Chapter
11 -
The Baptism
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TIDINGS of the wilderness prophet and his wonderful announcement, spread
throughout Galilee. The message reached the peasants in the remotest hill
towns, and the fisher folk by the sea, and in these simple, earnest hearts
found its truest response. In Nazareth it was told in the carpenter shop
that had been Joseph's, and One recognized the call. His time had come.
Turning from His daily toil, He bade farewell to His mother, and followed in
the steps of His countrymen who were flocking to the Jordan.
Jesus and John the Baptist were cousins, and closely related by the
circumstances of their birth; yet they had had no direct acquaintance with
each other. The life of Jesus had been spent at Nazareth in Galilee; that of
John, in the wilderness of Judea. Amid widely different surroundings they
had lived in seclusion, and had had no communication with each other.
Providence had ordered this. No occasion was to be given for the charge that
they had conspired together to support each other's claims.
John was acquainted with the events that had marked the birth of Jesus. He
had heard of the visit to Jerusalem in His boyhood, and of what had passed
in the school of the rabbis. He knew of His sinless life, and believed Him
to be the Messiah; but of this he had no positive assurance. The fact that
Jesus had for so many years remained in obscurity, giving no special
evidence of His mission, gave occasion for doubt as to whether He could be
the Promised One. The Baptist, however, waited in faith, believing that in
God's own time all would be made plain. It had been revealed to him that the
Messiah would seek baptism at his hands, and that a sign of His divine
character should then be given. Thus he would be enabled to present Him to
the people.
When Jesus came to be baptized, John recognized in Him a purity of character
that he had never before perceived in any man. The very atmosphere of His
presence was holy and awe-inspiring. Among the multitudes that had gathered
about him at the Jordan, John had heard dark tales of crime, and had met
souls bowed down with the burden of myriad sins; but never had he come in
contact with a human being from whom there breathed an influence so divine.
All this was in harmony with what had been revealed to John regarding the
Messiah. Yet he shrank from granting the request of Jesus. How could he, a
sinner, baptize the Sinless One? And why should He who needed no repentance
submit to a rite that was a confession of guilt to be washed away?
As Jesus asked for baptism, John drew back, exclaiming, "I have need to be
baptized of Thee, and comest Thou to me?" With firm yet gentle authority,
Jesus answered, "Suffer it to be so now: for thus it becometh us to fulfill
all righteousness." And John, yielding, led the Saviour down into the
Jordan, and buried Him beneath the water. "And straightway coming up out of
the water," Jesus "saw the heavens opened, and the Spirit like a dove
descending upon Him."
Jesus did not receive baptism as a confession of guilt on His own account.
He identified Himself with sinners, taking the steps that we are to take,
and doing the work that we must do. His life of suffering and patient
endurance after His baptism was also an example to us.
Upon coming up out of the water, Jesus bowed in prayer on the river bank. A
new and important era was opening before Him. He was now, upon a wider
stage, entering on the conflict of His life. Though He was the Prince of
Peace, His coming must be as the unsheathing of a sword. The kingdom He had
come to establish was the opposite of that which the Jews desired. He who
was the foundation of the ritual and economy of Israel would be looked upon
as its enemy and destroyer. He who had proclaimed the law upon Sinai would
be condemned as a transgressor. He who had come to break the power of Satan
would be denounced as Beelzebub. No one upon earth had understood Him, and
during His ministry He must still walk alone. Throughout His life His mother
and His brothers did not comprehend His mission. Even His disciples did not
understand Him. He had dwelt in eternal light, as one with God, but His life
on earth must be spent in solitude.
As one with us, He must bear the burden of our guilt and woe. The Sinless
One must feel the shame of sin. The peace lover must dwell with strife, the
truth must abide with falsehood, purity with vileness. Every sin, every
discord, every defiling lust that transgression had brought, was torture to
His spirit.
Alone He must tread the path; alone He must bear the burden. Upon Him who
had laid off His glory and accepted the weakness of humanity the redemption
of the world must rest. He saw and felt it all, but His purpose remained
steadfast. Upon His arm depended the salvation of the fallen race, and He
reached out His hand to grasp the hand of Omnipotent Love.
