THE ANOINTED ONE
From His announcement
by John the Baptist to
The Baptists
Imprisonment
God anointed
Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Ghost
and with power: who went about doing
good. Acts 10:38.
From
among the faithful in Israel, who had
long waited for the coming of the
messiah, the forerunner of Christ
arose. The aged priest Zacharias and
his wife Elisabeth were both
righteous before God; and in their
quiet and holy lives the light of
faith shone out like a star amid the
darkness of those evil days. To this
godly pair was given the promise of a
son, who should go before
the face of the Lord to prepare His
ways.
Zacharius dwelt in the hill
country of Judea, but he had
gone up to Jerusalem to minister for
one week in the temple, a service
required twice a year from the
priests of each course. And it
came to pass, that while he executed
the priests office before God
in the order of his course, according
to the custom of the priests
office, his lot was to burn incense
when he went into the temple of the
Lord.
He was
standing before the golden altar in
the holy place of the sanctuary. The
cloud of incense with the prayers of
Israel was ascending before God.
Suddenly he became conscious of a
divine presence. An angel of the Lord
was standing on the right side
of the altar. The position of
the angel was an indication of favor,
but Zacharius took no note of this.
For many years he had prayed for the
coming of the Redeemer; now heaven
had sent its messenger to announce
that these prayers were about to be
answered; but the mercy of God seemed
to great for him to credit. He was
filled with fear and
self-condemnation.
But he
was greeted with joyful assurance:
Fear not, Zacharius: for thy
prayer is heard; thy wife Elisabeth
shall bear thee a son, and thou shalt
call his name John. And thou shalt
have joy and gladness; and many shall
rejoice at his birth. For he shall be
great in the eyes of the Lord, and
shall drink neither wine or strong
drink; and he shall be filled with
the Holy Ghost
And many of the
children of Israel shall he turn to
the Lord their God. And he shall go
before Him in the spirit and power of
Elias, to turn the hearts of the
fathers to the children, and the
disobedient to the wisdom of the
just; to make ready a people prepared
for the Lord. And Zacharias said unto
the angel, Whereby shall I know this?
For I am an old man and my wife well
stricken in years.
Zacharius well knew how Abraham in
his old age a child was given because
he believed Him faithful who had
promised. But for a moment, the aged
priest turns his thought to the
weakness of humanity. He forgets that
what God has promised, He is able to
perform. What a contrast between this
unbelief and the sweet, childlike
faith of Mary, the maiden of
Nazareth, whose answer to the
angels wonderful announcement
was, Behold the handmaid of the
Lord; be it unto me according to thy
word! Luke 1:38.
The
birth of a son to Zacharius, like the
birth of the child of Abraham, and
that of Mary, was to teach a great
spiritual truth, a truth that we are
slow to learn and ready to forget. In
ourselves, we are incapable of doing
any good thing; but that which we
cannot do will be wrought by the
power of God in every submissive and
believing soul. It was through faith
that the child of promise was given.
It is through faith that spiritual
life is begotten, and we are enabled
to do the works of righteousness.
To the
question of Zacharius, the angel
said, I am Gabriel, that stand
in the presence of God; and am sent
to speak unto thee, and to show thee
these glad tidings. Five
hundred years before, Gabriel had
made known to Daniel the prophetic
period, which was to extend to the
coming of Christ. The knowledge that
the end of this period was near had
moved Zacharius to pray for the
messiahs advent. Now the very
messenger through whom the prophecy
was given had come to announce its
fulfillment.
The
words of the angel, I am
Gabriel that stand in the presence of
God show that he holds a
position of high honor in the
heavenly courts. When he came with a
message to Daniel, he said,
There is none that holdeth with
me in these things, but Michael
[Christ] your Prince. Daniel
10:21. Of Gabriel the Savior speaks
in the Revelation, saying He
sent and signified it by His angel
unto His servant John.
Revelation 1:1. And to John the angel
declared, I am a fellow servant
with thee and with thy brethren the
prophets. Revelation 22:9, R.V.
Wonderful thought that the
angel who stands next in honor to the
Son of God is the one chosen to open
the purposes of God to sinful men.
Zacharius had expressed doubt of the
angels words. He was not to
speak again until they were
fulfilled. Behold, said
the angel, thou shalt be
dumb,
until the day that these
things shall be performed, because
thou believest not my words, which
shall be fulfilled in their
season. It was the duty of the
priest in this service to pray for
the pardon of public and national
sins and for the coming of the
Messiah; but when Zacharius attempted
to do this, he could not utter a
word.
