Magyar Egyház, 2009 (88. évfolyam, 1-4. szám)

2009-07-01 / 3-4. szám

4. oldal MAGYAR EGYHÁZ John the Baptist Luke 3:1-17 John the Baptist is one the central figures whom we meet over and over again in the Scripture texts chosen for use in the Advent liturgy. He stands at the threshold between the Old and New Testaments, a bridge linking the two. In John we see the culmination of centuries of prophecy, anticipation, and preparation. The Baptist appeared out of the desert in the spirit and power of Elijah (see Kings 1:8; Matthew 3:4; Luke 1:17). Elijah had prefigured John as a prophetic figure consumed with zeal for the glory of the Lord. As Jesus himself asserted, ‘“Elijah is indeed coming, and he will restore everything. I assure you, though, that Elijah has already come, but they did not recognize him and they did as they pleased with him. The Son of Man will suffer at their hands in the same way’. The disciples then realized that he had been speaking to them about John the Baptizer” (Matthew 17:11-13). Not only was John foreshadowed in Elijah, but his coming and his role had been foretold by Isaiah and Malachi. John filled Isaiah's prophetic description as he came proclaiming a call to repentance: “1 send my messenger before you to prepare your way; a herald's voice in the desert, crying, ‘Make ready the way of the Lord, clear him a straight path’” (Mark 1:2-3; see Isaiah 40:3). Malachi had summoned Israel to repentance in the days after the exile and rebuilding of the temple and announced a coming day of judgment, the “day of the Lord”, which was to be preceded by a special emissary of God: “Lo, I am sending my messenger to prepare the way before me” (Malachi 3:1). This verse from Malachi was directly applied to John by Jesus as he told the crowds about John: “It is about this man that Scripture says, ‘I send my messenger ahead of you, to prepare the way before you’” (Matthewl 1:10). Jesus continued, verifying that John's testimony was indeed from God: “I solemnly assure you, history has not known a man bom of woman greater than John the Baptizer. Yet the least bom into the kingdom of God is greater than he. From John the Baptizer’s time until now the kingdom of God has suffered violence, and the violent have taken it by force. All the prophets as well as the law spoke prophetically until John. If you are prepared to accept it, he is Elijah, the one who was certain to come” (Matthew 11:11-14). John broke the prophetic silence that had followed Malachi for several hundred years. His message was remarkably like that of the great Old Testament prophets who had so often chided Israel for her sins and tried to waken her to true repentance. But his message went even further: John proclaimed that the good news of the kingdom of God was now at hand and exhorted his hearers to prepare for it by purifying their hearts. Jesus told those who questioned him about John: “What did you go out to the wasteland to see - a reed swaying in the wind?...Someone luxuriously dressed? Remember, those who dress luxuriously are to be found in royal palaces. Why then did you go out - to see a prophet? A prophet indeed and something more!” (Matthew 11:7-9). Dressed in camel’s hair and girded with a leather belt, eating locusts and wild honey, John was no courtier. The hardships of the desert disciplined and strengthened him for his mission. In ancient times messengers ran ahead of a king as he journeyed on the road, announcing his coming and encouraging the people to prepare themselves and their towns to receive the royal visitor. Messengers did not take this role upon themselves, but were appointed to it. So too was John an envoy, a herald chosen and called by God to announce the imminent coming of his Son and the reign of God breaking forth among his people (see Luke 3:1-14). After centuries of waiting, imagine Israel's heightened sense of expectancy! People flocked to the desert to see John and hear what he was preaching. Because John attracted great crowds - Pharisees and Sadducees and common people - his influence was widespread. We have an account from the first-century Jewish historian Josephus: “All the people thronged around him and hung on his every word. Herod was afraid that he would use his hold on men to incite them to rebel. In his eyes they appeared ready to do anything if John but spoke the word.” John made it clear that preparation for the coming of the Messiah demanded conversion of heart and transformation. He exhorted his listeners, “Give some evidence that you mean to reform” (Luke 3:8). It was not enough to stop sinning. The real fruits of repentance must be apparent in the way one lived. John attracted not only curious crowds to hear his preaching but disciples whom he taught to pray (Luke 11:1) and to fast (Luke 5:33) and who took his teaching to heart. In his relationship with his disciples John never lost sight of his mission to point them not to himself but to the one to come. He did not jealously demand their loyalty. Rather, it would seem that he readied them to follow the Messiah whose way he was preparing. John repeatedly and humbly asserted that he himself was not the Messiah (see John 1:19-20), but directed attention to another, saying, “There is one among you whom you do not recognize - the one who is to come after me - the strap of whose sandal I am not worthy to unfasten...After me a man is to come who ranks ahead of me, because he was before me” (John 1:26-27, 30). John was true to his mission as a herald. He never claimed more than God assigned to him or attempted to promote himself. He was willing to fulfill his role as forerunner, and step aside at Jesus’ appearance. “The next day John was there again with two of his disciples. As he watched Jesus walk by he said, ‘Look! There is the Lamb of God.’ The two disciples heard what he said, and followed Jesus. When Jesus turned around and noticed them following him, he asked them, ‘What are you looking for?’ they said to him, ‘Rabbi, where do you stay?’ ‘Come and see,’ he answered. So they went to see where he was lodged, and stayed with him that day... One of the two who had followed him after hearing John was Simon Peter’s brother Andrew. The first thing he did was seek out his brother Simon and tell him, ‘We have found the Messiah’ (John 1:35-41). In John's disciples we see men who were attuned to the teaching of their master. When John stated that he had recognized in Jesus the one he was waiting for (John 1:29, 32, 34), John’s disciples were disposed to seek out Jesus. John’s humility and genuine readiness to step off center stage is clear in his final

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