1.
Selective Bibliography
2. Josephus' Portrayal of John the Baptist
3. John the Baptist in the Synoptic Gospels
3.1. John as Preacher of Repentance before
Impending Eschatological Judgment
3.1.1. Mark 1:4; Luke 3:3; see
Matt 3:2, 6
3.1.2. Matt 3:7-10 = Luke 3:7-9
3.1.3. Luke 1:76-77
3.2. The One Who Comes After
3.2.1. Mark 1:7 = Matt 3:11;
Luke 3:15-16a (see John 1:26-27)
3.2.2. Matt 3:11b-12 = Luke
3:16b-17; Mark 1:7-8
4. John the Baptist as Elijah in the Synoptic Gospels
4.1. Elijah as Eschatological Figure
4.1.1. Old Testament
4.1.2. Second-Temple Texts,
New Testament and the Mishnah
4.2. Synoptic Gospels
4.2.1. Mark 1:2-3; Matt 3:1-3
= Luke 3:2b-4 (5-6); Matt 11:7-10, 13-15 = Luke 7:24-28
4.2.2. Mark 9:11-13 = Matt 17:10-13
5. John the Baptist in the Gospel of John
5.1. John 1:6, 15, 24-34
5.2. John 3:22-30
5.3. John 1:20-23
6. Death of John the Baptist
6.1. Sources
6.1.1. Josephus (Ant.
18.119)
6.1.2. Mark 6:17-29 (= Matt
14:3-12)
6.1.3. Luke 3:19-20
6.2. Reason for John's Execution
1.
Selective Bibliography
.D.C. Allison, "Elijah Must
Come First," JBL 103 (1984) 256-58; L.F. Badia, The Qumran
Baptism and John the Baptist's Baptism, 1980; J. Becker, Johannes
der Täufer und Jesus von Nazareth, 1972; W.H. Brownlee, "John
the Baptist in the New Light of Ancient Scrolls," Interpretation
9 (1955) 71-90; J. Ernst, Johannes der Täufer: Interpretation—Geschichte
—Wirkungsgeschichte, 1989; S. von Dobbler, Das Gericht
und das Erbarmen Gottes, 1988; M.M. Faierstein, "Why Do the Scribes
Say that Elijah Must Come First?" JBL 100 (1981) 75-86; P. Hoffmann,
Studien zur Theologie der Logienquelle (3d ed., 1981, 15-33;
Paul W. Hollenbach, John the Baptist, ABD 3:887-99; J. Hughes,
"John the Baptist: the Forerunner of God Himself" NovT
14 (1972) 191-218; C. H. Kraeling, John the Baptist, 1953); R.
Laufen, Die Doppelüberlieferungen der Logienquelle und des Markusevangeliums,
1980, 93-125; J.P. Meier, A Marginal Jew, vol. 2, Mentor,
Message and Miracles, 1996) chaps 12-13 (Part One); B.F. Meyer, The
Aims of Jesus, 1979, chap. 6; H. Merklein, Die Gottesherrschaft
als Handlungsprinzip. Untersuchung zur Ethik Jesu, 1981, 142-46;
B. Reicke, "The Historical Setting of John's Baptism," in Jesus, the
Gospels and the Church, ed. E.P. Sanders, 1987, 209-24; M. Reiser,
Jesus and Judgment, 1997, 167-93; C. Scobie, John the Baptist,
1964); J.E. Taylor, The Immerser: John the Baptist within Second-Temple
Judaism, 1997; Michael Tilly, Johannes der Täufer und die
Biographie der Propheten, 1994; R. Webb, John the Baptizer and
Prophet: A Socio-Historical Study, 1991; W. Wink, John
the Baptist in the Gospel Tradition, 1968); W. Zager, Gottesherrschaft
und Endgericht in der Verkündigung Jesu, 1996, 128-36.
2.
Josephus' Portrayal of John the Baptist
Before exploring John the Baptist
and his role in salvation-history in the gospels, it should be noted that
there exists a reference to John the Baptist in Josephus' Antiquities
(18.116-118).
| But
to some Jews the destruction of Herod's army seemed to be divine
vengeance, and certainly a just vengeance, for his treatment of
John, surnamed the Baptist. For Herod had put him to death, though
he was a good man and had exhorted (keleuonta) the Jews to
lead righteous lives (areten epaskousin), to practice justice
towards their fellows and piety towards God (ta pros allelous
dikaiosune kai pros ton theon eusebeia chromenois), and so doing
to join in baptism. In his view this was a necessary preliminary
if baptism was to be acceptable to God. They must not employ it
to gain pardon for whatever sins they committed, but as a consecration
of the body (hagneia tou somatos) implying that the soul
was already thoroughly cleansed by righteousness. |
Although he
often accommodates his language to Hellenistic thought in his description
of Jewish theological beliefs, thereby causing some distortion of meaning,
Josephus seems to give an accurate description of the content of John's
message. Probably only John's alleged distinction between the cleansing
of the "soul" and the "body" is so Hellenized as to need paraphrasing
into more Semitic expression. Josephus makes four points about
John's message.
- John exhorted Jews to begin
to live righteous lives towards one another and towards God. In other
words, John preached the necessity of what Jews referred to as repentance
(teshuvah), the turning from sin to obedience to the Law.
- John required that those
who responded to his exhortation to undergo an immersion in water (baptism).
- John insisted that the
cleansing of the "soul" resulted from the repentance and not from baptism.
As indicated, this manner of expression is Josephus' accommodation to
his non-Jewish readership. What he means by the "cleansing of
the soul" is the forgiveness of sins, which he insisted was conditional
upon repentance and not baptism.
- John's interpretation of
the baptism that he required Jews to undergo was that it was a "consecration
of the body," seeing that the "soul" was already cleansed by means of
repentance. Probably, by the "consecration of the body," Josephus is
referring to ritual lustration. If so, in his view, John offered the
possibility of both forgiveness and ritual purity.
In
contrast to that of the gospels, Josephus' description of John's message
lacks an eschatological dimension. Nothing is said of a imminent eschatological
judgment or of John's role as precursor to the one greater than he, whose
sandals he is not worthy to untie, and one who will baptize with the spirit
of holiness. Either not everyone in the first century—including
Josephus—viewed John the Baptist as an eschatological figure or,
more probably, Josephus suppressed this dimension of John's message. Any
reference to John the Baptist as preacher of eschatological jugdment and
as precursor of an eschatological figure who would bring judgment would
have been detrimental to Josephus' apologetic aim of portraying Jews as
good citizens of the Roman empire in light of the recent Jewish revolt,
which ended in the destruction of Jerusalem and the Temple.
|
Jordan
River
The Jordan
River is the longest and most important river in Palestine.
Beginning in foothills of Mt. Hermon, the Jordan River flows southward
through the Sea of Galilee and eventually empties into the Dead
Sea, some 394 m. below the level of the Mediterranean Sea. During
its course to the Dead Sea, the Jordan River drops about 915 m.
It seems that John the Baptist baptized in more than one place along
the Jordan. In John 3:23 he baptizes near Aenon, near Salim and
in John 1:28, it is said that he baptizes on the east side of the
Jordan River near Bethany or Bethabara (see 10:40). |
Question
What is Josephus'
description of the message of John the Baptist?
3. John the Baptist in the Synoptic Gospels
The four canonical gospels
take no interest in John the Baptist for his own sake, but for the sake
of Jesus. In them John the Baptist is portrayed as a preacher of repentance
in light of an impending eschatological judgment and also as the precursor
of one greater than he. There are several important units of tradition
in the synoptic gospels relating to John the Baptist.