Coming
forth to bless the people, He
beckoned unto them, and remained
speechless. They had waited
long, and begun to fear, lest he had
been cut down by the judgment of God.
But as he came forth from the holy
place, his face was shining with the
glory of God, and they
perceived that he had seen a vision
in the temple. Zacharius
communicated to them what he had seen
and heard; and as soon as the
days of his ministration were
accomplished, he departed to his own
house.
Soon
after the birth of the promised
child, the fathers tongue was
loosed, and he spake, and
praised God. And fear came on all
that dwelt round about them: and all
these sayings were noised abroad
throughout all the hill country of
Judea. And all they that heard them
laid them up in their hearts, saying,
What manner of child shall this
be! All this tended to call
attention to the Messiahs
coming, for which John was to prepare
the way.
The Holy
Spirit rested upon Zacharius, and in
these beautiful words be prophesied
of the mission of his son:
Thou, child,
shalt be called the prophet of the
Highest:
For thou shalt go before the face of
the Lord to prepare His ways;
To give knowledge of salvation unto
His people
By the remission of their sins,
Through the tender mercy of our God;
Whereby the Dayspring from on high
hath visited us,
To give light to them that sit in
darkness and in the shadow of death,
To guide our feet into the way of
peace.
And the child grew, and waxed
strong in spirit, and was in the
deserts till the day of his showing
unto Israel. Before the birth
of John, the angel had said, He
shall be great in the sight of the
Lord, and shall drink neither wine
nor strong drink; and he shall be
filled with the Holy Ghost. God
had called the son of Zacharius to a
great work, the greatest ever
committed to men. In order to
accomplish this work, he must have
the Lord to work with him. And the
Spirit of God would be with him if he
needed the instruction of the angel.
John was
to go forth as Jehovahs
messenger, to bring men the light of
God. He must give a new direction to
their thoughts. He must impress them
with the holiness of Gods
requirements, and their need of His
perfect righteousness. Such a
messenger must be holy. He must be a
temple for the indwelling Spirit of
God. In order to fulfill his mission,
he must have a sound physical
constitution, and mental and
spiritual strength. Therefore, it
would be necessary for him to control
the appetites and passions. He must
be able so to control all his powers
that he could stand among men as
unmoved by surrounding circumstances
as the rocks and mountains of the
wilderness.
In the
time of John the Baptist, greed for
riches, and the love of luxury and
display had become widespread.
Sensuous pleasures, feasting and
drinking, were causing physical
disease and degeneracy, benumbing the
spiritual perceptions, and lessening
the sensibility to sin. John was to
stand as a reformer. By his
abstemious life and plain dress, he
was to rebuke the excesses of his
time. Hence the directions given to
the parents of John, - a lesson
of temperance by an angel from the
throne of heaven.
In
childhood and youth, the character is
most impressible. The power of
self-control should then be acquired.
By the fireside and at the family
board influences are exerted whose
results are as enduring as eternity.
More than any natural endowment, the
habits established in early years
decide whether a man will be
victorious or vanquished in the
battle of life, Youth is the sowing
time. It determines the character of
the harvest, for this life and for
the life to come.
As a
prophet, John was to turn the
hearts of the fathers to the
children, and the disobedient to the
wisdom of the just; to make ready a
people prepared for the Lord.
In preparing the way for
Christs first advent, he was a
representative of those who are to
prepare a people for our Lords
coming. The world is given to
self-indulgence. Errors and fables
abound. Satans snares for
destroying souls are multiplied. All
who would perfect holiness in the
fear of the God must learn the
lessons of temperance and
self-control. The appetites and
passions must be held in subjection
to the higher powers of the mind.
This self-discipline is essential to
that mental strength and spiritual
insight which will enable us to
understand and to practice the sacred
truths of Gods word. For
this reason temperance finds it place
in the work of preparation for
Christs second coming.
In the
natural order of things, the son of
Zacharius would have been educated
for the priesthood. But the training
of the rabbinical schools would have
unfitted him for the work. God did
not send him to the teachers of
theology to learn how to interpret
the Scriptures. He called him to the
desert that he might learn of nature
and natures God.
It was a
lonely region where he found his
home, in the midst of barren hills,
wild ravines, and rocky caves. But it
was his choice to forgo the
enjoyments and luxuries of life for
the stern discipline of the
wilderness. Here his surroundings
were favorable to habits of
simplicity and self-denial.
