By Johann Peter Lange
Edited by Rev. Marcus Dods
THE HISTORICAL DELINEATION OF THE LIFE OF JESUS.
THE PUBLIC APPEARANCE AND ENTHUSIASTIC RECEPTION OF CHRIST
SECTION I
the public testimony of the
Baptist to Christ before the
Jewish rulers
WHILE Jesus was fighting in the
wilderness with the temptation
which met Him under the form of
the distorted Messianic hopes of
His age, and in this victorious
conflict developed the course of
His Messianic work, the same
hopes induced the Sanhedrim at
Jerusalem to send a deputation
to John the Baptist. John had
made a powerful impression, not
only on the people in general,
but also on their leaders, the
Pharisees, many of whom, as we
have already noticed, were so
carried away by the popular
enthusiasm as to submit to his
baptism. Gradually a more
distinct judgment had been
formed in the Sanhedrim
respecting the unquestionable
importance of so extraordinary a
theocratic undertaking. They had
arrived at the conviction, that
a man who, on good grounds,
could venture to subject the
nation to such a purification,
which implied a previous
excommunication, must be either
the Messiah Himself, or one of
His forerunners who was
announced as Elias by the
prophets, or the prophet
promised by Moses (Deu 18:15;
Joh 1:25). But if the Baptist by
his course of action, set forth
such extraordinary claims, it
was an official duty on the part
of the Sanhedrim to take
cognizance of it, and to come to
a clear understanding with him.
Accordingly this body resolved
on sending a deputation to him,
which consisted, as a matter of
course,1 of priests and Levites.
To the priests was entrusted the
sanctioning of religious
purification, which included the
observance of the laws relative
to ablutions,2 so that those who
were sent on this occasion might
be regarded as duly qualified
commissioners. They were very
properly accompanied by Levites,
who served in part as an honourable escort, and in part
to act, if need be, as a
hierarchical police force,
should John not be prepared to
show his credentials.3 And now,
if the deputation accomplish
their object, the Baptist must
be recognized as one of the
great prophets of the Messianic
advent, or exposed as a false
prophet. But the Jewish national
spirit in the high council would
be completely misunderstood, and
its members would be turned,
against their own will, into
Roman senators, if we supposed
that they were averse to the
announcement of the Messiah
under every condition. Yet such
a judgment has been rashly
formed, from the circumstance
that, at a later period, the
Baptist was not acknowledged by
them, and that Jesus was
absolutely rejected; while it
should be borne in mind that it
was precisely by
chiliastic-political motives
that the Sanhedrim were
determined to this course of
conduct (see vol. i. p. 385). It
could not therefore be the
primary aim of this deputation
to dispute the claims of the
Baptist; it may rather be
supposed that they were actuated
by chiliastic excitement.
From the account of the
Evangelist John, we see that the
deputation must have intimated
to the Baptist that he would
very likely announce himself as
the Messiah. The Sanhedrim, as
we have seen, must have regarded
his baptism as a phenomenon of
the commencing Messianic ĉon,
and in a character who
spiritually moved and carried
with him the whole nation, they
might find a claimant to the
Messianic dignity.5 Now it is
evident that a question which
assumed the possibility that the
Baptist might be the Messiah was
a great temptation to him. And
thus John was tempted at the
same time as Jesus. The
Evangelist has indicated the
force of the temptation by the
words, ‘He confessed, and denied
not, but confessed, I am not the
Christ’ (Joh 1:20).6
But the Baptist likewise gave a
negative to the question whether
he was Elias. How could he do
that, since it was undeniable
that Malachi had announced the
forerunner of the Messiah under
this designation? This
declaration of the Baptist seems
also to clash with the language
of Christ, who at a later period
told His disciples that in the
person of the Baptist they might
see that Elias who was to
precede the Messiah (Mat 11:14;
Mat 17:10-13). But Zacharias,
the father of John, distinctly
understood by the revelation of
the angel that this
identification of Christ’s
forerunner with Elias was to be
taken in a spiritual sense (Luk
1:17). And in the knowledge of
this fact lay the reason of the
Baptist’s negative to the
question. He was actuated,
doubtless, by the same motives
as those which induced the Lord
in the wilderness to reject the
Messianic programme of His time
as it was presented to Him. In
the same proportion as the image
of the Messiah or of the King
was distorted into a carnal one,
would be the image of His
forerunner; or even in a still
higher degree, inasmuch as this
misrepresentation was carried to
the length of expecting the
return literally of the ancient
prophet Elias. When, therefore,
the Jews asked him, Art thou the
Elias of the Messianic advent?
the question probably meant, Art
thou that Elias who was
translated to heaven, returning
at the founding of a new ĉon?