3.1. John
as Preacher of Repentance before Impending Eschatological Judgment
3.1.1. Mark
1:4-5; Luke 3:2-3; Matt 3:2, 6
| Mark
1:4-5 4
And so John came, baptizing in the wilderness and preaching a
baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins. 5 And all the
country of Judea was going out to him, and all the people of Jerusalem;
and they were being baptized by him in the Jordan River, confessing
their sins.
|
Luke
3:2-3 2
In the high priesthood of Annas and Caiaphas, the word of God
came to John, the son of Zacharias, in the wilderness 3 He went
into all the country around the Jordan, preaching a baptism of
repentance for the forgiveness of sins. |
Matt
3:2, 6 2
And saying, "Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is near."
6
Confessing their sins, they were baptized by him in the Jordan
River.
|
According to
Mark 1:4 and Luke 3:3, John the Baptist preached "a baptism of repentance
for the forgiveness of sins" (baptisma metanoias eis aphesin hamartiôn).
In other words, John preached the possibility of forgiveness of sins
on the condition of repentance; the reception of this offer of forgiveness
was expressed symbolically by submitting to being dipped in water (the
Jordan River) by John. This accounts for why John received the epithet
"the baptizer" or "the dipper." So it is explained that Jews
from Judea and Jerusalem submitted to being baptized by John while
confessing their sins (Mark 1:5; Matt 3:6). In this historical
context, what is meant by baptism is immersion in the water, in particular,
the Jordan River. (That John actually immersed those seeking baptism
from him is implied by the statement that after being baptized Jesus
"came up out of the water" [Mark 1:10; Matt 3:16].) The connection
between repentance and forgiveness was familiar to Jews of the second-Temple
period (see Repentance
as Condition of Forgiveness).
It is clear that John would not be understood as saying that baptism
functioned ex opera operato, so that by simply submitting to
being immersed in the Jordan River sufficed to bring about forgiveness.
The connection between forgiveness and being immersed in water derives
from the fact that in the Old Testament ritual cleansing is frequently
used metaphorically for moral cleansing (Ps 51:6-11; Isa 1:16-17; Ezek
36:25). (For use of the metaphor of washing with water to convey the
idea of eschatological cleansing from sin, see Ezek 36:25-29a; Isa 4:3-5;
1QS 4.19-22.) John exploits this metaphorical association, and uses
immersion in water as a symbol for the forgiveness that the people received
on the condition of repentance. But it should be noted that John may
understand being immersed in water, not just as symbolic of forgiveness,
but as a means of ritual purification, as Josephus implies. So what
John was offering the people may have been both forgiveness and ritual
purification.
| The Torah
requires ritual lustrations to removal impurity (e.g. Num 19).
In the second-Temple period, the Essenes practiced regular ritual
lustration before common meals (War 2.129; see also CD
10.10-13). Josephus makes mention of his ascetic teacher Bannus
who used "frequent ablutions of cold water, by day and night,
for the sake of purity" (Life 11). In general, Jews
of this period practiced regular ritual lustration (see, for example,
m. Miq.; m. Par.). Not surprising, the
mikveh (ritual bath) was a feature in many houses in Jerusalem
from the Herodian period (see Meir Ben-Dov, In the Shadow
of the Temple, 150-53). Parallel to John's practice, ritual
lustration seems to have been part of the initiation process into
the Essene community (1QS 3.4-9), which also included, of course,
repentance. Those who entered the community received atonement
and ritual purity: "purified by atonement...cleansed by waters
of purification" (3.4). The members of the community regularly
practiced ablution in order to become ritually pure and qualified
to "touch the purity of the men of holiness," i.e.,
eat the common meal (5.13). Likewise, in Sib. Or. 1.165-67,
the admonition to seek forgiveness and atonement through repentance
occurs in tandem with the exhortation to ritual ablution in "perennial"
rivers. According to Josephus, John's baptism was intended to
effect ritual purity, on the assumption that "the
soul was already thoroughly cleansed by righteousness."
This affirmation
is possible and the fact that nothing is
said of baptism as a ritual lustration in Mark 1:4 and
Luke 3:3 may be an omission, since the gentile church had no interest
in such a distinctly Jewish idea (see Heb 6:2). It more more likely,
however, that John is making use of the metaphorical connection
between ritual cleansing and moral cleansing. |
Different from
Mark 1:4-5 and Luke 3:3, Matt 3:2 states that John also preached the
nearness of the Kingdom of Heaven. So John's message is very similar
to that of Jesus in Mark 1:15: "The time is
fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand; repent and believe in
the gospel." For this reason, some scholars accuse the author
of Matthew or the tradition on which he is dependent of historical anachronism.
But this conclusion does not necessarily follow, since John's call to
repentance certainly implies that the time of eschatological salvation,
or the Kingdom of Heaven, has drawn near. Finally, it should be noted
that by choosing to preach in the wilderness John may be exploiting
the idea that the wilderness as the place of God's eschatological deliverance
in Hos 2:14-15: "Therefore, behold, I will
allure her, bring her into the wilderness and speak kindly to her"
(Mark 1:4; Matt 3:1; Luke 3:2) (see Hos 12:9; Micah 7:15; see also the
other example of the Egyptian in Josephus, War, 2.26163).
Repentance
as Condition of Forgiveness
John's
claim that God would forgive the repentant would have been accepted
without dispute by most Jews of the second-Temple period. In
the Old Testament,
the individual is promised forgiveness on the condition of repentance
(Ezek 33:14-16; Isa 55:7). In the second-Temple period, repentance
became the principal and indispensable condition by which divine
forgiveness was obtained for the individual. Thus, for the unrepentant,
the one who refuses to abandon his wickedness, forgiveness was
impossible, because forgiveness was conditional upon repentance.
The private, expiatory sacrifices of the wicked--those without
repentance--were of no avail (see Sir 34:19; m. Yoma 8:9; Sipra
Lev Nedabah parasha 2.3; see Hosea 6:6; Prov 21:27).
For the repentant, on the other hand, any violation of
the Torah could be forgiven. In fact, repentance alone could
expiate (Sir 17:24-25, 29; 18:21; Pss. Sol. 3:7-8; 9:5-7).
No longer was there seen to exist a class of unforgivable violations
of the Torah, although the distinction was still made between
those that were intentional and those that were unintentional
(m. Ker.; Ant. 3. 230-32; Spec. Laws
1. 226-38; Tobit 3:3; Pss. Sol. 3:7-8; 13:7; 1QS 9.
1; Sir 18:11-12). (M. Ker. 1:1 even lists the
thirty-six classes of violations of the Torah that lead to extirpation.)
This meant that the repentant would not be cut off from this
world and the world to come for one (or more) intentional sins
(see Jos. Asen. 11:18, Pr Man 11-14; Pss.
Sol. 9:6-7; 1QS 11:11-14; 1QH 4:30; 11; 12; 13; 16; Sipre
Num 15:31 [112.4]; m. Sanh. 6:2; Mek.
Bahodesh 7 [Exod 20:7-11]). That God would forgive men
like Judah and Reuben of acts that were liable to extirpation
was explained on the assumption that these men had repented
(Jub. 33:15; 41:23-24; Sipre Deut 6:4 [31];
33:5-6 [347]). According to the early rabbis, even blasphemy
could be forgiven with repentance, although it could only be
forgiven in death; the blasphemer would not, nonetheless, bear
the consequences of the act into the next life (see m. Sanh.
6:2; Sipre Num 15:31 [112.4]; Mek. Bahodesh
7. 1-55 [Exod 20:7]; Sipre Num 2 170). The Day
of Atonement was interpreted explicitly by many as the means
by which all violations of the Torah in a given year, including
those that were specified as resulting in extirpation, could
be expiated, again on the condition of repentance (see Jub.
5:17-18; 34:19; m. Sebu. 1:6; m. Yoma 8:6-9;
Sipra Lev Ahare parasha 2.4 [16:6]; pereq 8.1-2 [16:30];
Abot. R. Nat. 39).
