JESUS' BAPTISM
AND TEMPTATIONS
1.
Jesus' Baptism
G. Beasley-Murray, Baptism in the New Testament, 1962; J.D.G. Dunn, Jesus and the Spirit, 1975); Kilian McDonnell, The Baptism of Jesus in the Jordan: The Trinitarian and Cosmic Order of Salvation, 1996); S. McKnight, A Light Among the Gentiles, 1991). 1.2. Accounts of Jesus' Baptism Accounts of Jesus' baptism are found in Mark 1:9-11 = Matt 3:13-17 = Luke 3:21-22; Matthew, however, has additional material not found in Mark or Luke (Matt 3:14-15).
Jesus sought baptism from John the Baptist (Mark 1:9 = Matt 3:13 = Luke 3:21). On the assumption of Markan priority, it clear that Matthew and Luke have used Mark as a source. The fact that there are minor agreements between Matthew and Luke against Mark, however, may suggest that Matthew and Luke had access to another account of Jesus' baptism and were influenced by this when redacting their Markan source. The minor agreements between Matthew and Luke are as follows: 1. Both change the Markan aorist "he was baptized" (ebaptisthê) into aorist participles (Matt: baptistheis; Luke: baptisthentos); 2. Both make no reference to Jesus' being baptized in the Jordan by John (Mark 1:9 = Matt 3:15 = Luke 21); 3. Both have the verb "to open" (anoigein) to describe the phenomenon in the sky, rather than the verb "to tear" (skizein) found in Mark; 4. Both use the name Jesus in the statement that Jesus was baptized, whereas Mark does not; 5. Both use the prepositional phrase "upon him" (ep' auton) rather than Mark's "towards him" (eis auton); 6. Both agree in word order against Mark by having the verb precede the comparison of Spirit's descent to a dove: "the (Holy) Spirit (bodily) descended like a dove," rather than Mark's "the Spirit like a dove descended." Admittedly, the evidence is not overwelmingly compelling to conclude that there is a non-Markan version of Jesus' baptism influencing the Matthean and Lukan redaction of Mark; rather, the conclusion has only a moderate degree of probability. But if there is another version of Jesus' baptism, it is possible that Matthew's interpolation of a dialogue between Jesus and John that serves to explain Jesus' request to receive John's baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins (Matt 3:14-15) may derive from that non-Markan source. So, contrary to what some commentators hold, the author of Matthew would not have written this dialogue between Jesus and John de novo, with the apologetic aim of correcting what he considered to be a discrepancy in Mark: that Jesus needed forgiveness for sins. In Matthew's account, John the Baptist attempts to discourage Jesus from being baptized; he says that it is he who has need to be baptized by Jesus, not Jesus by him. John's reaction presupposes that he knows who Jesus is. (Indeed, according to Luke 1:36, 41, John and Jesus are cousins so that it is highly probable that they have met prior to this encounter.) By his statement, "I need to be baptized by you, and do you come to me?" John probably means that, since he is righteous, Jesus should be baptizing rather than he. Jesus' reply is, "Allow it for now, for thus it is fitting for us to do this in order to fulfill all righteousness." In this context, "righteousness" (dikaiosunê) means what God requires, so that Jesus sees his submission to John's baptism as fulfilling completely God's requirement for him ("to fulfil all righteousness"). The unanswered question, however, is why Jesus' baptism at the hands of John is a requirement for him. It is difficult to know for certain. Probably, Jesus' undergoes baptism in order to identify himself vicariously with Israel, even though he himself did not need to repent and be forgiven (hence John the Baptist's surprise at seeing that Jesus was a candidate for baptism). Such an identification with Israel is a presupposition of the assumption of his messianic function.
