who lived his message. Not only his words, but also his whole life was a protest. Three things about him marked the reality of his protest against contemporary life.
(a) There was the place in which he stayed – the wilderness. Between the centre of Judaea and the Dead Sea lies one of the most terrible deserts in the world. It is a limestone desert; it looks warped and twisted; it shimmers in the haze of the heat; the rock is hot and blistering and sounds hollow to the feet as if there was some vast furnace underneath; it moves out to the Dead Sea and then descends in dreadful and unscalable precipices down to the shore. In the Old Testament it is sometimes called Jeshimmon, which means The Devastation. John was no city-dweller. He was a man from the desert and from its solitudes and its desolations. He was a man who had given himself a chance to hear the voice of God.
(b) There were the clothes he wore – a garment woven of camel’s hair and a leather belt about his waist. So did Elijah (2 Kings 1:8). To look at the man was to be reminded, not of the fashionable orators of the day, but of the ancient prophets who lived close to the great simplicities and avoided the soft and comfortable luxuries which kill the soul.
(c) There was the food he ate – locusts and wild honey. It so happens that both words are capable of two interpretations. The locusts may be the insects, for the law allowed them to be eaten (Leviticus 11:22–3); but they may also be a kind of bean or nut, the carob, which was the food of the poorest of the poor. The honey may be the honey the wild bees make, or it may be a kind of sweet sap that distils from the bark of certain trees. It does not matter what the words precisely mean. In any event John’s diet was of the simplest.
So John emerged. People had to listen to a man like that. It was said of Thomas Carlyle that ‘he preached the gospel of silence in twenty volumes’. Many come with a message that they themselves deny. Many who possess comfortable bank accounts preach about not laying up treasures upon earth. Many extol the blessings of poverty from comfortable homes. But in the case of John, the man was the message, and because of that people listened.
(2) His message was effective because he told people what in their heart of hearts they knew and brought them what in the depths of their souls they were waiting for.
(a) The Jews had a saying that ‘if Israel would only keep the law of God perfectly for one day the kingdom of God would come’. When John summoned men and women to repentance he was confronting them with a decision that they knew in their heart of hearts they ought to make. Long ago Plato said that education did not consist in telling people new things; it consisted in extracting from their memories what they already knew. No message is so effective as that which speaks to a person’s own conscience, and that message becomes well-nigh irresistible when it is spoken by someone who obviously has the right to speak.
(b) The people of Israel were well aware that for 300 years the voice of prophecy had been silent. They were waiting for some authentic word from God. And in John they heard it. In every walk of life the expert is recognizable. A famous violinist tells us that no sooner had Toscanini mounted the rostrum than the orchestra felt his authority flowing over them. We recognize at once a doctor who has real skill. We recognize at once speakers who know their subject. John had come from God, and to hear him was to know it.
(3) His message was effective because he was completely humble. His own verdict on himself was that he was not fit for the duty of a slave. Sandals were composed simply of leather soles fastened to the foot by straps passing through the toes. The roads were unsurfaced. In dry weather they were dust-heaps; in wet weather rivers of mud. To remove the sandals was the work and office of a slave. John asked nothing for himself but everything for the Christ whom he proclaimed. The man’s obvious self-forgottenness, his patent yieldedness, his complete self-effacement, his utter lostness in his message compelled people to listen.
(4) His message was effective because he pointed to something and someone beyond himself. He told men and women that his baptism drenched them in water, but one was coming who would drench them in the Holy Spirit; and while water could cleanse the body, the Holy Spirit could cleanse a person’s life and self and heart. The Glasgow minister Dr G. J. Jeffrey had a favourite illustration. When he was making a telephone call through the operator and there was some delay, the operator would often say, ‘I’m trying to connect you.’ Then, when the connection had been effected, the operator faded out and left him in direct contact with the person to whom he wished to speak.
John’s one aim was not to occupy the centre of the stage himself, but to try to connect men and women with the one who was greater and stronger than he; and they listened to him because he pointed, not to himself, but to the one whom we all need.
THE DAY OF DECISION
Mark 1:9–11
In those days Jesus came from Nazareth in Galilee and was baptized by John in the Jordan; and as soon as he came up out of the water he saw the heavens being riven asunder and the Spirit coming down upon him, as a dove might come down; and there came a voice from heaven, ‘You are my beloved Son; I am well pleased with you.’
TO any thinking person the baptism of Jesus presents a problem. John’s baptism was a baptism of repentance, meant for those who were sorry for their sins and who wished to express their determination to have done with them. What had such a baptism to do with Jesus? Was he not the sinless one, and was not such a baptism unnecessary and quite irrelevant as far as he was concerned? For Jesus the baptism was four things.
(1) It was the moment of decision. For thirty years he had stayed in Nazareth. Faithfully he had done his day’s work and discharged his duties to his home. For a long time he must have been conscious that the time for him to go out had to come. He must have waited for a sign. The emergence of John was that sign. This, he saw, was the moment when he had to launch out upon his task.
In every life there come moments of decision which may be accepted or rejected. To accept them is to succeed; to reject them, or to shirk them, is to fail. As the American poet, J. R. Lowell, in a poem entitled ‘The Present Crisis’, had it:
Once to every man and nation comes the moment to decide
In the strife of Truth with falsehood, for the good or evil side;
Some great cause, God’s new Messiah, offering each the bloom or blight,
Parts the goats upon the left hand, and the sheep upon the right
And the choice goes by for ever ’twixt that darkness and that light.
To each of us there comes the unreturning decisive moment. As Shakespeare expressed it in the words of Brutus:
There is a tide in the affairs of men,
Which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune;
Omitted, all the voyage of their lives
Is bound in shallows and in miseries.
The undecided life is the wasted life, the frustrated life, the discontented life and often the tragic life. As John Oxenham saw it when he wrote ‘The Ways’:
To every man there openeth
A way and ways and a way;
The high soul treads the high way,
And the low soul gropes the low,
And in between on the misty flats,
The rest drift to and fro.
The drifting life can never be the happy life. Jesus knew when John emerged that the moment of decision had come. Nazareth was peaceful and home was sweet, but he answered the summons and the challenge of God.
(2) It was the moment of identification. It is true that Jesus did not need to repent from sin; but here was a movement of the people back to God; and with that Godward movement he was determined to identify himself. It is possible to possess ease and comfort and wealth and still to identify with a movement to bring better things to the downtrodden and the poor and the ill-housed and the overworked and the underpaid. The really great identification is when people identify with a movement,