The Qumran sectarians
likewise believed that God would forgive all who repented. IQS
3.7 says, "It is by a spirit of holiness
of the community in his [God's] truth that he is cleansed from
all his iniquities. It is by an upright and humble spirit
that his sin can be atoned." Atonement occurs by
means of "a spirit of holiness" (3.7) which is synonymous with
"an upright and humble spirit" (3.8). In other words,
atonement occurs when a person enters the community and comes
under the influence of a principle of obedience, which naturally
leads to repentance, the turning from sin towards obedience
to the Torah. In response to repentance God atones for sin.
This "spirit of holiness," or "upright and humble spirit" is
also synonymous with "a spirit of the true counsel of God" (3.6b),
which is likewise said to atone for iniquity: "For
by the spirit of the true counsel of God are the ways of man—all
his iniquity—atoned" (3.6b-7a). The notion that
repentance atones is also found in 3.9b-11: "May
he establish his steps for walking perfectly in all of God's
ways...and not transgress a single one of his commands.
Then he will accepted by a soothing atonement before God and
it shall be unto him a covenant of the eternal community."
When he turns from sin and obeys God's commands perfectly, a
man "will be accepted by a soothing atonement before God." Repentance
should probably be understood as causally related to being accepted
by God; it functions, in other words, as the soothing atonement. |
3.1.2.
Matt 3:7-10 = Luke 3:7-9
| Matt
3:7-10 7
But when he saw many of the Pharisees and Sadducees coming to
where he was baptizing, he said to them: "You brood of vipers!
Who warned you to flee from the coming wrath? 8 Produce fruit
in keeping with repentance. 9 And do not think you can say to
yourselves, 'We have Abraham as our father.' I tell you that out
of these stones God can raise up children for Abraham. 10 The
axe is already at the root of the trees, and every tree that does
not produce good fruit will be cut down and thrown into the fire.
|
Luke
3:7-9 7
John said to the crowds coming out to be baptized by him,
"You brood of vipers! Who warned you to flee from the coming wrath?
8 Produce fruit in keeping with repentance. And do not begin to
say to yourselves,
' We have Abraham as our father.' For I tell you that out of these
stones God can raise up children for Abraham. 9 The axe is already
at the root of the trees, and every tree that does not produce
good fruit will be cut down and thrown into the fire."
|
According to
this pericope from the double tradition (Matt 3:7-10 = Luke 3:7-9),
John speaks ominously of "the coming wrath," by which he means eschatological
judgment. (Both Matthew and Luke insert this non-Markan pericope into
the same place in the Markan framework.) He expresses this metaphorically
as the axe being ready to cut down every tree that does not bear fruit
(see Isa 10:33-24; Sir 6:2-3; 23:25; Wis 4:3-5). It is possible
that John is alluding to the metaphor of Israel as God's planting, which
occurs in the Old Testament and in the Second-Temple period (Isa
60:21; 61:3; 1 Enoch 93:5, 10; Jub. 16:26; Ps.
Sol. 14:3-5; LAB 28:4).
This metaphor has positive connotations: God as attentive and solicitous
towards the nation ensuring its growth and well-being. To describe the
Israel or individual Jews within the nation as about to be cut down
with an axe is a startling reversal of the metaphor (see Amos 2:9; Zech
11:2). John sees his role as a preacher of repentance as that of preparing
his generation for eschatological judgment, which lends an urgency to
his message, since there is a time limit on the possibility of repentance.
(The absolute use of "wrath" also occurs in
Isa 13:3; Sir 48:10; 1 Enoch 5:9; 1QH 11.27-36; Ps. Sol.
15:4-5.) The repentance
of Israel before the eschaton is foretold in the Hebrew prophets, so
that John probably saw his role as effecting this repentance (Isa 59.20;
Hos 3.4-5; see also Jub. 1.15, 23). (As indicated, this eschatological
context of John's offer of forgiveness on the condition of repentance
is lacking in Josephus' account.) Because of his preaching of a imminent
eschatological judgment, John was interpreted by the people as a prophet
(Matt 14:5; Mark 11:32 = Matt 21:26 = Luke 20:6). Also it should be
noted that John's warning of judgment is not addressed to the nation
as whole but to individual Jews, similar to what is found sometimes
in the Hebrew prophets (Jer 6:13; 10:15, 19; 32:19; Ezek 33:1-18). For
this reason he cautions his hearers not to presume upon the covenantal
promises made to Abraham ("We
have Abraham as our father"),
because these apply only to the nation. The individual within the nation
will be judged strictly and impartially, according to his or her actions.
This is implied in his statement, "Out
of these stones God can raise up children for Abraham."
The point is that nationality
will not guarantee salvation from the wrath to come. In effect, he makes
a distinction among Jews between the righteous and the wicked, as was
common among many Jews; the wicked Jew is no better off than the wicked
gentile. Perhaps this is John's prophetic midrash on Isa 51:1-2a "Look
to the rock from which you were hewn and to the quarry from which you
were dug. Look to Abraham your father."
| Some argue
that John the Baptist and Jesus agree in conceiving all Jews of
their generation as having forfeited any right accruing from the
covenants with the forefathers because of their sins. This is the
anthropological premise of Jesus’ proclamation. This means
that Jesus like John assumes that all Jews are sinners and that
there are no genuinely righteous Jews in the first century (see
Merklein, Jesu Botschaft von der Gottesherrschaft, 27-36; Die
Gottesherrschaft als Handlungsprinzip. Untersuchung zur Ethik Jesu
Gottesherrschaft,
127-28, 142-49; S. von Dobbler, Das Gericht und das Erbarmen
Gottes, 75-76; ,Becker, Johannes der Täufer und Jesus
von Nazareth, 21-22; 33; id., Jesus of Nazareth, 53-58;
73-80; Weder, Gegenwart und Gottesherrschaft, 47-48; Giesen, Herrschaft
Gottes—heute oder morgen?, 24-25, 56-57. It seems more
likely that both were speaking to individuals within Israel and
warning of coming judgment, but without making the assumption that
all Jews living at that time are under the judgment of God. Like
other Jews, both John and Jesus do not assume that by virtue of
being a descendent of Abraham and therefore heir of the covenant,
a Jew is guarateed of a positive outcome at eschatological judgment.
There is a shift of emphasis from the nation to the individual.
Besides, it is unlikely that a second-Temple
Jew would ever hold that Israel’s covenantal status could
ever be revoked permanently, although individual Jews could certainly
be disqualified as recepients of the covenantal promises. |
John teaches that to be able to stand before God at the time of eschatological
judgment a Jew must have fruit in keeping with repentance. In fact,
for John the fruit is the repentance. For this reason, he condemned
some who came for baptism but did not show the works consistent with
their alleged repentance. John's offer of forgiveness was conditional
upon repentance, so that the one who had not turned from sin and, therefore
was unforgiven, would be founding wanting at eschatological judgment.
(In Luke 3:10-14, John gave concrete prescriptions to different groups
concerning what the works worthy of baptism were.) (The Hebrews prophets
called the nation to repentance either as a condition of escaping looming
judgment or in relation to judgment already experienced [Jer 3:22-23;
18:8; 26:3-5; Zech 1:3-4; Mal 3:7].) That John was successful in bringing
Jewish sinners to repentance is implied in a later statement of Jesus:
"For John came to you in the way of righteousness
and you did not believe him; but the tax collectors and prostitutes
did believe him; and you, seeing this, did not even feel remorse afterward
so as to believe him" (Matt 21:32).