And taking it in this sense,
John answered, ‘No!’ and in
saying that, he did not deny
that he was the Lord’s
forerunner in the spirit and
power of Elias, for that was
testified by his whole life, by
his daily ministry. Under
similar circumstances, Christ
expressed Himself even with more
caution and reserve. He avoided
the misinterpretation of His
Messianic calling, without the
risk of fostering the opposite
error, that He disowned all
claim to be regarded as the
Messiah.7
Lastly, the Baptist answered in
the negative the inquiry of the
deputation, whether he was ‘The
Prophet’ (ὁ προφήτης), namely,
that particular prophet whom the
Jews, according to the promise
of Moses, expected before the
beginning of the new era. For
this he had still greater
reason, because such a
representation of this Prophet
had not become a general
definite expectation among his
nation. The genuine children of
the theocratic spirit referred
the passage to the Messiah
Himself (Act 3:22). Now, if the
Baptist also received this
exposition, as must be admitted,
the question in this sense would
be a repetition of the first
question, which he had already
met with a negative. But others
expected, according to the same
passage, that one day Jeremiah
would return and take part in
the renovation of the theocracy.
By others, again, Joshua was
pointed out as the person to be
expected.8 It is quite plain
that John could not give assent
to preconceptions of this kind.
But though some persons in
Israel had regarded the Prophet
simply as the forerunner of
Christ, John could not admit
that this was the meaning of the
official inquiry addressed to
him; hence he gave a most
decided negative also to this
question. Thus, then, John
repelled three tempting
questions, which were animated
by the same spirit as the three
temptations which Christ
conquered in the wilderness.
It has been thought surprising
that the deputation asked the
Baptist whether he was ‘the
Prophet,’ after putting the
question to him whether he was
the Christ or Elias. If it were
possible to consider the Prophet
as identical with Christ, or
with Elias, in both cases the
question had already been
settled. But probably the
deputation already entertained
one of those views which were
developed more distinctly in the
latter Jewish traditions;
probably they understood
Jeremiah by ‘the Prophet,’ and
in that case the question was
perfectly necessary. But even on
the opposite supposition, if
they held ‘the Prophet’ to be
identical with Elias or with the
Christ, still they knew not what
the Baptist on his part thought
on this point. Hence this third
question was unavoidable, and
its insertion marks the
diplomatic exactness of the
authorities, and indirectly the
historical fidelity of the whole
narrative. But if we view the
series of questions in relation
to their final object, we shall
find that they are very
carefully arranged. Was John,
for instance, the Messiah, then
his warrant for baptizing was
placed beyond all doubt; was he
the second Elias, it would stand
equally firm; was he, lastly,
‘the Prophet,’ still its
validity would be allowed.
