Firm in the Nazarite vow that he should taste neither wine nor strong drink, and heavily influenced by Essene training, he appeared dramatically, wearing camel’s hair with a leather girdle, eating locusts and wild honey. He had spent time in the wilderness of Judaea - the area around the eastern shore of the Dead Sea. He was a forbidding figure, burned by the fierce Middle East sun, gaunt with piercing eyes and resonant voice. Exuding a remarkable charismatic mystique, he captivated, even mesmerized his hearers. Filled with the Holy Spirit from the time of his birth, he strode up and down the Jordan valley urgently calling a nation to repent. He made it clear to all who responded, "I am baptizing with water, but my successor is among you. One whom you do not recognize, and I am not fit to untie the string of his sandal." (John 1:26-27)

In due time the successor appeared, and John was the first to recognize him, "Look, there is the Lamb of God, who is to remove the sin of the world!" His was the reluctant honor of administering baptism to Jesus, "I need to be baptized by you." To which his cousin Jesus replied reassuringly, "Come now, this is how we should fulfill our duty to God."

John’s brief public ministry moved from crisis to crisis. We can see him as the divinely-called catalyst who made stringent ethical demands, stipulating repentance and righteousness, bluntly warning Pharisees and Saducees, "You brood of vipers, who told you to flee from the coming Wrath?" (Matthew 3:7) He turned on soldiers, the multitude, taxgatherers, with equal candor. No one was spared the strict, moral earnestness of his evangelizing. Few preachers in the history of the church have demonstrated such power and rough, innate eloquence.

When Herod Antipas abducted Herodias - wife of his half-brother Philip - John denounced their flagrant adultery. Josephus describes the cruel result: John’s imprisonment at Machaerus. During those torturous days in a frightful cell came periods of deep depression accompanied by agonizing soul-searching. He asked himself the brooding questions, the why of it all. Was it really worth it? Had it been a mistake? Hence the query to Jesus, "Are you the Coming One? Or are we to look out for someone else?" John the Baptizer was intensely human. He knew heights and depths, victory and defeat, spiritual exaltation and lonely despair.

The macabre end came amid a tragic carnival. Herodias contrived a scene of debauchery whereby she could demand John’s execution. Herod Antipas was aghast at the thought of John’s death, but "Herodias had a grudge ... she wanted him killed ..." So on the ruler’s birthday a drunken orgy was arranged and Salome danced. "Ask anything you like and I will give you it," promised the besotted degenerate. Prompted by her scheming mother, the girl responded, "I want you to give me this very moment ..." John the Baptizer’s head.

How unfair that one so young should die. His mission was seemingly unfulfilled. But is this not part of preparing the way? John was denied a role in Nativity just as he was not present at Easter. Yet he played a part in both, indirectly, from the wings rather than center stage. John is one, who, having fulfilled his concise, dynamic, and dramatic role, is seen no more. But he is forever talked about, his memory vivid and his name real: "... for the people all held that John had been really a prophet." (Mark 11:32) Jesus boldly asked the multitude, "Come, why did you go out? To see a prophet? Yes, I tell you, and far more than a prophet." (Matthew 11:9) John depicts the rugged prophetic tradition at its best.

John is symbol of so much in life, and of so many lives. He portrays those destined to render a particular service, meet a responsibility, then make a departure. Often, it is a short-lived - but essential - glory. Our Christian heritage is immeasurably richer because John lived. His strength becomes ours. His transparent honesty gives us new resolution, courage, and conviction. His faith provides an example for us during fearful and uncertain hours. Because he lived, the Christian life takes on added moral tone, and there is a hardy radiance in stormy, unrestrained forth telling of the gospel. It is not easy, when one is popular, to say, "He must increase, but I must decrease." (John 3:30 RSV) But sometimes it is necessary. John had enough raw courage to do it. Not all of us are granted center stage; we do not all have the spotlight. Frequently, some must step aside, give up the spotlight, make room for another. As a result we may not even be on stage when the great moment comes. Our lot in life may be that of preparing the way.

Let us employ the celebration of Christmas as an example of what John means. Is Christmas Day not made all the more beautiful by those who have contributed, yet are not present? We think of family and friends we have loved and lost for a while. We remember parents who are now gone, but with us in spirit. We call to mind people who have taught, guided, helped, and loved us; they have made our lives rich and blessed. Frequently they are not with us, but because they have lived, we experience greater joy, and there is high intent in living.

Jesus summed up John’s contribution, "I tell you truly, no one has arisen among the sons of women who is greater than John ..." Amazing commendation, yet "... the least in the Realm of heaven is greater than he is." Eminent as he is, John is not as fortunate as the humblest soul who has accepted Jesus Christ as Lord. Ours is the sacred privilege of coming along that way - the way to Christ - made plain because John the Baptizer lived.

A voice crying in the wilderness:
"Make His paths straight;"
Eyes that searched souls
And found their Savior;
A high heart undismayed
By Pharisees
Or despots;
A speechless head upon a salver -
This is the stuff martyrs are made of;
This was the pioneer,
Who hewed a way through the wilderness
For One
The latchet of Whose shoes
He thought himself unworthy to unloose
.1


1. "John the Baptist" by Earl Bowman Marlatt in Chapel Windows (Boston: 1924).

CSS Publishing Co., Inc., And The Play Goes On, by Warren Thomas Smith