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| Of What John Learned from Jesus When Mary Visited Elisabeth in the Hill Country. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
30. Of What John
Learned from Jesus When Mary Visited Elisabeth in the Hill
Country.
“The next day John seeth Jesus coming unto
him.”4948 The mother of
Jesus had formerly, as soon as she conceived, stayed with the mother of
John, also at that time with child, and the Former then communicated to
the Formed with some exactness His own image, and caused him to be
conformed to His glory. And from this outward similarity it came
that with those who did not distinguish between the image itself and
that which was according to the image, John was thought to be
Christ4949 and Jesus was
supposed4950 to be John risen
from the dead. So now Jesus, after the testimonies of John to Him
which we have examined, is Himself seen by the Baptist coming to
him. It is to be noticed that on the former occasion, when the
voice of Mary’s salutation came to the ears of Elisabeth, the
babe John leaped in the womb of his mother, who then received the Holy
Spirit, as it were, from the ground. For it came to pass, we
read,4951 “when Elisabeth heard the salutation
of Mary, the babe leaped in her womb; and Elisabeth was filled with the
Holy Spirit, and she lifted up her voice with a loud cry and
said,” etc. On this occasion, similarly, John sees Jesus
coming to him and says, “Behold the Lamb of God which taketh away
the sin of the world.” For with regard to matters of great
moment one is first instructed by hearing and afterwards one sees them
with one’s own eyes. That John was helped to the shape he
was to wear by the Lord who, still in the process of formation and in
His mother’s womb, approached Elisabeth, will be clear to any one
who has grasped our proof that John is a voice but that Jesus is the
Word, for when Elisabeth was filled with the Holy Spirit at the
salutation of Mary there was a great voice in her, as the words
themselves bear; for they say, “And she spake out with a loud
voice.” Elisabeth, it is plain, did this, “and she
spake.” For the voice of Mary’s salutation coming to
the ears of Elisabeth filled John with itself; hence John leaps, and
his mother becomes, as it were, the mouth of her son and a prophetess,
crying out with a loud voice and saying, “Blessed art thou among
women, and blessed is the fruit of thy womb.” Now we see
clearly how it was with Mary’s hasty journey to the hill country,
and her entrance into the house of Zacharias, and the greeting with
which she salutes Elisabeth; it was that she might communicate some of
the power she derived from Him she had conceived, to John, yet in his
mother’s womb, and that John too might communicate to his mother
some of the prophetic grace which had come to him, that all these
things were done. And most rightly was it in the hill country
that these transactions took place, since no great thing can be
entertained by those who are low and may be thence called
valleys. Here, then, after the testimonies of John,—the
first, when he cried and spoke about His deity; the second, addressed
to the priests and levites who were sent by the Jews from Jerusalem;
and the third, in answer to the sharper questions of those from the
Pharisees,—Jesus is seen by the witness-bearer coming to him
while he is still advancing and growing better. This advance and
improvement is symbolically indicated in the phrase, “On the
morrow.” For Jesus came in the consequent illumination, as
it were, and on the day after what had preceded, not only known as
standing in the midst even of those who knew Him not, but now plainly
seen advancing to him who had formerly made such declarations about
Him. On the first day the testimonies take place, and on the
second Jesus comes to John. On the third John, standing with two
of his disciples and looking upon Jesus as He walked, said,
“Behold the Lamb of God,” thus urging those who were there
to follow the Son of God. On the fourth day, too, He was minded
to go forth into Galilee, and He who came forth to seek that which was
lost finds Philip and says to him, “Follow Me.” And
on that day, after the fourth, which is the sixth from the beginning of
those we have enumerated, the marriage takes place in Cana of Galilee,
which we shall have to consider when we get to the passage. Note
this, too, that Mary being the greater comes to Elisabeth, who is the
less, and the Son of God comes to the Baptist; which should encourage
us to render help without delay to those who are in a lower position,
and to cultivate for ourselves a moderate station.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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