All three gospels record that subsequent to Jesus' baptism the heavens opened and the Spirit descended as a dove. The Spirit depicted as a dove (Matt / Mark) or in the form of a dove (Luke) is not found in the Old Testament or in second-Temple Jewish literature; this appears to be unique to the gospels. That the Davidic Messiah would be endued with the Spirit was foretold by the prophet Isaiah (Isa 11:2), and formed part of the expectation of at least some second-Temple Jews (see Ps. Sol. 17:37; 1QSb 5:25) (see also Jesus' messianic interpretation of Isa 61:1-2 in Luke 4:18-19). In 1 Enoch 49:1-4; 51:3; 62:2 likewise, the elect one, is said to be indelt by " the spirit of wisdom, and the spirit that gives insight, and the spirit of understanding and of strength," which is a citation of Isa 11:2. Jesus' reception of the Spirit at his baptism fulfils this aspect of Jewish messianic expectation. It seems that the reception of the Spirit marked the beginning of Jesus' public ministry; apparently he needed the Spirit for what he was about to do. It should also be noted that Jesus is once again referred to as the son of God. At this time a voice from heaven was heard saying "this is" or "you are" "my beloved son in whom I am well-pleased." This phenomenon is known in early rabbinic Judaism as the giving of a bath qol, a "daughter of the voice," the speaking of God from heaven as the verification that what was happening or what someone said was authorized by God or in line with God's will. The early rabbinic view was that the Holy Spirit had been withdrawn from Israel but that God occasionally spoke by the bath qol. In Jesus' case, the Spirit is given to Jesus at his baptism and a bath qol is given as further testimony that he was sent from God. To declare that Jesus is the son would probably be understood to mean that Jesus is the Davidic Messiah, since, as already indicated, the term "son [of God]" became a synonym for Davidic Messiah. The statement "You are / this is my beloved son" alludes to Ps 2:7, which was interpreted messianically in Jesus' day (see Son of God). It is probable that what is said of Jesus immediately after his baptism bears the influence of Isa 42:1 in the (the introductory verse of the first Servant Song): "Behold, my Servant, whom I uphold, my chosen one in whom my soul delights. I have put my Spirit upon him." Like the Servant, Jesus receives the Spirit. Also, the phrase "with him / whom I am well pleased" (en soi / hô eudokêsa) is similar to what is said of the Servant: "in whom my soul delights" (LXX prosedexato auton hê psuchê). Moreover, in Matt 12:18, Isa 42:1 is quoted and the verb used is not prosedexato as in the LXX, but eudokêsen. This makes an allusion to Isa 42:1 in Mark 1:11 = Matt 3:17 = Luke 3:22 even more probable. An obstacle to accepting that there is an allusion to Isa 42:1 in the account of Jesus' baptism and reception of the Spirit is the fact that Jesus is not called servant but son. It has been argued, however, that the original Hebrew ebed ("servant") was translated as the Greek huios ("son") rather than pais ("son" or "servant"), the LXX choice for translating ebed, which is feasible, because in Greek huios and pais are easily confused. Yet it still seems imcomprehensible that an allusion to the Servant would be allowed to become obscure in the history of the synoptic tradition. In short, it is best to see the influence of both Ps 2:7 and Isa 42:1 on this synoptic tradition, so that Jesus is to be understood as both the Davidic Messiah and as the Isaian Servant. John's reluctance to baptize Jesus in Matt 3:14 implies that John knew Jesus before he baptized him. Yet John's statement in John 1:33 makes it clear that he did not know that Jesus was the Davidic Messiah until after his baptism and reception of the Spirit.