When the deputies from the
Sanhedrim pressed the Baptist to
declare at last who he was, he
answered them: ‘I am the voice
of one crying in the wilderness,
Make straight the way of the
Lord, as said the prophet Esaias’
(40:3). As Christ veiled His
Messianic call in the most
spiritual designation, which was
diametrically opposed to the
carnal enthusiasm of His nation,
by calling Himself the Son of
Man, so the Baptist chose the
most delicate and spiritual
characteristic of the
forerunner, as he found it in
the prophet Isaiah. That voice
of one crying in the wilderness
was primarily the theocratic
presentiment, incorporating
itself in prophecy, of the
return of Israel from exile, as
it would be accomplished under
the spiritual guidance of
Jehovah. But the Baptist rightly
saw the highest fulfilment of
that passage in the Israelitish
presentiment of the advent of
the Messiah, which had formed
itself into a voice in his
person.9 Yet the Jewish mind was
not in a state to discover the
deeper and more spiritual
references of the Old Testament
Scriptures, and on that account
this interpretation was not
received in the schools of the
scribes. Hence the deputation
took no notice of the positive
declaration of the Baptist, and
now asked him in the form of a
reprimand, ‘Why baptizest thou
then?’ This ministration
appeared to them an unallowable
undertaking if he could not
substantiate his claim to either
of the titles adduced.10 But John
felt his ground; he answered
firmly, ‘I baptize;’ but when he
added, ‘with water,’ he passed a
judgment on his baptism which he
set in opposition to the
judgment of the Sanhedrim. To
them, this ritual observance
appeared of extraordinary
importance; to him, on the
contrary, it appeared of
extraordinary insignificance,
because the vastly superior
agency which the Messiah would
shortly exert was always present
to his thoughts. But while he
depreciated his own baptism, he
also justified its use, by
announcing to the deputation
that the Messiah was already
nigh at hand. Even now He is in
your midst, and ye know Him
not—even Him who cometh after
me, and yet was before me.11 So
mysteriously and yet so
distinctly did the Baptist speak
of the Messiah, while he also
had a feeling of the discrepancy
between the expectations of His
people and the character of Him
who was about to appear. The
Messiah had become a public
character for His people, and
therefore had come into their
midst, when He accredited
Himself to the person who was
appointed by God to announce His
appearance. But when the Baptist
designates the personage who was
to come after him as ‘He who was
before him,’ he expresses the
essential priority or princely
dignity of Christ, His essential
precedence to himself in the
kingdom of God. Such a twofold
relation exists even in the case
of a common herald. The herald
outwardly hastens on before the
prince, but the prince possessed
his dignity before him, and made
him a herald, and, according to
the privilege of his rank, the
prince preceded him. The herald
is the outward forerunner of the
prince, but the prince is the
spiritual forerunner of the
herald. But if the Baptist had
the full impression that in his
calling he was entirely
regulated by the higher calling
of Christ, that his dignity was
derived from Christ’s dignity,
and if he declared that Christ
had this priority in the
theocracy, he expressed at the
same time the essential priority
of Christ in the eternity of
God; for the one is not without
the other. We have not here to
examine how clearly and
comprehensively he thus
developed, theologically, the
eternal existence of Christ. But
without doubt he was already
more certain of the eternal
existence of his own inferior
personality in God, than many
theologians are certain of the
eternal existence of Christ.
John knew that Christ in His
spiritual essence had exerted
His agency throughout the Old
Testament dispensation, and was
undoubtedly the King of Israel.
Hence he declared that he was
not worthy to loosen His
shoe-latchet. He was willing to
vanish, with all his works,
before the glory of the Lord,
and with this feeling he
dismissed the deputation from
Jerusalem, who were so destitute
of the fitting presentiments as
to regard his water-baptism as
the greatest event of the times.
We have already seen how
extremely improbable it is, that
the deputation should not be
anxious to have an exact
description of the outward
appearance of a personage whom
the Baptist had thus magnified,
and how much it accorded with
the duty of the Baptist to give
them such a description. Hence
we may confidently assume that
the deputation returned with
highly raised expectations,
after receiving such an account
of the person and presence of
the Messiah. It is an important
circumstance, that this
conference took place at
Bethany, on the other side
Jordan, where John was then
baptizing; so that the
deputation must needs return
home through the wilderness, in
which John was tarrying.
In the meantime, it was quite a
matter of uncertainty what
judgment the Sanhedrim would
form in the sequel respecting
John. That judgment would now
depend on the question, what
relation the Sanhedrim would
assume towards Jesus. As soon,
therefore, as a collision took
place between the spirit of that
body and the spirit of Christ,
as, according to the view we
have taken, must have happened
at the close of Christ’s
temptation in the wilderness,
the Jewish authorities would
come to a rupture with the
Baptist. But since the people,
and even many members of their
own body, had already done him
homage, it suited their policy
to conduct themselves towards
him, and to express their
opinion respecting him, with the
greatest reserve. Yet they were
not able to conceal the
contradiction which existed
between their earlier personal
homage and their later official
reserve. The Lord could reproach
with unbelief towards John, men
who at one time resorted to the
Jordan (Luk 7:33). If,
therefore, the Evangelists
appear to contradict one another
when in one place they report
(Mat 3:7) that many Pharisees
came to John, and in another
that the Pharisees and scribes
were not baptized of him (Luk
7:30), a real and striking fact
is exhibited in a very
characteristic manner. The
ambiguous position which the
Jewish rulers occupied in
relation to the question whether
John was a prophet, was founded
on the constant embarrassment
they felt, owing, on the one
hand, to John’s decisive
testimony to Christ, and, on the
other, to the decisive opinion
of the people in favour of John.