Eschatological
Judgment
The Hebrew
prophets sometimes speak of the eschatological judgment of God
using the term "day of Yahweh" or a synonym (IIsa
2:12-22; 6:11; 10:3-4, 13; 13:6, 9; 34:4, 8; Jer 46:10; Ezek
7:3, 8, 19; 30; Amos 5:18-20; Obad 1:15; Joel 2:2; Zeph 1:2-2:3;
Zech 12-14; Mal 3:2-3; 4:1, 2) (see also references to the Messiah's
function as judge in Isa 11:3-5). The expectation of eschatological
judgment, however, becomes a fixture in many second-Temple texts.
In 1 Enoch 1.1-9, impending universal judgment is announced,
whereas in 2-5 the "obedience" of nature is set in
contrast to the disobedience of sinners (1
Enoch 1-5). Those who have nothing to fear at the Great
Judgment are “the righteous elect” (1.1), a group sometimes
referred to as “the righteous” or “the elect.” These designations
denote the same group of people, those who are obedient to God.
Those who ought to fear the day of judgment are the ungodly
(1.1), for God, accompanied by ten thousand holy ones
(angels), “will destroy all the ungodly and convict all flesh
of the works of their ungodliness" (1.9). In the Animal Apocalypse,
at the appointed time, God ("the lord of the sheep")
will strike the world with "the staff of his wrath,"
bringing judgment to the wicked and deliverance to the righteous
(1 Enoch 90:18). In the so-called Letter of Enoch (part
of 1 Enoch), Enoch utters his exhortations and woes
on the basis of the revelations received in a vision (93.2;
see also 91.1-3, 18). The content of Enoch’s heavenly wisdom
is that, contrary to popular opinion, there will be a final
judgment when the righteous will be vindicated and rewarded,
while the wicked will be punished. This time of eschatological
reversal and retribution is called the “the day of the great
judgment” (94.9; 98.10; 99.15), “the day your destruction” (96:8a),
“the day of your judgment” (96:8b; 98.8), “that day of judgment”
(97.3), “the days of your judgment” (97.5 [B C]). The author’s
opponents, however, deny that there are rewards and punishments
after death (102.6-8), which could be interpreted to mean that
they did not believe in a post-mortem final judgment or that
they are not the sinners, who will be punished at the final
judgment.
In Jub.
23, the renewed nation will successfully fight the eschatological
war against the gentiles (see also 24:30), leading to peace
and rejoicing (23:29), after which God will bring judgment on
the enemies of the people (23:30) (see also Jub. 9:14-15;
36:10). In Jub. 24:28, 30the author refers to the "day
of wrath and anger" and "the day of the wrath of judgment"
when the Philistines will be judged by means of the Kittim.
Likewise, in 36:10a eschatological judgment is described as
"the day of turmoil and execration and idignation and wrath"
when God will destroy with fire will destroy his land and his
city. Judgment will also be meted out eschatologically on the
basis of what was recorded in the heavenly tablets concerning
all moral beings, both angels imprisoned in depths of the earth
and human beings (5.10-16). In Jub.
24:33 it is said that the heavenly tablets that record the moral
actions of human beings will be used as the basis of eschatological
condemnation on the day of judgment (see 22.22 and 16.9). Similarly,
in 36:10b, Jacob warns his sons, Jacob and Esau, that if either
breaks his oath he will be not be written in the book of life,
but the book in which the names of those destined for destruction
are written (36:10).
According
to T.
Moses
10, at the eschaton the kingdom of God will appear throughout
all of creation, and the devil will have
an end and along with him sorrow. The Heavenly One will arise
and bring vengeance upon the nations, destroying their idols.
It also appears that Israel will be exalted to a heavenly habitation
while the judgment is being carried out (see T. Moses
1:18).
In Psalms of
Solomon, the righteous will be raised and inherit to eternal
life, whereas destruction awaits the wicked. In 2.31,
the author speaks God's raising him up to glory, a possible
reference to bodily resurrection, but God's "putting to sleep
the arrogant for eternal destruction in dishonor because they
did not know him" (2:31). In another psalm, the author
explains that there will come a time when God will "look upon"
the righteous, by which is meant that he will be merciful to
them and vindicate them in judgment. At this time, the sinner
will be destroyed and no longer remembered; this is the share
of sinners forever (3.11-12). The ones who fear the Lord, however,
"will be raised up to eternal life" (3.12). Along the same lines,
the author of Ps. Sol. 15 explains that sinners will
be destroyed "when God looks upon the earth with judgment" (15.12b),
which, in this context, is idiomatic for the time of final judgment.
The ones who fear the Lord, however, shall will "receive mercy"
in this day, and "will live by God's mercy forever" (5.13a).
Finally, in Ps.
Sol.
14.9-10, the final destiny of sinners "is Hades, darkness and
destruction" (14.9). These sinners "will not be found in
the day of the mercy for the righteous" (14.9b), which is time
of the vindication of the righteous at God's judgment; at that
time also the righteous "will inherit life in joy" (14.10; see
also 12.6).
The Qumran community,
composed of Essenes, anticipated a time of judgment (the "visitation
of God"). The "visitation" of those walk in "the spirit of truth"
will be "healing, great peace with many days, progeny with blessings
forever, eternal joy in everlasting life etc.” (1QS 4.6b-8).
On the other hand, while the "visitation" of those who walk
in "the spirit of deceit" will be destruction (4.11-14); God
has set an end to the existence of deceit, when at the appointed
time he will destroy it eternally (4.18-19). Likewise, 4QTestament
of Naphtali (4Q215) describes the advent of the eschatological
age (Frag. 2), when the age of wickedness will come to an end:
"For the age of wickedness has been completed and all evil will
pas[s away]" (2.3-4). Presumably, with the removal
of sin will come the removal of sinners. The age of wickedness
will yield to "the time of righteousness" (2.4), also called
"the age of peace" (2.5). In 1QM 1.1-17, God and his angels
are said to be allies with the sons of light in the final battle
with the sons of darkness, the army of Belial: "For
this will be the day determined by him since ancient times for
the war of extermination against the sons of darkness"
(1.10). Like John, the Qumran sectarians connected their teaching
of the need for repentance to impending eschatological judgment,
although for them it was not so imminent as for John.
In 4 Ezra, at the
final judgment human beings, in spite of being spiritually handicapped
by the evil heart, will be judged on the basis of their works
(6.18-19; 7.17, 19-21, 33-44, 70-101; 8.33; 9.10). There
will be no possibility of intercession for the wicked on the
day of judgment (7.102-11): “Everyone shall bear his own
righteousness or unrighteousness” (7.105). Likewise, in 2 Baruch
it is revealed to Baruch that there will be a final judgment
of all human beings, which will be coincidental with the appearance
of the Messiah (30.1-5). In these days, the books will be opened
in which are written all the sins of those who have sinned (24.1);
the wicked will be condemned because of their transgressions
against God's Law, and be punished accordingly (30.1-5; 44.15;
48.45-47; 51; 54.14-15, 20-22; 55.1-3; 59.2; 78.6; 83.8) The
righteous, on the other hand, are destined to be rewarded for
their obedience (14.13; 15.7-8; 30.1-5; 44.7-13; 48.48-50; 51;
54.4-5; 59.2). They are described as having a store of
good works preserved in treasuries (14.12-13; 24.1); these will
commend the righteous at the final judgment. The merit
of the righteous is attributed to their faith, which is assumed
to issue in bedience to the Law (54.4-5, 16, 20-22). |
3.1.3.
Luke 1:76-77
| 76
And you, my child, will be called a prophet of the Most High;
for you will go on before the Lord to prepare the way for him,
77 to give his people the knowledge of salvation through the forgiveness
of their sins. |
In the Song
of Zechariah (Luke 1:57-80), John is situated in salvation-history as
the one who would prepare the coming of the Lord, to bring the possibility
of forgiveness, which is equated with knowing salvation (1:76-77).
|
Mikveh
This mikveh
(ritual bath of purification) is located south of the old city walls
in Jerusalem and dates from the second-Temple period. Jews would
cleanse themselves from ritual impurity in a mikveh in order to
be qualified to enter the Temple (see Lev 14, 15; Num 19). One would
enter the mikveh thorugh one entrance and exit it through the other. |
3.2.