1.4. The Date of Jesus' Baptism According to the prophet Daniel, there will elapse 483 years (sevens "sevens" and sixty-two sevens) between the issuing of the decree to rebuild the Temple to the coming of the Anointed One (Dan 9:25). There were, in fact, three official decree to rebuild the Temple: 1. The decree of Cyrus (Ezra 1:2-4; 6:3-5) in 538/37 BCE; 2. The decree of Artaxerxes (Ezra 7:11-26) in 458 BCE; 3. The second decree of Artaxerxes (Neh 2:5-8, 17, 18) in 445 BCE (see L. Wood, A Commentary on Daniel, 252). Most likely, the second is intended by Dan 9:25, which would put the date for the coming of the Messiah as 26, on the assumption that solar years are meant (keeping in mind that between 1 BCE and 1 is only one year). This is the estimated date of Jesus' baptism, which marks the beginning of his ministry. That Jesus was baptized in 26 is confirmed by John 2:20. In response to Jesus' claim that he would destroy the Temple and rebuild it in three days, Jesus' opponents said, "It has taken forty-six years to build this temple, and you are going to raise it in three days?" It is known that Herod began to rebuild the Temple in the eighteenth year of his reign or 20/19 BCE (Ant. 15.380) (Herod assumed kingship in 37 BCE), so that forty-six years after 20/19 is 26/27. Jesus' baptism would have been probably a few months earlier than this incident in the Temple. Luke dates the appearance of John the Baptist to the fifteen year of the reign of Tiberius, when Pontius Pilate was in charge of Judea (Luke 3:1). Tiberius became emperor upon the death of Augustus in 14, but, according to Roman sources, he was co-regent with Augustus (over certain provinces) beginning either in 11 (= A.U.C. 764) (Velleius Paterculus 2.121) or 12 (A.U.C. 765) (Suetonius, Tib. vit. 21) (A.U.C = ab urbe condita [from the founding of the city, i.e., of Rome]). Dating from the begining of his co-regency with Augustus, the fifteenth year of the reign of Tiberius would be either 26 or 27 (It is not certain from which day of the year Luke assumes that the new year begins, since there were different practices in the Roman world.) Pontius Pilate began his appointment as praefectus of Judea in 26. Luke's dating, therefore, can be made consistent with the chronological data from the Gospel of John and the prediction of the appearance of Anointed One in Dan 9:25.
J. Dupont, "L'origine du récits des tentations de Jésus" RB 73 (1966) 30-76; B. Gerhardson, The Testing of God's Son, 1966; P. Doble, "The Temptations," ExpT 72 (1960-61) 91-93; U.W. Mauser, Christ in the Wilderness, 1963; A.B. Taylor, "Decision in the Desert: The Temptation of Jesus in the Light of Deuteronomy," Int 40 (1969) 300-306.
2.2. Sources for Jesus' Temptations Information on Jesus' temptations is found in Mark 1:12-13 and in Matt 4:1-11/Luke 4:1-13; the Matthean and Lukan accounts are much longer than Mark's. In each account we find that Jesus was compelled to go to the wilderness by the Spirit to be tempted. (Luke first says that Jesus was full of the Spirit [Luke 4:1].) The wilderness should probably be understood negatively as a cursed place where demons dwell and so under the control of Satan (Isa 13:19-22; Ezek 34:25; Luke 11:24-28; 1QM 1). This means that by entering into the wilderness Jesus enters into the realm of Satan. Mark's statement "And he was with the animals" is comprehensible on the assumption that wild animals are sometimes placed in close association with demons (T. Issa. 7:7; T. Naph. 8:4; T. Benj. 5:2). Mark does not give any details concerning the nature of Jesus' temptations, unlike Matthew and Luke. Many exegetes assume that the authors of Matthew and Luke independently had access to so-called Q-source version of the Temptation Story, the only non-Markan version, so that one or the other changed the original order of Jesus' temptations. In the absence of proof for such a single document as the Q-source, it is more probable that each had access to a different version of the Temptation story, whatever form these took.
Jesus was in
tempted in three ways, and, in each case, responded by citing a passage
from the Torah
Jesus' temptations were Satan's attempt to cause Jesus to sin, which presumably would have disqualified Jesus as the Davidic Messiah. This raises the question of whether Jesus could have sinned? Based on the principle of analogy—judged by our own experience—he could have; but perhaps we cannot apply the principle of analogy to Jesus in every case, because Jesus in some respects was not like us.
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