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20. Different
Conceptions of John the Baptist.
“At that season Herod the tetrarch heard the
report concerning Jesus and said unto his own servants, This is John
the Baptist.”5299 In
Mark5300 it is the same, and also in Luke.5301 The Jews had different opinions, some
false, such as the Sadducees held about the resurrection of the dead,
that they do not rise, and in regard to angels that they do not exist,
but that those things which were written about them were only to be
interpreted figuratively, but had no reality in point of fact; and some
true opinions, such as were taught by the Pharisees about the
resurrection of the dead that they rise. We must therefore here
inquire, whether the opinion regarding the soul, mistakenly held by
Herod and some from among the people, was somewhat like this—that
John, who a little before had been slain by him, had risen from the
dead after he had been beheaded, and was the same person under a
different name, and being now called Jesus was possessed of the same
powers which formerly wrought in John. For what credibility is
there in the idea that One, who was so widely known to the whole
people, and whose name was noised abroad in the whole of Judæa,
whom they declared to be the son of the carpenter and Mary, and to have
such and such for brothers and sisters, was thought to be not different
from5302
5302 Or, none other
than. | John whose father was Zacharias, and whose
mother was Elisabeth, who were themselves not undistinguished among the
people? But it is probable that the fact of his being the Son of
Zacharias was not unknown to the people, who thought with regard to
John that he was truly a prophet, and were so numerous that the
Pharisees, in order to avoid the appearance of saying that which was
displeasing to the people, were afraid to answer the question,
“Was his baptism from heaven or from men?”5303 And perhaps, also, to some of them had
come the knowledge of the incident of the vision which was seen in the
temple, when Gabriel appeared to Zacharias. What credibility,
forsooth, has the erroneous opinion, whether of Herod or of some of the
people, that John and Jesus were not two persons, but that it was one
and the same person John who rose from the dead after that he had been
beheaded and was called Jesus? Some one might say, however, that
Herod and some of those of the people held the false dogma of the
transmigration of souls into bodies, in consequence of which they
thought that the former John had appeared again by a fresh birth, and
had come from the dead into life as Jesus. But the time between
the birth of John and the birth of Jesus, which was not more than six
months, does not permit this false opinion to be considered
credible. And perhaps rather some such idea as this was in the
mind of Herod, that the powers which wrought in John had passed over to
Jesus, in consequence of which He was thought by the people to be John
the Baptist. And one might use the following line of
argument. Just as because of the spirit and the power of Elijah,
and not because of his soul, it is said about John, “This is
Elijah which is to come,”5304 the spirit in
Elijah and the power in him having gone over to John—so Herod
thought that the powers in John wrought in his case works of baptism
and teaching,—for John did not one miracle,5305 but in Jesus miraculous portents. It
may be said that something of this kind was the thought of those who
said that Elijah had appeared in Jesus, or that one of the old prophets
had risen.5306 But the
opinion of those who said that Jesus was “a prophet even as one
of the prophets,”5307 has no bearing on
the question. False, then, is
the saying concerning Jesus, whether that recorded to have been the
view of Herod, or that spoken by others. Only, the saying,
“That John went before in the spirit and power of
Elijah,”5308 which corresponds
to the thoughts which they were now cherishing concerning John and
Jesus, seems to me more credible. But since we learned, in the
first place, that when the Saviour after the temptation heard that John
was given up, He retreated into Galilee, and in the second place, that
when John was in prison and heard the things about Jesus he sent two of
his disciples and said to Him, “Art thou He that cometh, or look
we for another?”5309 and in the third
place, generally that Herod said about Jesus, “It is John the
Baptist, he is risen from the dead,”5310
but we have not previously learned from any quarter the manner in which
the Baptist was killed, therefore Matthew has now recorded it, and Mark
almost like unto him; but Luke passed over in silence the greater part
of the narrative as it is found in them.”5311
5311 The question of
John’s relation to Jesus and of the supposed transcorporation, is
more fully discussed by Origen in his Commentary on John, book vi. 7,
p. 353, sqq. | E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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