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| Messianic Discussion with John the Baptist. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
6. Messianic
Discussion with John the Baptist.
Then the Jews sent priests and levites from Jerusalem to
ask him, Who art thou? And he confessed and denied not; and he
confessed, I am not the Christ.4837 What
legates should have been sent from the Jews to John, and where should
they have been sent from? Should they not have been men held to
stand by the election of God above their fellows, and should they not
have come from that place which was chosen out of the whole of the
earth, though it is all called good, from Jerusalem where was the
temple of God? With such honour, then, do they enquire of
John. In the case of Christ nothing of this sort is reported to
have been done by the Jews; but what the Jews do to John, John does to
Christ, sending his own disciples to ask him,4838
“Art thou He that should come, or do we look for
another?” John confesses to those sent to him, and denies
not, and he afterwards declares, “I am the voice of one crying in
the wilderness;” but Christ, as having a greater testimony than
John the Baptist, makes His answer by words and deeds, saying,
“Go and tell John those things which ye do hear and see; the blind receive their sight,
and the lame walk, the lepers are cleansed and the deaf hear, and the
poor have the Gospel preached to them.” On this passage I
shall, if God permit, enlarge in its proper place. Here, however,
it might be asked reasonably enough why John gives such an answer to
the question put to him. The priests and levites do not ask him,
“Art thou the Christ?” but “Who art thou?” and
the Baptist’s reply to this question should have been, “I
am the voice of one crying in the wilderness.” The proper
reply to the question, “Art thou the Christ?” is, “I
am not the Christ;” and to the question, “Who art
thou?”—“The voice of one crying in the
wilderness.” To this we may say that he probably discerned
in the question of the priests and levites a cautious reverence, which
led them to hint the idea in their minds that he who was baptizing
might be the Christ, but withheld them from openly saying so, which
might have been presumptuous. He quite naturally, therefore,
proceeds in the first place to remove any false impressions they might
have taken up about him, and declares publicly the true state of the
matter, “I am not the Christ.” Their second question,
and also their third, show that they had conceived some such surmise
about him. They supposed that he might be that second in honour
to whom their hopes pointed, namely, Elijah, who held with them the
next position after Christ; and so when John had answered, “I am
not the Christ,” they asked, “What then? Art thou
Elijah?” And he said, “I am not.” They
wish to know, in the third place, if he is the prophet, and on his
answer, “No,” they have no longer any name to give the
personage whose advent they expected, and they say, “Who art
thou, then, that we may give an answer to them that sent us. What
sayest thou of thyself?” Their meaning is: “You
are not, you say, any of those personages whose advent Israel hopes and
expects, and who you are, to baptize as you do, we do not know; tell
us, therefore, so that we may report to those who sent us to get light
upon this point.” We add, as it has some bearing on the
context, that the people were moved by the thought that the period of
Christ’s advent was near. It was in a manner imminent in
the years from the birth of Jesus and a little before, down to the
publication of the preaching. Hence it was, in all likelihood,
that as the scribes and lawyers had deduced the time from Holy
Scripture and were expecting the Coming One, the idea was taken up by
Theudas, who came forward as the Messiah and brought together a
considerable multitude, and after him by the famous Judas of Galilee in
the days of the taxing.4839 Thus the
coming of the Messiah was more warmly expected and discussed, and it
was natural enough for the Jews to send priests and levites from
Jerusalem to John, to ask him, “Who art thou?” and learn if
he professed to be the Christ.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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