Hence Christ, towards the close
of His career, when they
questioned His authority,
probably to execute the
purification of the temple, with
the most wonderful sagacity
proposed to them a
counter-question, and showed
that He saw into the very depths
of their evil conscience,—the
question whether the baptism of
John rested on divine authority,
or was an arbitrary human
institution (Mat 21:24). They
confessed their inability to
answer the question—a confession
most disgraceful to the tribunal
they formed—rather than they
would express a decision either
for or against the Baptist; a
proof how completely they were
non-plussed by the question of
Jesus. The fact that the Jewish
rulers never ventured to form an
official judgment respecting the
Baptist, confirms in a very
significant manner the account
of the Evangelist John, that the
Baptist had, by a solemn
testimony, directed the people
through their rulers to Christ,
and that Christ expressly
appealed to this testimony (Joh
5:33, &c.) But since John
testified so publicly of Christ,
he linked His fate with his own;
and Herod Antipas probably
considered the outrage he
committed on the stern preacher
of repentance as greatly
favoured by the circumstance
that his authority had not been
supported by the Sanhedrim.
───♦───
Notes
1. Von Ammon, in his Geschichte
des Lebens Jesu (i. 261),
remarks, ‘Full freedom of
opinion and of public speaking
prevailed among the Israelites
as long as the fundamental
doctrines of the law were not
endangered, as we find also
among Christians in the time of
Paul at Corinth (1Co 14:29). If,
on the other hand, a Chakam or
Rabbi indulged in attacks on the
Mosaic theocratic constitution,
the Lesser or Greater Sanhedrim,
and the high-priestly board
especially, was authorized to
interfere constitutionally, and
to call the innovating teacher
to account respecting his
authority for such proceedings (Vitringa,
De Synagogâ vetere, p. 866).
This was done by the Great
Sanhedrim in the case of Jesus,
and previously in reference to
the Baptist.’
2. The fact of the testimony of
the Baptist to Jesus is disputed
by the latest critics. Weisse
even thinks that true faith in
the divine revelation in Christ
requires most peremptorily a
deviation from the letter of the
Gospel narrative in reference to
this testimony. Strauss adduces
a series of reasons for setting
aside this testimony. First of
all, the later sending of the
Baptist to Christ. This we shall
consider in its proper place. A
real difficulty brought forward
also by others is the question,
why the Baptist still continued
to baptize, and why he did not
rather join himself to Jesus?
But this question has weight
only as long as the significance
of John’s baptism is not clearly
understood. John could not
venture to cease purifying the
old Israelitish congregation for
the Church of the Messiah, as
long as any unbaptized persons
resorted to him. His attachment
to Christ, therefore, was
evinced by remaining at his
post, and by fulfilling the
vocation given him by God as the
labour of his life. As all the
other Israelites who were
believers in Christ were not
called to join themselves to Him
as disciples in the more special
sense, so neither was this the
case with John. Rather would he
have been unfaithful to his
christological calling, had he
relinquished his baptismal
office. It is further alleged
that John, on his ‘contracted
stand-point,’ was unable to form
a conception of that higher one
which Jesus occupied (i. 377).
Here again the author constructs
a psychology at his own hand.
This time he sets out on an
assumption of ethical
pitifulness, owing to which men
on lower stand-points cannot
help making mistakes when they
look up to a man who stands
higher than themselves. We are
here reminded of the self-denial
with which Farel implored Calvin
to remain at Geneva,12 and the
earlier judgments of Erasmus on
Luther, and other similar facts.
Even Bodmer’s behaviour towards
Klopstock and Wieland’s judgment
on Göthe (Weisse, i. 271, and
Ebrard) may be here adduced. In
the history of modern
philosophy, the author might
indeed believe he could find
vouchers for his canon. But the
assumption was quite false, that
the ethical ability of humanity
is to be estimated according to
that individual philosopher.
