John 1:19-28 · John the Baptist Denies Being the Christ
The Greatness Of John The Baptist
John 1:19-28
Sermon
by King Duncan
Loading...

Probably you or I would not have been drawn to the preaching of John the Baptist. A man clothed in camel's hair and wild animal's skins and subsisting on a diet of locusts and wild honey out in the wilderness would not seem to have much to say about the way we live our lives. His appearance was eccentric. His preaching was dreadfully morbid "all about sin and repentance" calling people snakes and warning them of the wrath that was to come. We like our sins treated more gently. Preferably we would like them mentioned not at all.

Two things may surprise us. One is how popular John the Baptist was in his own time. The other is his prominence in the drama of the first Christmas.

As to his popularity, Mark tells us, "all the people of the Judaean countryside and everyone in Jerusalem went out to him in the desert and received his baptism in the river Jordan, publicly confessing their sins." (1) That was some revival! Can you imagine every single person in a large metropolitan area and in all the surrounding counties repenting of their sins and being baptized in a river? Among those who came to be baptized was a young carpenter, a cousin of John the Baptist, named Jesus of Nazareth. But we are getting ahead of our story. Today, we want to know about John's prominence in the story of the first Christmas.

Luke begins his version of the Christmas story not with Mary and Joseph but with a couple named Zacharias and Elizabeth. Zacharias was a priest. He and Elizabeth were deeply religious people who did their best to keep all of God's commandments. They were also childless, much to their sorrow.

One day, while Zacharias was going about his priestly functions in the temple, he was startled by the appearance of an angel. It was Gabriel. "Do not be afraid, Zacharias," said Gabriel. "Your prayers have been heard. Elizabeth your wife will bear you a son, and you are to call him John."

Zacharias was nearly knocked off his feet. "How can I know that this is true?" he asked. "I am an old man myself and my wife is getting on in years."

"I am Gabriel," the angel answered. "I stand in the presence of God, and I have been sent to tell you this good news." As a sign to Zacharias that this message was true, he was literally "struck speechless," which is how you or I would probably be under similar circumstances.

When the new infant was born, there was much joy in the home of Zacharias and Elizabeth. On the eighth day they took him to be circumcised. It was the custom to give the child its name at this rite of circumcision. Family and friends thought that the infant boy would be named Zacharias after his father. But Elizabeth spoke up and said, "Oh, no! His name is John."

"But none of your relations is called John," they replied. And they made signs to the poor mute Zacharias to see what name he wanted the child to have.

Zacharias beckoned for a writing tablet and wrote the words: "His name is John." At this moment Zacharias' speech was restored and his first words were to thank God. The neighbors were awe-struck, and news of these events spread throughout Judea. People asked, "What is this child's future going to be?" For as Luke says "the Lord's blessing was plainly upon him."

Six months after Gabriel had given the joyous news to Zacharias that he would father a son, Gabriel also appeared to a young woman in Nazareth named Mary. Gabriel's message to Mary was that she too would bear a son, but not just any son. He would be the Son of the Most High and his name would be Jesus.

Mary was a cousin of Elizabeth. They must have been very close, for Mary spent three months of her pregnancy living with Zacharias and Elizabeth. Indeed, Elizabeth was the first person in the Scriptures to declare that Jesus is Lord. You will find the story in the first chapter of Luke.

As you are aware, we know very little about Jesus' childhood. However, in view of Mary and Elizabeth's relationship, can we not speculate that young John and his six-month younger cousin Jesus spent a great deal of time together? Perhaps they played together and fished together and did all the things young boys and young men like to do. Might this not explain the kind of man John the Baptist became? He was in intimate contact with Jesus. Cousins can certainly have that kind of influence on each other. Might this also not explain John the Baptist's reaction when he saw Jesus come out with the others to be baptized? Matthew tells us that John was reluctant to baptize his younger cousin.. "I need you to baptize me," John protested. This says something special to me about Jesus' character as a youth and young adult.

The Jewish historian Josephus tells us that John the Baptist's ministry was a stunning success. Untold numbers of people from all over the area came to be baptized by him in the river Jordan. Many of those who were baptized became his disciples. They studied with John and sought to follow him as others later were to follow Jesus. Indeed, two of Jesus' most prominent disciples, Andrew and John, were originally followers of John the Baptist. You will remember that one of the most gifted and influential preachers mentioned in the book of Acts was a man named Apollos, who, according to Acts 18: 25, was baptized as a disciple of John.

YET, CONSIDER THE HUMILITY OF THIS MAN JOHN.

"Somewhere among you," he said, "stands a man you do not know. He comes after me, it is true, but I am not fit to undo his shoes!"

Two hundred years ago there was another man named John, a preacher of extraordinary power and influence in England and America. We know John Wesley as the founder of the Methodists. Surprisingly, however, Wesley was not the most popular preacher of his day. A man named George Whitefield preached to far more people than Wesley, baptized many more into the Kingdom of God and was a favorite of such prominent Americans as Benjamin Franklin.

