You might be surprised to know
that Jesus did once attribute that distinction of greatness to a certain man. He
told his disciples, “I tell you, among those born of women there is no one
greater than John; yet the one who is least in the kingdom of God is greater
than he” (Luke 7:28).
Major celebrity
John the Baptizer was an
amazingly popular figure. Everybody in Jerusalem and people from all over the
Judean countryside went out to listen to him preach. But they didn’t just
listen—they responded; they confessed their sins and were baptized! Not only was
John popular, he was also successful.
For all his popularity and
success, though, John was strikingly different from the average man. Many people
respond to great popularity and success with a certain degree of pride and
swagger. But from the beginning, John the Baptizer was different.
‘Not about me’
Perhaps you have seen the
slogan, “It’s not about me.”
That was the root of John’s
message. He preached about someone else, someone who would come after him whose
sandal thongs John did not consider himself even worthy to tie.
John wasn’t interested in the
limelight. He wasn’t interested in the praise or admiration of others. He was
interested in preparing the way for someone else, and he didn’t let personal
ambition get in the way of doing his job well.
Free to be
John was a baptizer. Among the
preparations he made for the coming of Christ was the task of preaching a
baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins. It was into this kind of
baptism that the people listening to him entered.
Baptism was not an invention of
John, nor was it unique to the Israelites. From ancient times, baptism was a
well-known symbol, an outward sign, of a new spiritual birth, of entering into a
new form of life.
For those whom John baptized, it
marked their confession that they were sinners. When we admit we are sinners, we
are laying aside our human pride and confessing the truth of what we really are.
But we are not making that confession blindly. We are making it in the light of
the revealed knowledge that God loves us immeasurably, and that he has made
atonement for us in Jesus Christ.
In other words, because God has
revealed to us that he is for us, we are free in Christ both to fearlessly
acknowledge our sinfulness before God, and free to accept God’s gift of
atonement and his new creation of us in Jesus Christ.
We’re free to be who God has
already made us to be. Because we have met with the grace of God in Jesus
Christ, we can entrust ourselves to him fully and without reservation. Safe in
his love, we can give over to him even the crushing burdens of our darkest sins
and fears.
New creation
Within that confession of our
sinfulness is our recognition that we need God’s forgiveness. We admit that we
are rebels who have betrayed God’s love, and we place ourselves at his mercy,
having now renounced our rebellion and pledged faithful obedience.
But actually becoming that new
person, entering that new life, turning over that new leaf, is another question
entirely. When we try to do that, we find ourselves failing—fighting our old
ways, but losing so often we can easily fall into despair.
That is, unless we trust God to
be who he really is for us in Jesus Christ!
In Christ, we are a new creation
(see 2 Corinthians 5:17 and Galatians 6:15). And we are set free (Galatians
5:1)! God has freed us to be the new, redeemed, healed and complete persons he
has made us to be in Christ. We can use that gift of freedom to hear and obey
our heavenly Father, or we can reject it and continue to live as though God had
not made us his covenant partner, as though he had not made us the beloved
recipients of his overflowing grace in Christ (verse 13).
No longer must we live in
spiritual bondage, struggling in vain to grasp here and there a little respect,
dignity, security and love in this heartless world. No longer must everything in
life be about us and our anxieties about not getting all
the things we think we want. No longer must we live in opposition to God,
ourselves and our neighbor.
The Holy Spirit both gives us
ears to hear God’s command and provides us our new life in Christ. In that new
life provided by the Holy Spirit, we are free to choose to be the person in
Christ God has already chosen us to be. To do otherwise is not freedom, but a
return to bondage.
In Christ
All this repenting, believing
and passing through the waters of baptism have meaning only because God gives
them meaning. Only because the Son of God took the indescribable action of
becoming one of us—living sinlessly as one of us, dying on the cross as one of
us, being resurrected as one of us, ascending to and being received by the
Father as one of us—does any of it make any sense at all.
It makes sense because God, in
his divine freedom to be who he wants to be for our sakes, makes it make sense.
We are saved by God’s grace—his love, his utter faithfulness to his redemptive
purpose for the humanity he loves so much that in Christ he took humanity itself
into himself.
A lesson in humility
God was pleased to have all his
fullness dwell in Jesus Christ, and through Christ to reconcile to himself all
things in heaven and earth through Christ’s death (see Colossians 1:19-20).
That is the way God chose to
make us into a new creation. The Son of God took humanity into himself, and in
his perfect obedient sacrifice of love, he reconciled humanity to God. It is to
this God, the God who in immeasurable love humbled himself to take all our
burdens upon himself, including our ugliest sins, and turn us into a new and
beautiful creation in his Son, that we owe complete allegiance and obedience.
John’s ministry was a ministry
of humility. Baptism is an expression of humility. The Son of God humbled
himself to become one of us for our sakes. And the new life in Christ that is
given to us by our Creator and Redeemer is a life of humility.
It’s not about me. If it were
about me, what would I do? How can I heal my own past, my present and future?
How can I redeem my own faults, sins, betrayals and rebellion? How can I secure
my future or the future of those I care about?
No,
thank God, it’s not about me. It’s all about Jesus Christ, the Son of God
incarnate (in the flesh) for our sakes. He is the one who heals our personal
history, redeems our every dark sin, secures our future and gives us deep peace
and rest.