Further on we meet with the
well-known quick evolutions of
sophistical dexterity (p. 379).
‘According to Mat 11:2 and Luk
7:18, John sends two disciples
to Christ with the doubting
inquiry whether He was the ἐρχόμενς,
while according to the fourth
Gospel he directed likewise two
disciples to Him, but with the
definite assertion that Jesus
was the ἀμνὸς Θεοῦ, &c.’ The
reader can supply the et cetera
in the well-known style of this
writer. As to the relation of
the Baptist to Jesus generally,
Strauss defines it in a manner
which has drawn forth the
following remark from Kuhn (das
Leben Jesu, i. 223):-‘In order
to convict the synoptical
representation of a legendary
character, it is assumed that
the Baptist and Jesus were not
acquainted with one another at
an early period; in order to set
aside St John’s representation
as unhistorical, the very
opposite is assumed, that the
two men were well acquainted
with one another in early life.
This I call a splendid specimen
of critical art, which (as
Lichtenberg playfully tells
Philadelphia), to speak without
bragging, goes far beyond the
miraculous; indeed, so to speak,
is absolutely impossible!’ As to
the supposition that the Baptist
and Jesus were early acquainted
with one another, Strauss thus
expresses himself: ‘John allows
the Baptist to make rather the
opposite assertion, but only
because another interest, the
one just noticed, preponderated
in his mind.’
3. Bethany on the other side
Jordan is to be distinguished
from the Bethany not far from
Jerusalem. Origen, as Lücke
remarks, has altered it to
Bethabara, against all, or
almost all, the manuscript
authorities.13 ‘It may be
admitted that the place, as was
often the case, had two names of
similar meaning—Beth-abara,
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1) [Lampe quotes from Maimonides: ʻSyucdriorum pars maxima ex Sacerdotibua constitit et Levitis.ʼ—ED.] 2) Lev. xiii. and xv. 3) The ground of suspicion which Weisse has taken against the truth of the narrative from the phrase ‘priests and Levites,’ is changed by a clear view of Israelitish relations into a ground of credence, ‘This point has already been satisfactorily settled by Lücke and Ebrard, and barely deserves a passing notice. 4) [Nulla adsunt vestigia, quie ex mera invidia aut impediendi studio prognatam esse legationem suadeant. Honorifica per se erat.” Lampe in Joun., i 407.—ED.] 5) ‘This disposes of what Strauss has remarked (i. 388) against the probability of such an inquiry. 6) [On which Augustin says: In eo probata est humilitas ejus, quia dixit se non esse, cum posset credi esse.’ Tract in Joan., iv. 8.—ED.] 7) Among other passages, that in John xviii. 34 proves how carefully the Lord avoided all misinterpretation relative to the Messianic title. 8) See Lücke's Commcntar über das Evany, des Jvhannes i. 386. 9) This passage is the first proof that references to typical prophecy in the Old Testament occur in John as well as in Matthew. 10) [Τοιαύας εἶχον παρὰ τῶν διδασκάλων ἑαυτῶν παραδόσεις, ὡς μόνοις ἐκείνοις ἐξήν βαπτίζειν, i.e, to the Christ, Elias, and that prophet. Ammonius in Catena.—ED.] 11) The words ὃς ἔμπροσθέν μου γέγονεν are wanting in several manuscripts, Lücke conjectures that they were taken from the parallel passages, vers. 15,30. Lachmann considers the reading as doubtful; the connection of the passage favours their retention, To the mysterious assertion, ‘He is in your midst, and ye know Him not,’ the other corresponds: ‘He cometh after me, and yet was before me.’ The unknown and manifested One of the people is the follower and predecessor of the Baptist. [Tischendorf, Meyer, Tholuck, and Alford reject the words.] 12) [See Kirchhofer's Life of Farel (Religious Tract Society, 1837), p. 136 ; Henry's Leben Johann Calvins, Hamburg, 1835, i. 161. TR.] 13) [Alford gives Origen's defence of the alteration, and exposes its weakness. Stanley, however, follows Origen (Sinai and Palestine). ED.] 14) [As Meyer remarks, however, this etymology will scarcely do for Bethany on the Mount of Olives. ED.]
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