The One Who Comes After
In Mark and the
double tradition (Matthew and Luke), there are two sayings concerning
one who will come after John the Baptist. John does not identify the one
who is to come after him, so that it is unclear who this person is supposed
to be. A prime candidate for this person, however, would be the Davidic
Messiah, for according to expectation he would rule Israel and carry out
the judgment of God on the nations and Jewish sinners (see
Eschatological Davidic King).
(Of course, the synoptic gospels implicitly assume that Jesus is the one
who comes after John.) In these passages John says two things about the
one who will come after him.
3.2.1.
Mark 1:7 = Matt 3:11; Luke 3:15-16a (see John 1:26-27)
Matt
3:11b
But
after me will come one who is more powerful than I, whose sandals
I am not fit to touch. |
Mark
1:7
And
this was his message: "After me will come one more powerful than
I, the thongs of whose sandals I am not worthy to stoop down and
untie."
|
Luke
3:16b
But one more powerful than I will come, the thongs of whose sandals
I am not worthy to untie. |
In Mark 1:7
= Matt 3:11 = Luke 3:16a, John subordinates himself to one who will
come after him, expressed by the idea of John's not being worthy to
touch or untie this one's sandals. (The removal of a sandals from a
person's feet was the task of a slave.) John's salvation-historical
role is to offer his generation the possibilty of forgiveness on the
condition of repentance in the face of impending eschatological judgment.
In this way he would prepare the people for the coming of this eschatological
figure (see the eshatological promise in Isa 59.20).
| Some have
argued that, when he spoke about the one who comes after him, John
the Baptist was not referring to the Davidic Messiah but to another
eschatological figure, possibly the son of man or the archangel
Michael / Melchizedek. Such attempts reject John 1:24-34 as historical
(see below). Based on references to him in second-Temple texts,
the son of man is often judged to be the best candidate for John's
coming one. In the Similtudes of Enoch the son of man is primarily
a great and majestic judge operating as God's eschatological agent
(see 1 Enoch 46:6; 49:2-3; 52; 61:8-13; 69:29). (Some identify
the son of man with Michael.) The early church is supposed to have
"christologized" the older John-tradition and substituted
Jesus (interpreted as the Davidic Messiah) for the one whom John
actually had in mind as coming after him, thereby leading to the
identification of Jesus with the future son of man. (The compiler
or author of the hypothetical Q-source is sometimes assumed to make
this historical alteration.) It is, however, unjustifiably skeptical
to conclude that John could not have interpreted Jesus as the Messiah
and viewed him as destined to fulfil the role that he attributes
to the one who comes after him. Other exegetes interpret John's
coming one as God himself (Mal 3:2 "day of Yahweh"). Evidence
for this is that in the Old Testament God as coming judge is often
portrayed as coming with fire (Isa 30:27-30; 66:15-16; Zeph 1:14-2:3;
Mal 3:1-4:6) and it is God himself who will give his spirit to Israel
as the eschaton (Isa 44:3; Ezek 37:14; 39:29; Joel 3:1-2). But this
interpretation seems improbable since John would hardly have to
insist that God as the coming one was stronger than he was, and
to speak about untying God's sandals seems bizarrely inappropriate.
It is
claimed that sandals is an anthropomorhism derived from Ps 108:10
("Moab is my washbowl; over Edom I shall throw my sandal"),
but this is unconvincing. |

Sandal from Qumran
Site
|
Ancient
Sandal
Sandals,
with soles of the "soleae" style, are made of three
layers of leather held together with leather bindings. There were
two tabs on the upper part of the sandal with slits in them and
another tab on the upper part near the two with a slit also. A
strap was threaded through the three slits and tied at the tab
near the toe. To remove the sandal required untying the strap..
|
3.2.2.
Matt 3:11a,c-12 = Luke 3:16a,c-17; Mark 1:8
| Matt
3:11a,c-12
11a
I baptize you with water for repentance....11c He will baptize
you with a spirit of holiness and with fire. 12 His winnowing
fork is in his hand, and he will clear his threshing floor, gathering
his wheat into the barn and burning up the chaff with unquenchable
fire." |
Luke
3:16a,c-17
16a
John answered them all, "I baptize you with water....16c He will
baptize you with a spirit of holiness and with fire. 17 His winnowing
fork is in his hand to clear his threshing floor and to gather
the wheat into his barn, buthe will burn up the chaff with unquenchable
fire." |
| Mark
1:8 I
baptize you with water, but he will baptize you with a spirit
of holiness." |
According
to Mark 1:8, John explains that the one who comes after him will "baptize,"
not with water, but with "a spirit of holiness." In Matt 3:11b-12 =
Luke 3:16b-17, a pericope from the the double tradition that both Matthew
and Luke insert into the Markan framework in the same place, John says
that the one who comes after him will baptize in "a
spirit of holiness and with fire." (Matthew
uses the title "the coming one" probably indicating an eschatological
figure [3:11].) The giving of the spirit of holiness was part of Jewish
eschatological expectation;
in John's teaching, the fulfilment of this eschatological promise will
come through the mediation of the one who comes after him. The reception
of the spirit of holiness will make disobedience impossible, since a
spirit of holiness is an eschatological principle of obedience. But
the one who comes after John will also bring fire, a symbol of eschatological
judgment. The image seems to be that of a river of fire into which unrepentant
Jews will be immersed. The idea is
also expressed by the metaphor of the separation of wheat and chaff
by means of a winnowing fork. The separated chaff, which is worthless,
will be burned up (see the use the metaphor of chaff in Job 21:18; Ps
1:4; 35:5; Isa 17:13; 29:5; Hos 13:3). (Reiser argues that the word
achura does not mean "chaff," which blows away in the
wind, but the pieces of straw, which, when winnowed, falls into a pile
some distance away from the pile of grain [Jesus and Judgment,
176-80].) (For the use of fire as a metaphor of judgment in biblical
and second-Temple sources, see
Ezek
30:14-16; Joel 2:3; Obad 18; Nahum 1:6; Mal 4:1; 1QpHab
10.13; 1QH 11.24-31;
4.3-4; 1 Enoch 102.1; Ps. Sol. 15.4-5). In second-Temple
expectation, the eschaton would be both a time of salvation and judgment.
Only those who have repented and have received forgiveness on the condition
of that repentance will be eligible for eschatological salvation; the
rest will fall under the wrath of God. The one who comes after John
would the mediator of both salvation, the spirit of holiness, and eschatological
judgment.
| The term "spirit
of holiness," (or Holy Spirit) occurs infrequently in the Hebrew
Bible (Isa 63:11 [see Isa 63:14]; Ps 51:11), and never with the
meaning of eschatological principle of obedience. (The closest parallel
to the idea of the "spirit of holiness" as eschatological principle
of obedience is found in Ezekiel: the prophet proclaims that
God will give His people a new spirit [11:19; 36:26] and that He
will give them His spirit [36:27; see 37:14; 39:29].) The term “spirit
of holiness,” however, does occur in some Jewish texts from the
second-Temple period with the meaning of eschatological principle
of obedience. In this period, the promise of the giving of the Holy
Spirit (or better "spirit of holiness") is interpreted as God's
supplying Israel with an eschatological principle of obedience. In
other words, at the end, the time of Israel's final and definitive
salvation, God will so spiritually transform his people, that disobedience
to the Torah will henceforth be impossible. To have a spirit
of holiness is to have a God-given disposition to holiness; generally,
in these texts, spirit of holiness refers not to God as Spirit placed
in human beings but to a new human spirit or disposition that leads
to holiness created by God. (See Jub. 1.12-26; T.
