2nd Sunday in
Ordinary Time, John 1:29-34
“I did not know him, but
the one who sent me to baptize with water told me, ‘On whomever you see the
Spirit come down and remain, he is the one who will baptize with the Holy
Spirit.’”
John
the Baptist testifies that he did not know Jesus until after the baptism, when
he saw the Holy Spirit come down and remain upon the Lord. But what can the
Baptist possibly mean? What did he not know about Jesus? Recall, of course,
that John was the second cousin of the Lord – for his mother Elizabeth was the cousin
of the Blessed Virgin Mary. Could it be that the child of the visitation, who
leapt in the womb in the presence of the unborn Lord, did not recognize the
Messiah when he came to him as a man?
In
what may be the greatest scriptural commentary of the early Church, the
Tractates on John, St. Augustine discusses this very point. We will rely on him
as a sure witness to the Tradition, and a guide in speculative theology.
John knew Jesus’ identity
The
principle question we have is this: What did John know about Jesus before the
Baptism? And, What did John come to know only after the Baptism of Christ?
Most
certainly John the Baptist recognized Jesus when he saw him – Jesus was his
second cousin, after all! John would most certainly have known his own relative,
especially considering the close friendship of Mary and Elizabeth.
From
the Scriptures themselves it is clear that John recognized who Jesus was. Even
before the Baptism of our Lord, John recognized Jesus and said, “Behold the
Lamb of God.” (John 1:29) Moreover, when Jesus comes to John to be baptized by
him, John objects saying that he himself needs to be baptized by the Lord –
certainly John was able to recognize Jesus.
John knew Jesus to be the
Christ
Moreover,
it is clear that John not only recognized the external features of Jesus – so that
he could point Jesus out of a crowd of men – but he also was moved by the Holy
Spirit to recognize that Jesus was the Messiah. If John leapt in the womb when
in the presence of the nascent Christ, most certainly he would be moved, by
that same Spirit which had filled him from the moment Mary’s greeting reached
Elizabeth’s ears, to recognize Jesus as the Christ when he saw him as a full
grown man.
Again,
John said, “Behold the Lamb of God, behold him who takes away the sins of the
world.” And again, “I ought to be baptized by thee.” (Matthew 3:14) Indeed, it is
quite clear that John already knew Jesus to be the Christ, even before the Lord’s
Baptism.
John had some understanding
of Christ’s Divinity
When
Elizabeth heard Mary’s greeting she exclaimed, “And whence is this to me, that
the mother of my Lord should come to me?” (Luke 1:43) If Elizabeth knew Mary to
be the “mother of the Lord,” then she recognized Jesus to be “the Lord.” Most
certainly, Elizabeth would have told her son John, that his second cousin was
the Lord – and that he was to be the forerunner of the Lord Jesus.
Again,
after John’s birth, Zachariah exclaimed, “And thou, child, shalt be called the prophet
of the Highest: for thou shalt go before the face of the Lord to prepare his
ways.” (Luke 1:76) John most certainly knew that he was the forerunner of the
Lord. He also knew that this Lord, this most High, was his own second cousin,
Jesus of Nazareth.
Finally,
from John’s own words we can see that he knew Jesus to be Divine – John said, “He
that shall come after me, is preferred before me: because he was before me.”
(John 1:15) Now John knew that he had been conceived before Jesus (three months
before) and that he had therefore been born before Jesus. If, then, John was
conceived and born before Jesus (and, if he had begun his public ministry
before Jesus), how can John say that Jesus was before? Here, John hints at
Jesus’ divinity – for Jesus was before John not as man, but as God. Jesus was
before John by virtue of his eternal generation from the Father. Here, John is
testifying to the fact that Jesus is God – and all this comes before the
Baptism of the Lord.
John knew that Jesus would
baptize and institute a new baptism
Finally,
we add that John already knew that Jesus would baptize – hence, he said, “I
ought to be baptized by thee.” John had foretold, “He that shall come after me,
is mightier than I, […] he shall baptize you in the Holy Ghost and fire.”
(Matthew 1:11) John knew that Jesus would institute a new baptism, a baptism
not of water only, but of the Holy Spirit. John had some sense of the first
sacrament of the New Law.
What John did not know
about Christ Jesus
What
then does John mean when he says, “I did not know him”? For he knew who Jesus was,
he knew him to be Christ and even God, and he knew that the Lord would baptize
in the Holy Spirit.