Whitefield and Wesley were the best of friends until they had a severe falling out over Whitefield's strict adherence to Calvinist doctrine. Whitefield was asked following this falling out, "Do you expect that you will see John Wesley in heaven?"

"No," answered Whitefield.

"That's what I thought you would say," his questioner replied.

"But you don't know what I mean," said Whitefield. "Wesley will be so far up there near the great Throne, I will never see him."

Such an answer takes a certain kind of divine humility.

John the Baptist, in spite of his own popularity, sought to direct attention not to himself but to Jesus. That kind of humility is a rare commodity.

People magazine reported many years ago about a $22,000 painting, a billboard, really, standing in downtown Hollywood where thousands of cars passed it each day. It was a painting of an infamous young woman named Angelyne. Why was Angelyne on a billboard? Because she wanted to be famous. For what? The answer is, for nothing. She is, one interviewer writes, "untalented by her own admission." Angelyne really didn't do anything. She just wanted people to notice her. "I'm the first person in the history of this town to become famous for doing nothing," she said. "I can feel myself getting more and more famous every day."

John the Baptist's life looms large in contrast. His goal was not to draw attention to himself. His greatest desire was to glorify Jesus. Leonard Bernstein once said that the hardest instrument to play is second fiddle. John willingly took on the part of second fiddle. John was a humble man.

HE WAS ALSO A MAN OF ENORMOUS COURAGE. The ending to John's life was tragic. He offended the royal family of his day by confronting them with their sins and he was beheaded. John the Baptist was a preacher of righteousness and he would not betray his convictions. The world has always been made better by men and women of such character.

Millions of Christians have been inspired by the life and death of Dietrich Bonhoeffer, a German pastor and theologian who was killed during World War II.

Bonhoeffer was as outspoken concerning the sins of Adolf Hitler as John the Baptist was about the sins of Herod. Friends in the United States and England, knowing the probable consequences of opposing Hitler, arranged for Bonhoeffer to leave Germany. After a few months, however, Bonhoeffer knew he must return to his homeland. There he preached ever more strongly against what was happening to his people. Needless to say, he aroused great opposition. Soon he was forced to go underground. Later he was imprisoned. There he was executed.

Out of his struggles he wrote a monumental work, THE COST OF DISCIPLESHIP. It stands as an eternal judgment of those who want Christ but do not want to bear a cross. John the Baptist understood the cost of discipleship. He knew what it was to sacrifice everything in answer to God's call.

HE WAS DETERMINED TO BEAR WITNESS TO THE LIGHT. On the banks of the Jordan he proclaimed that the Kingdom of God was at hand. When he saw Jesus he declared, "Behold the Lamb of God."

Many years ago a pastor in Glasgow, Scotland named George McLeod chanced to look up at the stained-glass windows over the chancel of the sanctuary. The phrase, "Glory to God in the highest" was carved in the glass. As he looked he noticed that a pane of glass was broken and missing, the pane on which the letter "e" in the word "highest" was carved. Suddenly he found himself seeing the words that were now there, "Glory to God in the High St." High Street was a nearby avenue. It struck McLeod that the only way to glorify God IS to glorify him in the High St. (2) The only way to truly glorify God is to glorify him where we live, work and play. Certainly John did that. He did it in his preaching. He did it in his life.

Somewhere I heard about identical twin brothers who lived in the same town “one was a physician and the other was a pastor. One Monday morning, the doctor ran into someone who said, "That was a marvelous sermon you preached last Sunday." "Oh, no," the doctor protested, "you've got the wrong man. That was my brother. He preaches and I practice." (3) There is a lot of that. John the Baptist preached but he also practiced and his influence has been felt ever since.

As you celebrate this Christmas season, as you think about the shepherds and the wise men and the star and Mary and Joseph and all the rest of the important figures and events of that first Christmas, remember another small child six months of age born to a deeply devout couple named Zacharias and Elizabeth. He was not the Messiah. He simply bore witness to the Messiah. No star shone over the house where he lay. Only a mute old man beamed down at him with pride and great joy. It was the joy of one who had lived to see the promises of God fulfilled. It was clear at John's birth, according to Luke, that the Lord's blessing was upon him, and it was. He grew into a man of humility, courage and determination who proclaimed the coming of the Lord. Jesus himself composed John's epitaph when he said on one occasion, "No greater man has ever been born than John."

There is the path to greatness “a path that you and I would do well to follow. Humility. Courage. And a commitment to bear witness to the light of God.


1. Scriptural quotations in this sermon are taken from THE NEW TESTAMENT IN MODERN ENGLISH, Translated by J. B. Phillips (New York: The MacMillan Co., 1960).

2. Robert Raines, THE SECULAR CONGREGATION.

Dynamic Preaching, Collected Sermons, by King Duncan