Uninterrupted by the clamor of the
world, he could here study the
lessons of nature, of revelation, and
of Providence. The words of the angel
to Zacharius had been often repeated
to John by the God-fearing parents.
From childhood, his mission had been
kept before him, and he had accepted
the holy trust. To him the solitude
of the desert was a welcome escape
from society in which suspicion,
unbelief, and impurity had become
well-nigh all-pervading. He
distrusted his own power to withstand
temptation, and shrank from constant
contact with sin, lest he should lose
the sense of its exceeding
sinfulness.
Dedicated to God as a Nazarite from
his birth, he made the vow his own in
a life-long consecration. His dress
was that of the ancient prophets, a
garment of camels hair,
confined by a leather girdle. He ate
the locusts and wild
honey found in the wilderness,
and drank the pure water from the
hills.
But the
life of John was not spent in
idleness, in ascetic gloom, or
selfish isolation. From time to time,
he went forth to mingle with men; and
he was an interested observer of what
was passing in the world. From his
quiet retreat, he watched the
unfolding of events. With vision
illuminated by the divine Spirit, he
studied the characters of men, that
he might understand how to reach
their hearts with the message of
heaven. The burden of his mission was
upon him. In solitude, by meditation
and prayer, he sought to gird up his
soul for the lifework before him.
Although
in the wilderness, he was not exempt
from temptation. So far as possible,
he closed every avenue by which Satan
could enter; yet, he was still
assailed by the tempter. But his
spiritual perceptions were clear; he
had developed strength and decision
of character and through the aid of
the Holy Spirit, he was able to
detect Satans approaches, and
to resist his power.
John
found in the wilderness his school
and his sanctuary. Like Moses amid
the mountains of Midian, he was shut
in by Gods presence, and
surrounded by the evidences of His
power. It was not his lot to
dwell, as did Israels great
leader, amid the solemn majesty of
the mountain solitudes; but before
him were the heights of Moab, beyond
Jordan, speaking of Him who had set
fast the mountains, and girded them
with strength.
The
gloomy and terrible aspect of nature
in his wilderness home vividly
pictured the condition of Israel. The
fruitful vineyard of the Lord had
become a desolate waste. But above
the desert, the heavens bent bright
and beautiful. The clouds were
gathered, dark with tempest, were
arched by the rainbow of promise. So
above Israels degradation shone
the promised glory of the
Messiahs reign. The clouds of
wrath were spanned by the rainbow of
His covenant-mercy.
Alone in
the silent night he read Gods
promise to Abraham of a seed
numberless as the stars. The light of
dawn, gilding the mountains of Moab,
told of Him who should be as
the light of the morning, when
the sun riseth, even a morning
without clouds. 2 Samuel 23:4.
And in the brightness of noontide, he
saw the splendor of His
manifestations, when the glory
of the Lord shall be revealed, and
all flesh shall see it
together. Isaiah 40:5.
With
awed yet exultant spirit he searched
in the prophetic scrolls the
revelations pf the Messiahs
coming, - the promised seed that
should bruise the serpents
head; Shiloh, the peace
giver, who was to appear before
a king should cease to reign on
Davids throne. Now the time had
come. A Roman ruler sat in the palace
upon Mount Zion. By the sure word of
the Lord, already the Christ was
born.
Isaiahs rapt portrayals of the
Messiahs glory were his study
by day and by night, - the Branch
from the root of Jesse; a King to
reign in righteousness, judging
with equity for the meek of the
earth; a covert from the
tempest;
the shadow of a great
rock in a weary land; Israel no
longer to be termed
Forsaken, nor her land
Desolate, but to be
called of the Lord, My
Delight, and her land
Beulah. Isaiah 11:4;
32:2; 62:4, margin.
The heart of the
lonely exile was filled with the
glorious vision.
He
looked upon the King in His beauty,
and self was forgotten. He beheld the
majesty of holiness, and felt himself
to be inefficient and unworthy. He
was ready to go forth as
Heavens messenger, unawed by
the human, because he had looked upon
the Divine. He could stand erect and
fearless in the presence of earthly
monarchs, because he had bowed low
before the King of kings.
John did
not fully understand the nature of
the Messiahs kingdom. He looked
for Israel to be delivered from her
national foes; but the coming of a
King in righteousness, and the
establishment of Israel as a holy
nation, was the great object of his
hope. Thus he believed would be
accomplished the prophecy given at
his birth, -
To remember His
holy covenant;
That we being delivered out of the
hand of our enemies
Might serve Him without fear,
In holiness and
righteousness before Him, all the
days of our
life.