Levi 18.10; 4Q504 [Words of the Luminaries] 5.15-16; 1QS [The
Rule of the Community] 3:6-8; 4.18-21; 9.3; 1QSb [Blessings] 1.2
1QH [Thanksgiving Hymns] 7.6-7; 16.) Because of its occurrence in
second-Temple Judaism, it is unnecessary to conclude that the phrase
"with a spirit of holiness" is a later Christian expansion
(see M. Reiser, Jesus and Judgment, 167-93). A reason put
forward to prove that the phrase "with a spirit of holiness"
is secondary is that without it there is an antithetical parallelism
between "I baptize you with water" and "He will baptize
you with fire." Such an argument assumes that the lack of parallelism
is an indication of inauthenticity, which is a very weak argument.
It must be noted that the idea of a future baptism with a spirit
of holiness also occurs in Mark 1:8. |
Question
What is the
message of John the Baptist according to the synoptic gospels and how
does it differ from Josephus' description of it?
4.
John the Baptist as Elijah
The unanimous
agreement of the gospels is that John the Baptist is the Elijah referred
to in Mal 4:5-6, but obviously not the literal Elijah. There is a "twist"
in the fulfilment of the prophecy.
4.1.
Elijah as Eschatological Figure
4.1.1.
Old Testament
Before the eschaton,
according to Mal 4:5-6, Elijah is to return in order to prepare the people
by reconciling the children to their fathers and fathers to their children,
so that they would be spared eschatological judgment: "See
I will send you the prophet Elijah before that great and dreadful day
of the Lord comes. He will turn the hearts of the fathers to their children,
and the hearts of the children to their fathers; or else I will come and
strike the land with a curse."
4.1.2.
Second-Temple Texts, New Testament and the
Mishnah
There are references
to the return of Elijah in second-Temple sources, the New Testament and
the Mishnah.
A. Wisdom of Jesus
b. Sirach 48:10: Mal 4:5-6 is interpreted in Sirach 48:10
literally as the actual return of Elijah, who was assumed to heaven, without
seeing death, many centuries earlier (2 Kings 2): "At
the appointed time, it is written, you [Elijah] are destined to calm the
wrath of God before it breaks out in fury, to turn the hearts of parents
to children and to restore the tribes of Jacob." (We should note
that Sirach includes the restoration of the tribes of Jacob in the eschatological
function of Elijah.)
B.
Sibylline Oracles 2:187-89: "Then the Thesbite
[Elijah], driving a heavenly chariot at full stretch from heaven, will
come on earth and then display three signs to the whole world, as life
perishes."
C. New Testament
Evidence that
Jews contemporary with John the Baptist and Jesus believed that Elijah
would return before the eschaton is found in the New Testament.
- Mark 6:15 = Luke 9:8:
In attempting to explain Jesus salvation-historically, some Jews propose
that he is Elijah: "But others were saying,
'He is Elijah'." To do so presupposes the belief that
Elijah would return before the eschaton.
- Mark 8:28; Matt 16:14;
Luke 9:19: Jesus asks his disciples about what people are saying about
who he is. Among the possibilities enumerated is that Jesus is Elijah:
"They told Him, saying, 'John the Baptist;
and others say Elijah; but others, one of the prophets'."
Some Jews take Jesus to be Elijah who would return before the eschaton.
- Mark 9:11 = Matt 17:11
The disciples ask Jesus, "Why is it that
the scribes say that Elijah must come first?" It would
seem that it was a common teaching among sages in the first century
that Elijah would come before the eschaton. The disciples ask Jesus
for his view on the issue.
- John 1:21 One of the questions
that John is asked is whether he is Elijah: "They
asked him, 'What then? Are you Elijah?" This question
no doubt presupposes that view that Elijah would return before the
eschaton.
D. M. Sotah
9:15: "And the resurrection of the dead shall
come through Elijah of blessed memory."
E. M. Eduyoth
8:7: According to the Sages, "Elijah will come
neither to expel or bring nigh, but to make peace in the world, as it
is said (Mal 4:5-6)." In other words, the Sages interpret Elijah's
ministry of reconciliation as bringing about world peace. In addition,
R. Joshua passes down
a tradition that "Elijah will not come to pronounce
unclean or declare clean, or who must be expelled or who must be received,
but to expel such [ineligible ones] that were received through violence
and to reinstate those who were removed by violence." Finally,
R. Simon
says, "Elijah will come to harmonize disputes."
F. M. Skeqalim
2.5: Uncertainty about what to do with excess money for the burial
of the dead must be put away until Elijah comes.
(It should be
pointed out that a late tradition in Pirke de-Rabbi Eliezer (43)
(quoting R. Judah) interprets Elijah's role in Mal 4:5 as bringing Israel
to the great [eschatological] repentance.)
4.2.
Identification of John with Elijah
4.2.1.
Mark 1:2-3; Matt 3:1-3 = Luke 3:2b-4 (5-6); Matt 11:7-10, 13-15 = Luke
7:24-28
A. Mark 1:2-3
| 2
It is written in Isaiah the prophet: "I will send my messenger ahead
of you, who will prepare your way" (Mal. 3:1) 3 "a voice of one
calling in the desert, 'Prepare the way for the Lord, make straight
paths for him' (Isa 40:3)." |
B. Matt 3:1-3 = Luke 3:2b-4
| Matt
3:1-3 In
those days John the Baptist came, preaching in the Desert of Judea
2 and saying, "Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is near." 3 This
is he who was spoken of through the prophet Isaiah:
"A
voice of one calling in the desert, 'Prepare the way for the Lord,
make straight paths for him.' (Isa 40:3)."
|
Luke
3:2b-6 2b
The word of God came to John son of Zechariah in the desert. 3
He went into all the country around the Jordan, preaching a baptism
of repentance for the forgiveness of sins. 4 As is written
in the book of the words of Isaiah the prophet: "A voice
of one calling in the desert, 'Prepare the way for the Lord, make
straight paths for him. 5 Every valley shall be filled in, every
mountain and hill made low. The crooked roads shall become straight,
the rough ways smooth. 6 And all mankind will see God's
salvation.' (Isa 40:3-5)" |
C. Matt 11:7-10, 13-15
= Luke 7:24-28
| Matt
11:7-10, 14-15 7
As John's disciples were leaving, Jesus began to speak to the
crowd about John: "What did you go out into the desert to see?
A reed swayed by the wind? 8 If not, what did you go out to see?
A man dressed in fine clothes? No, those who wear fine clothes
are in kings' palaces. 9 Then what did you go out to see? A prophet?
Yes, I tell you, and more than a prophet. 10 This is the one about
whom it is written: "'I will send my messenger ahead of you, who
will prepare your way before you.' (Mal 3:1)
14
And if you are willing to accept it, he is the Elijah who was
to come. 15 He who has ears, let him hear. |
Luke
7:24-27 24
After John's messengers left, Jesus began to speak to the crowd
about John: "What did you go out into the desert to see?
A reed swayed by the wind? 25 If not, what did you go out to see?
A man dressed in fine clothes? No, those who wear expensive clothes
and indulge in luxury are in palaces. 26 But what did you go out
to see? A prophet? Yes, I tell you, and more than a prophet. 27
This is the one about whom it is written: "`I will send my messenger
ahead of you, who will prepare your way before you.' (Mal
3:1)
|
John the Baptist
is interpreted in the light of Mal 3:1and Isa 40:3 in the synoptic gospels.
In Mark 1:2-3, prophecies in Isa 4:3 and Mal 3:1 are cited together
as being fulfilled in the appearance of John the Baptist, although the
author cites only the prophet Isaiah as the source of his quotation.
