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| How the Baptist Answers the Question of the Pharisees and Exalts the Nature of Christ. Of the Shoe-Latchet Which He is Unable to Untie. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
15. How the Baptist Answers the Question of the Pharisees
and Exalts the Nature of Christ. Of the Shoe-Latchet Which He is
Unable to Untie.
John4906 answered them,
saying, “I baptize with water, but in the midst of you standeth
one whom ye know not, even He who cometh after me, the latchet of whose
shoe I am not worthy to unloose.” Heracleon considers that
John’s answers to those sent by the Pharisees refer not to what
they asked, but to what he wished, not observing that he accuses the
prophet of a want of manners, by making him, when asked about one
thing, answer about another; for this is a fault to be guarded against
in conversation. We assert, on the contrary, that the reply
accurately takes up the question. It is asked, “Why
baptizest thou then, if thou art not the Christ?” And what
other answer could be given to this than to show that his baptism was
in its nature a bodily thing? I, he says, “baptize with
water;” this is his answer to, “Why baptizest
thou.” And to the second part of their question, “If
thou art not the Christ,” he answers by exalting the superior nature of Christ, that He has such
virtue as to be invisible in His deity, though present to every man and
extending over the whole universe. This is what is indicated in
the words, “There standeth one among you.” The
Pharisees, moreover, though expecting the advent of Christ, saw nothing
in Him of such a nature as John speaks of; they believed Him to be
simply a perfect and holy man. John, therefore, rebukes their
ignorance of His superiority, and adds to the words, “There
standeth one among you,” the clause, “whom ye know
not.” And, lest any one should suppose the invisible One
who extends to every man, or, indeed, to the whole world, to be a
different person from Him who became man, and appeared upon the earth
and conversed with men, he adds to the words, “There standeth one
among you whom you know not,” the further words, “Who
cometh after me,” that is, He who is to be manifested after
me. By whose surpassing excellence he well understood that his
own nature was far surpassed, though some doubted whether he might be
the Christ; and, therefore, desiring to show how far he is from
attaining to the greatness of the Christ, that no one should think of
him beyond what he sees or hears of him, he goes on: “The
latchet of whose shoe I am not worthy to unloose.” By which
he conveys, as in a riddle, that he is not fit to solve and to explain
the argument about Christ’s assuming a human body, an argument
tied up and hidden (like a shoe-tie) to those who do not understand
it,—so as to say anything worthy of such an advent, compressed,
as it was, into so short a space.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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