He saw
his people deceived self satisfied,
and asleep in their sins. He longed
to rouse them to a holier life. The
message that God had given him to
bear designed to startle them from
their lethargy, and cause them to
tremble because of their great
wickedness.
Before the seed of the gospel could
find lodgment, the soil of the heart
must be broken up. Before they would
seek healing from Jesus, they must be
awakened to their danger from the
wounds of sin.
God does
not send messengers to flatter the
sinner. He delivers no message of
peace to lull the unsanctified into
fatal security. He lays heavy burdens
upon the conscience of the wrongdoer,
and pierces the soul with arrows of
conviction. The ministering angels
present to him the fearful judgments
of God to deepen the sense of need,
and prompt the cry, What must I
do to be saved? Then the hand
that has humbled in the dust lifts up
the penitent. The voice that has
rebuked sin, and put to shame pride
and ambition, inquires with tenderest
sympathy, What wilt thou that I
shall do unto thee?
When the
ministry of John began, the nation
was in a state of excitement and
discontent verging on revolution. At
the removal of Archelaus, Judea had
been brought directly under the
control of Rome. The tyranny and
extortion of the Roman governors, and
their determined efforts to introduce
the heathen symbols and customs,
kindled revolt, which had been
quenched in the blood of thousands of
the bravest of Israel. All this
intensified the national hatred
against Rome, and increased the
longing to be freed from her power.
Amid
discord and strife, a voice was heard
from the wilderness, a voice starling
and stern, yet full of hope:
Repent ye; for the kingdom of
heaven is at hand. With a new,
strange power, it moved the people.
Prophets had foretold the coming of
Christ as an event far in the future;
but here was an announcement that it
was at hand. Johns singular
appearance carried the minds of his
hearers back to the ancient seers. In
his manner and dress, he denounced
the national corruption, and rebuked
the prevailing sins. His words were
plain, pointed and convincing. Many
believed him to be the one of the
prophets risen from the dead. The
whole nation was stirred. Multitudes
flocked to the wilderness.
John
proclaimed the coming of the Messiah,
and called the people to repentance.
As a symbol of cleansing from sin, he
baptized them in the waters of the
Jordan. Thus by a significant object
lesson he declared that those who
claimed to be the chosen people of
God were defiled by sin, and without
purification of heart and life they
could have no part in the
Messiahs kingdom.
Princes
and rabbis, soldiers, publicans, and
peasants came to hear the prophet.
For a time the solemn warning from
God alarmed them. Many were brought
to repentance, and received baptism.
Persons of all ranks submitted to the
requirement of the Baptist, in order
to participate in the kingdom he
announced.
Many of
the scribes and Pharisees came
confessing their sins, and asking for
baptism. They had exalted themselves
as better than other men, and had led
the people to entertain a high
opinion of their piety; now the
guilty secrets of their lives were
unveiled. But John was impressed by
the Holy Spirit that many of these
men had no real conviction of sin.
They were timeservers. As friends of
the prophet, they hoped to find favor
with the coming Prince. And by
receiving baptism at the hands of
this popular young teacher, they
thought to strengthen their influence
with the people.
John met
them with scathing inquiry, O
generation of vipers, who hath warned
you to flee from the wrath to come?
Bring forth therefore fruits meet for
repentance: and think not to say
within yourselves, We have Abraham to
our father: for I say unto you, that
God is able of these stones to raise
up children unto Abraham.
The Jews
misinterpreted Gods promise of
eternal favor to Israel: Thus
saith the Lord, which giveth the sun
for a light by day, and the
ordinances of the moon and of the
stars for a light by night, which
divideth the sea when the waves
thereof roar; The Lord of hosts is
His name: If those ordinances depart
from before Me, saith the Lord, then
the seed of Israel also shall cease
from being the nation before Me
forever. Thus saith the Lord; if
heaven above can be measured, and the
foundations of the earth searched out
beneath, I will also cast off all thy
seed of Israel for all that they have
done, saith the Lord. Jeremiah
31: 35-37. The Jews regarded their
natural descent from Abraham as
giving them a claim to this promise.
But they overlooked the conditions
that God had specified. Before giving
the promise, He had said, I
will put My law in their inward
parts, and write it in their hearts;
and will be their God, and they shall
be My people
. For I will
forgive their iniquity, and I will
remember their sin no more.
Jeremiah 31: 33,34.
To a
people in whose hearts His law is
written, the favor of God is assured.