In one double tradition, only Isa 40:3 is cited as fulfilled by John
the Baptist, parallel to Mark 1:2-3 (Matt 3:1-3 = Luke 3:2b-4). (Actually,
Isa 40:3-5 is cited in Luke, not simply Isa 40:3.) In another double
tradition, a collection of Jesus' sayings about John (Luke 7:24-28 =
Matt 11:7-11), Jesus cites Mal 3:1 as being fulfilled by John the Baptist
(Matt 11:10 = Luke 7:27). The citation of Mal 3:1 in both Mark
and the double tradition should be interpreted as the implicit interpretation
of John as the eschatological figure of the prophet Elijah, since in
Malachi the one spoken of in Mal 3:1 is probably to be identified with
Elijah in Mal 4:5-6. In fact, in Matt 11:14, a saying unique to Matthew,
which he includes as one of the collection of Jesus' sayings about John
in Matt 11:7-15, Jesus explicitly identifies John the Baptist with Elijah,
after identifying him as fulfilling Mal 3:1; the assumption is that
Mal 3:1 refers to Elijah mentioned explicitly in Mal 4:5. John's appearance
as one preaching in the wilderness is also said to fulfill Isa 40:3.
The text as cited in the synoptic gospels (Mark 1:3; Matt 3:3 = Luke
3:4-6) agrees with the LXX, except for the change of "for our God" to
"for him."
John functions to prepare for the coming of the one whose sandals he is
not fit to untie, in fufilment of Isa 40:3; metaphorically, he removes
all "obstacles" for the historical appearance of this one ("Every
valley shall be exalted, and every mountain and hill brought low; the
crooked places shall be made straight, and the rough places smooth"
[Isa 40:4]). The chief "obstacle" that John must remove is Israel's
sin, for the eschatological revelation of the glory of Yahweh (Isa 40:5)
(what the Qumran community refer to as the "visitation" of God) will not
only bring eschatological salvation for the righteous, but also eschatological
judgment for the wicked. As the one whose voice is calling in the wilderness
(Isa 40:3), John's salvation-historical role, as Elijah, is to offer the
people forgiveness on the condition of repentance, in order to become
qualified for the soon-to-appear eschatological salvation (baptism with
the spirit of holiness) and thereby avoid eschatological judgment (see
Str-B I. 96-97 for evidence of rabbinic interpretation of Isa
40:3 as messianic). The practice of combining eschatological texts is
likewise found in 4QFlorilegium (4Q174) and 4QTestimonia (4Q175).
The members
of the Qumran community used Isa 40:3, interpreting it in relation
to themselves: they saw their community as the that which was preparing
the way of the Lord in the desert. The means by which they prepared
the way of God was through the study of the Law; this was the "path"
that they were making for God. Their study of the Torah was preliminary
to the soon-to-come eschatological judgment and salvation of God:
And
when these become members of the community in Israel according
to all these rules, they shall separate from the habitation of
ungodly men and shall go into the wilderness to prepare the way
of Him; as it is written, 'Prepare in the wilderness the way of
[ ], make straight in the desert a path for our God.' This (path)
is the study of the Law which He commanded by the hand of Moses,
that they may do according to all that has been revealed from
age to age, and as the Prophets have revealed by His Holy Spirit."
(1QS
8.12-16)
It is possible
that John the Baptist had connections with the Qumran community
(he also was in the desert) and at some point broke with them; he
then perhaps re-interpreted Isa 40:3 in terms of himself after the
word of the Lord came to him (see Luke 1:80). |
4.2.2.
Mark 9:11-13 = Matt 17:10-13
| Mark
9:11-13 11
And they asked him, "Why do the teachers of the law say that Elijah
must come first?" 12 Jesus replied, "To be sure, Elijah does come
first, and restores all things. Why then is it written that the
Son of Man must suffer much and be rejected? 13 But I tell you,
Elijah has come, and they have done to him everything they wished,
just as it is written about him."
|
Matt
17:10-13 10
The disciples asked him, "Why then do the teachers of the law
say that Elijah must come first?" 11 Jesus replied, "To be sure,
Elijah comes and will restore all things. 12 But I tell you, Elijah
has already come, and they did not recognize him, but have done
to him everything they wished. In the same way the Son of
Man is going to suffer at their hands." 13 Then the disciples
understood that he was talking to them about John the Baptist. |
The idea of
the identity of John the Baptist as Elijah is found in another Markan
tradition. Upon descending the mount of transfiguration, the disciples
express their puzzlement that the scribes (experts in the law) say that
Elijah must come first (before the Messiah). Jesus' response is to agree
that Elijah must come, but adds that Elijah has already come (implicitly
referring to John the Baptist), which is a another clear allusion to
Mal 4:5-6.
4.2.3.
Luke 1:17
| Luke
1:17 And
he will go on before the Lord, in the spirit and power of Elijah,
to turn the hearts of the fathers to their children and the disobedient
to the wisdom of the righteous—to make ready a people prepared
for the Lord." |
The angel of
the Lord says to Zechariah, John's father, that John will go before
the Lord in the spirit and power of Elijah. This is an explanation of
how John the Baptist can be called Elijah when he is not literally Elijah.
John wore
"clothing made of camel hair with a leather belt around his waist"
(Mark 1:6 = Matt 3:4). It is possible that his choice of
clothing was for the purpose identifying himself with Elijah in
the popular understanding, for Elijah is described as wearing
"a garment of hair and a leather belt around his waist" (2 Kings
1:8; see Zech 13:4). Josephus recounts how he spent three years
with a certain Bannus, who resembles John is several respects:
"When
I was informed that one, whose name was Bannus, lived in the desert,
and used no other clothing than grew upon trees, and had no other
food than what grew of its own accord, and bathed himself in cold
water frequently, both by night and by day, in order to preserve
his chastity"
(Life 11). Unlike John, Bannus does not seem to have viewed
himself as having a salvation-historical calling. |
Questions
What is the
eschatological role assigned to the prophet Elijah in Jewish expectation
and according to the gospels in what sense is John the Baptist the Elijah
who is to come?
5.
John the Baptist in the Gospel of John
5.1.
John 1:6, 15, 24-34
| 6
There came a man who was sent from God; his name was John.
15
John testifies concerning him. He cries out, saying, "This was
he of whom I said, 'He who comes after me has surpassed me because
he was before me.'"
24 Now some Pharisees who had been sent 25 questioned him, "Why
then do you baptize if you are not the Christ, nor Elijah, nor
the Prophet?" 26 "I baptize with water," John replied, "but among
you stands one you do not know. 27 He is the one who comes after
me, the thongs of whose sandals I am not worthy to untie." 28
This all happened at Bethany on the other side of the Jordan,
where John was baptizing.
29 The next day he saw Jesus coming to him and said, "Behold,
the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world. 30 This is
he on behalf of whom I said, 'After me comes a who has surpassed
me, because he existed before me.' 31
I did not recognize him, but in order that he might be manifested
to Israel, I came baptizing in water." 32 John testified
saying, "I have seen the Spirit descending as a dove out
of heaven, and he remained upon him. 33 I did not recognize him,
but he who sent me to baptize in water said to me, 'He upon whom
you see the Spirit descending and remaining upon him, this is
the one who baptizes in the spirit of holiness.' 34 I myself have
seen, and have testified that this is the Son of God." |
In the Gospel of John is
also found the tradition that John the Baptist expects one to come
after him who is his superior, expressed as his being unworthy to
untie his sandals (see Mark 1:7-8 = Matt 3:11-12; Luke 3:15-18). This
one will baptize in the spirit of holiness. (But nothing is said of
baptizing in fire etc..) Different from the synoptic gospels, however,
it is explicitly stated that John later recognizes Jesus as the one
who is to come after him when he sees the Spirit descend upon him
after his baptism. John explains that he was told that "He
upon whom you see the Spirit descending and remaining upon him, this
is the one who baptizes in the Holy Spirit." He calls
him the son of God; this title would have been understood by his contemporaries
to mean Davidic Messiah (see The
Son of God). Likewise absent from the synoptics, John also confesses
Jesus' pre-existence: "He
who comes after me has surpassed me because he was before me"
(1:15) and "After
me comes one who has surpassed me, because
he was before me" (1:30).