What
John did not know about Christ, St. Augustine tells us, “But what did he not
know? That this great authority of baptism the Lord himself was to have, and to
retain to himself, whether present in the earth or absent in body in the
heaven, and present in majesty; lest Paul should say, my baptism; lest Peter
should say, my baptism. Therefore see, give heed to the words of the apostles.
None of the apostles said, my baptism. […] This, then, my brethren, John
learned.”
The
Doctor of Grace continues, “John learns to know him whom he knew; but he learns
in him with regard to what he did not know; with regard to what he did know, he
does not learn. And what did he know? The Lord. What did he not know? That the
power of the Lord’s baptism was not to pass from the Lord to any man, but that
the ministration of it plainly would do so; the power from the Lord to no one,
the ministration both to good and to bad.”
Finally,
the Bishop of Hippo states, “And that which was given by Paul, and that which
was given by Peter, is Christ’s; and if baptism was given by Judas it was
Christ’s. […] Those whom Judas baptized, Christ baptized. In like manner, then,
they whom a drunkard baptized, those whom a murderer baptized, those whom an
adulterer baptized, if it was the baptism of Christ, were baptized by Christ. I
do not fear the adulterer, the drunkard, or the murderer, because I give heed
unto the dove, through whom it is said to me, This is he which baptizes.”
Christ Jesus is the foundation
of the Church
Hence,
because the value of the sacrament of baptism does not depend upon the minister
of the sacrament but upon Christ by whose power the sacrament is administered,
neither then does the Church depend upon the ministers of the Church but upon
Christ. Most certainly, we desire and need holy priests and holy religious and
holy lay persons. Indeed, we must all strive to live lives ever more closely united
with the Lord. However, it is good to recall that the holiness of the Church
does not come from the holiness of her members – the Church is holy because Christ
is holy, the members of the Church become holy because they participate in Christ
through his Church.
This
is what the Donatists did not understand – for they believed that if a sinful
priest administered baptism, that baptism was invalid. These heretics thought
that the holiness of the Church and the power of the sacraments came from the holiness
of the priests.
This
heresy crops up in our own day as well – all too often we hear of people who
leave the Church because of the sins of priests and the hypocrisy of other lay
Catholics. However, we know well that, if someone leaves the Church because of
the sins of her members, that person has not truly understood why they belonged
to the Church in the first place. For we are not Catholic because of any
priests or any popes, we are not Catholic because of the sanctity of other
Catholics; we are Catholic because Christ founded the Church and united himself
to her as her head and bridegroom. We are Catholic because we love Jesus – and the
only reason any ever leave the Church is that they do not yet love Jesus as
they should.
What great wisdom from Augustine. It's a great way to balance John's words about not knowing Jesus as the annointed one until the Spirit descended and the voice was heard.
ReplyDeleteThere's a great power in Baptism that's independent of us. It's true in Holy Communion too where we depend not on our own power or will but the power of God to be at work doing his will.
pax
John
St. Luke says Elizabeth was in her sixth month when Mary hastened to be with her right after the Annunciation, so John was conceived six months before Jesus, not three, no?
ReplyDeleteRichard
Thank you for recapping the insight that the grace of God will work of its own by the Power of the Holy Spirit, that we are hardly in position to judge who or what is most efficacious. Nouwen reminds in "Who Are We" of the segment of Bernstein's Mass in which the chalice falls to the floor and breaks; the priest says "I never knew that broken glass can shine so brightly". We all are broken yet we are all capable of being the vehicles through which grace can flow and sometimes we don't even know it!
ReplyDeleteI always thought of John's protest "I am to be baptized by You..." and Jesus' response to be about humility and the Redemption of man in Christ, but never about the power of Baptism. Though it does lead to an interesting question: Did John not know about the universalization of Israel? That is did John only know about the Messiah of Israel, but not the Messiah of mankind?
ReplyDeleteAnd you misquote Matthew 3:11 and said Matthew 1:11.
ReplyDeleteThis tells quite a bit about John's character as well, his humility. For he felt not fit to remove his sandals; but what did John know? He quotes "the voice of one crying out in the wilderness". How did he know a reference from the prophet of Old was himself? This falls in line with the confusing segment on his being Elijah?..Or in the spirit and power of Elijah. If he was in the spirit of ELijah, then who was the original Elijah? And how did he ascend (if he did) if no one had come from the Father yet would ascend to the Father? This opens up doors to discussions about Reincarnation and then it's a pandora's box of 'vain imaginings' that eventual dilute the Gospel accounts leading to the proliferation of Jesus going to India...for on the Transfiguration account Elijah was present with Moses, yet how is that if John the Baptist was Elijah and he was beheaded by that time.
ReplyDelete