They are alone with Him. But the Jews
had separated themselves from God.
Because of their sins, they were
suffering under His judgments. This
was the cause of their bondage to a
heathen nation. Their minds were
darkened by transgression, and
because in times past the Lord had
shown them so great favor, they
excused their sins. They flattered
themselves that they were better than
other men, and entitled to His
blessings.
These
things are written for our
admonition, upon whom the ends of the
world are come. 1 Corinthians
10:11. How often we misinterpret
Gods blessings, and flatter
ourselves that we are favored on
account of some goodness in us! God
cannot do for us that which He longs
to do. His gifts are used to increase
our self-satisfaction, and to harden
our hearts in unbelief and sin.
John
declared to the teachers of Israel
that their pride, selfishness, and
cruelty showed them to be a
generation of vipers, a deadly curse
to the people, rather than the
children of just and obedient
Abraham. In view of the light they
had received from God, they were even
worse than the heathen, to whom they
felt so much superior. They had
forgotten the rock whence they were
hewn, and the hole of the pit from
which they had been digged. God was
not dependent upon them for the
fulfilling of His purpose. As He had
called Abraham out from a heathen
people, so He could call others to
His service. Their hearts might now
appear as lifeless as the stones of
the desert, but His Spirit could
quicken them to do His will, and
receive the fulfillment of His
promise.
And now also, said the
prophet, the axe is laid unto
the root of the trees: therefore
every tree which bringeth not forth
good fruit is hewn down, and cast
into the fire. Not by its name,
but by its fruit, is value of a tree
determined. If the fruit is
worthless, the name cannot save the
tree from destruction. John declared
to the Jews, that their standing
before God was to be decided by their
character and life. Profession was
worthless. If their life and
character were not in harmony with
Gods law, they were not His
people.
Under
his heart-searching words, his
hearers were convicted. They came to
him with the inquiry, What
shall we do then? He answered,
He that hath two coats, let him
impart to him that hath none; and he
that hath meat, let him do
likewise. And he warned the
publicans against injustice, and the
soldiers against violence.
All who
became the subjects of Christs
kingdom, he said, would give evidence
of faith and repentance. Kindness,
honesty, and fidelity would be seen
in their lives. They would minister
to the needy, and bring offerings to
God. They should shield the
defenseless, and give an example of
virtue and compassion. So, the
followers of Christ will give
evidence of the transforming power of
the Holy Spirit. In the daily life,
justice, mercy, and the love of God
will be seen. Otherwise, they are
like the chaff that is given to the
fire.
I
indeed baptize you in water unto
repentance, said John;
but He that cometh after me is
mightier than I, whose shoes I am not
worthy to bear: He shall baptize you
with the Holy Ghost and with
fire. Matthew 3:11, R.V.,
margin. The prophet Isaiah had
declared that the Lord would cleanse
His people from their iniquities
by the spirit of judgment, and
by the spirit of burning. The
word of the Lord to Israel was,
I will turn My hand upon thee,
and purely purge away the dross, and
take away all thy sin. Isaiah
4:4; 1:25. To sin, wherever found,
our God is a consuming
fire. Hebrews 12:29. In all who
submit to His power, the Spirit of
God will consume sin. But if men
cling to sin, they become identified
with it. Then the glory of God, which
destroys sin, must destroy them.
Jacob, after his night of wrestling
with the Angel, exclaimed, I
have seen God face to face, and my
life is preserved. Genesis
32:30.
Jacob
had been guilty of a great sin in his
conduct toward Esau; but he had
repented. His transgression had been
forgiven, and his sin purged;
therefore, he could endure the
revelation of Gods presence.
But wherever men came before God
while willfully cherishing evil, they
were destroyed. At the second advent
of Christ the wicked shall be
consumed with the Spirit of His
mouth, and destroyed with
the brightness of His coming. 2
Thessalonians 2:8. The light of the
glory of God, which imparts life to
the righteous, will slay the wicked.
In the
time of John the Baptist, Christ was
about to appear as the revealer of
the character of God. His very
presence would make manifest to men
their sin. Only as they were willing
to be purged from sin could they
enter into fellowship with Him. Only
the pure in heart could abide in His
presence.
Thus,
the Baptist declared Gods
message to Israel. Many gave heed to
his instruction. Many sacrificed all
in order to obey. Multitudes followed
this new teacher from place to place,
and not a few cherished the hope that
he might be the Messiah. But as John
saw the people turning to him, he
sought every opportunity if directing
their faith to Him who was to come.