The Saviour's glance seems to penetrate heaven as He pours out His soul in
prayer. Well He knows how sin has hardened the hearts of men, and how
difficult it will be for them to discern His mission, and accept the gift of
salvation. He pleads with the Father for power to overcome their unbelief,
to break the fetters with which Satan has enthralled them, and in their
behalf to conquer the destroyer. He asks for the witness that God accepts
humanity in the person of His Son.
Never before have the angels listened to such a prayer. They are eager to
bear to their loved Commander a message of assurance and comfort. But no;
the Father Himself will answer the petition of His Son. Direct from the
throne issue the beams of His glory. The heavens are opened, and upon the
Saviour's head descends a dovelike form of purest light,--fit emblem of Him,
the meek and lowly One.
Of the vast throng at the Jordan, few except John discerned the heavenly
vision. Yet the solemnity of the divine Presence rested upon the assembly.
The people stood silently gazing upon Christ. His form was bathed in the
light that ever surrounds the throne of God. His upturned face was glorified
as they had never before seen the face of man. From the open heavens a voice
was heard saying, "This is My beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased."
These words of confirmation were given to inspire faith in those who
witnessed the scene, and to strengthen the Saviour for His mission.
Notwithstanding that the sins of a guilty world were laid upon Christ,
notwithstanding the humiliation of taking upon Himself our fallen nature,
the voice from heaven declared Him to be the Son of the Eternal.
John had been deeply moved as he saw Jesus bowed as a suppliant, pleading
with tears for the approval of the Father. As the glory of God encircled
Him, and the voice from heaven was heard, John recognized the token which
God had promised. He knew that it was the world's Redeemer whom he had
baptized. The Holy Spirit rested upon him, and with outstretched hand
pointing to Jesus, he cried, "Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the
sin of the world."
None among the hearers, and not even the speaker himself, discerned the
import of these words, "the Lamb of God." Upon Mount Moriah, Abraham had
heard the question of his son, "My father, . . . where is the lamb for a
burnt offering?" The father answered, "My son, God will provide Himself a
lamb for a burnt offering." Gen. 22:7, 8. And in the ram divinely provided
in the place of Isaac, Abraham saw a symbol of Him who was to die for the
sins of men. The Holy Spirit through Isaiah, taking up the illustration,
prophesied of the Saviour, "He is brought as a lamb to the slaughter," "and
the Lord hath laid on Him the iniquity of us all" (Isa. 53:7, 6); but the
people of Israel had not understood the lesson. Many of them regarded the
sacrificial offerings much as the heathen looked upon their sacrifices,--as
gifts by which they themselves might propitiate the Deity. God desired to
teach them that from His own love comes the gift which reconciles them to
Himself.
And the word that was spoken to Jesus at the Jordan, "This is My beloved
Son, in whom I am well pleased," embraces humanity. God spoke to Jesus as
our representative. With all our sins and weaknesses, we are not cast aside
as worthless. "He hath made us accepted in the Beloved." Eph. 1:6. The glory
that rested upon Christ is a pledge of the love of God for us. It tells us
of the power of prayer,--how the human voice may reach the ear of God, and
our petitions find acceptance in the courts of heaven. By sin, earth was cut
off from heaven, and alienated from its communion; but Jesus has connected
it again with the sphere of glory. His love has encircled man, and reached
the highest heaven. The light which fell from the open portals upon the head
of our Saviour will fall upon us as we pray for help to resist temptation.
The voice which spoke to Jesus says to every believing soul, This is My
beloved child, in whom I am well pleased.
"Beloved, now are we the sons of God, and it doth not yet appear what we
shall be: but we know that, when He shall appear, we shall be like Him; for
we shall see Him as He is." 1 John 3:2. Our Redeemer has opened the way so
that the most sinful, the most needy, the most oppressed and despised, may
find access to the Father. All may have a home in the mansions which Jesus
has gone to prepare. "These things saith He that is holy, He that is true,
He that hath the key of David, He that openeth, and no man shutteth; and
shutteth, and no man openeth; . . . behold, I have set before thee an open
door, and no man can shut it." Rev. 3:7, 8.
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