How John knew this and what he understood by being "before"
him is not stated.
5.2.
John 3:22-30
| 22
After this, Jesus and his disciples went out into the Judean countryside,
where he spent some time with them, and baptized. 23 Now John also
was baptizing at Aenon near Salim, because there was plenty of water,
and people were constantly coming to be baptized. 24 (This was before
John was put in prison.) 25 An argument developed between some of
John's disciples and a certain Jew over the matter of ceremonial
washing. 26 They came to John and said to him, "Rabbi, that man
who was with you on the other side of the Jordan--the one you testified
about—well, he is baptizing, and everyone is going to him."
27 To this John replied, "A man can receive only what is given him
from heaven. 28 You yourselves can testify that I said, 'I am not
the Christ but am sent ahead of him.' 29 The bride belongs to the
bridegroom. The friend who attends the bridegroom waits and listens
for him, and is full of joy when he hears the bridegroom's voice.
That joy is mine, and it is now complete. 30 He must become greater;
I must become less. |
This passage
relates a dispute between John the Baptist's disciples and Jesus' concerning
Jesus' increasing popularity. Some of John the Baptist's disciples saw
Jesus as a competitor; John's reaction is significant: he recognizes
that he must decline and that Jesus must increase. He has served his
purpose, that of preparing the way of one greater than he, the Christ.
5.3.
John 1:20-23
| 20
He did not fail to confess, but confessed freely, "I am not the
Christ. 21 They asked him, "Then who are you? Are you Elijah?"
He said, "I am not." "Are you the Prophet?" He answered,
"No." 22 Finally they said, "Who are you? Give us an answer to take
back to those who sent us. What do you say about yourself?"
23 John replied in the words of Isaiah the prophet, "I am the voice
of one calling in the desert, `Make straight the way for the Lord.'
(Isa 40:3)" |
In the Gospel
of John, John the Baptist denies that he is Elijah. But in
the synoptic gospels, as was seen, John the Baptist is identified with
Elijah. It seems that, in the Johannine passage, John's denial means
that he is not literally Elijah, in which case he would confuse
his hearers who apparently have not considered the possibility of a
non-literal interpretation of Mal 4:5 (3:1). John eventually identifies
himself as the one whose coming is foretold in Isa 40:3. This connects
with the tradition in the synoptics where the writers of the synoptic
gospels and Jesus see John the Baptist as the one to fulfil this prophecy;
in this case, however, it is John himself who sees himself as fulfilling
Isa 40:3.
Questions
How is John
the Baptist portrayed in the Gospel of John and does the portrayal of
John the Baptist in the Gospel of John differ from that in the synoptic
gospels? If so, how?
6.
Death of John the Baptist
6.1.
Sources
6.1.1.
Josephus (Ant. 18.119)
| Now when [many]
others came in crowds about him, for they were very greatly moved
[or pleased] by hearing his words, Herod, who feared lest the great
influence John had over the people might put it into his power and
inclination to raise a rebellion, for they seemed ready to do any
thing he should advise, thought it best, by putting him to death,
to prevent any mischief he might cause, and not bring himself into
difficulties, by sparing a man who might make him repent of it when
it would be too late. Accordingly he was sent a prisoner, out of Herod's
suspicious temper, to Macherus, the fortress I before mentioned, and
was there put to death. |
6.1.2.
Mark 6:17-29 (= Matt 14:3-12)
| 17 For Herod
himself had sent and had John arrested and bound in prison on account
of Herodias, the wife of his brother Philip, because he had married
her. 18 For John had been saying to Herod, "It is not lawful
for you to have your brother's wife." 19 Herodias had a grudge
against him and wanted to put him to death and could not do so; 20
for Herod was afraid of John, knowing that he was a righteous and
holy man, and he kept him safe. And when he heard him, he was very
perplexed; but he used to enjoy listening to him. 21 A strategic day
came when Herod on his birthday gave a banquet for his lords and military
commanders and the leading men of Galilee; 22 and when the daughter
of Herodias herself came in and danced, she pleased Herod and his
dinner guests; and the king said to the girl, "Ask me for whatever
you want and I will give it to you." 23 And he swore to her,
"Whatever you ask of me, I will give it to you; up to half of
my kingdom." 24 And she went out and said to her mother, "What
shall I ask for?" And she said, "The head of John the Baptist."
25 Immediately she came in a hurry to the king and asked, saying,
"I want you to give me at once the head of John the Baptist on
a platter." 26 And although the king was very sorry, yet because
of his oaths and because of his dinner guests, he was unwilling to
refuse her. 27 Immediately the king sent an executioner and commanded
him to bring back his head. And he went and had him beheaded in the
prison, 28 and brought his head on a platter, and gave it to the girl;
and the girl gave it to her mother. 29 When his disciples heard about
this, they came and took away his body and laid it in a tomb. |
6.1.3.
Luke 3:19-20
| 19 But when
Herod the tetrarch was reprimanded by him because of Herodias, his
brother's wife, and because of all the wicked things that Herod had
done, 20 Herod also added this to them all: he locked John up in prison. |
6.2.
Reason for John's Execution
The three sources
agree that Herod (Antipas) had John the Baptist put to death; they differ,
however, concerning the reason for his decision. (On the Markan account,
there must be a period of time between the giving of the order for John
to be executed and the delivery of his head on a platter to Herodias,
because Mark 6:21 should be taken to imply that the party was held in
Galilee and not at Machaerus. It would take few days at least for a soldier
to travel to Judea and bring back John's head.) Mark provides a detailed
account of how Herodias, the former wife of Philip, the brother of of
Herod Antipas and now the wife of the latter, conspired with her daughter,
Salome, to have John killed because he had criticized Herod Antipas for
marrying his brother's wife, an act contrary to the Law (Lev 18:16; 20:21).
Luke's phrase "because of Herodias" probably alludes to Mark's
longer account. Luke adds also "all the wicked things that Herod
had done," implying that John condemned him for other violations
of the Law. Herod Antipas was the son of Herod and Malthrace. He divorced
his first wife, the daughter of the Nabatean king Aretas IV (Ant.
18.109-12). The historical problem is that Josephus calls the first husband
of Herodias Herod, not Philip, as Mark does. He is son of Herod the Great
and Mariamme II, daughter of Simon the high priest (Ant. 18.109).
It is probable that this Herod also went by the double name Herod Philip,
so that he could be referred by either part of the double name. Thus,
the Philip identified in Mark's account is not Philip the tetrarch, but
this other half-brother. In his account of John's death, Josephus does
not seem to have any knowledge of the role that Herodias had leading up
to John's execution. He puts the blame on Herod Antipas himself, because
he feared that John's activities may lead to popular rebellion. It is
conceivable, however, that both factors contributed to Herod's decision
to execute John.
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Fortress
of Machaerus
The fortress
of Machaerus was constructed by Alexander Janneus, but was destroyed
by Gabinius in 57 BCE, then Roman proconsul of Syria. Herod the
Great rebuilt the fortress (War 7.163-89). Herod Antipas,
son of Herod the Great, imprisoned John the Baptist in the fortress
of Machaerus, and then had him beheaded there (Ant. 18.119;
Mark 6:14-20 = Matt 14:1-12; Luke 9:7-9). |
Question
Why did Herod
Antipas put John the Baptist to death?
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