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 II
the testimony of john to the
dignity of Christ, uttered to
his disciples
The day after John’s temptation
Jesus returned to him from the
wilderness, where He also had
overcome the last and most
violent onset of His great
temptation. Both were animated
by a lively feeling of victory;
and John more than ever was in a
state of mind to understand the
suffering Messiah, since his own
soul was now enjoying the
blessedness of a verified
renunciation of the world. But a
presentiment of His victory on
the cross seemed to glorify the
whole being of Christ. In this
state of mind, and in the beauty
of the priestly spirit, He came
to the Baptist. How He greeted
him—what He announced to him—and
in general what passed between
them, the Evangelist does not
inform us.
But he narrates the impression
which Jesus at that time made on
the Baptist, and which the
latter probably communicated, in
whole or in part, to his
disciples in the presence of
Jesus. With deep emotion he
exclaimed, ‘Behold the Lamb of
God, that taketh away the sins
of the world!’ The same prophet
who, in the voice of one crying
in the wilderness, as spoken of
by the prophet Isaiah,
recognized the serious image of
his own life, now beheld with
equal clearness the tragical
image of the Messiah’s life in
the suffering Lamb of God
bearing the sins of men, as
spoken of by the same prophet.
The recognition of the one is
closely connected with that of
the other. The Baptist might
indeed have thought, when he
used this expression, of the
sacrificial lamb in the
Israelitish worship, as it must
have been present to the
prophet’s mind. But no doubt his
expression is founded
immediately on the language of
the prophet. As he had derived
from the prophet the information
respecting himself-that he was
to be heard as a voice in the
wilderness—so he had learned
respecting Christ, that He was
the Lamb of God described by the
prophet, ordained by God, and
consecrated to God, and
therefore that He must
accomplish His redemptive work
by unparalleled endurance. At
all events, the presentiment of
atonement flashed through his
soul in this expression. Those
who feel themselves placed in a
dilemma by this language,—who
say, either the Baptist must
have propounded a doctrine of
atonement dogmatically defined;
or he must, at the most, have
intended to say that Christ, as
the meek One, would remove the
sins of the world;1 or,
forsooth, with this critic, he
could not have uttered the
sentence had he not spoken as a
dogmatic,2—such persons fail to
understand the whole type of
prophetic knowledge and
illumination. We must, first of
all, survey in general the
region of the spiritual dawnings
of great spirits, if we would
distinguish between the
momentary flashes of
illumination vouchsafed to the
prophets and their average
knowledge. Respecting the nature
of such a difference as it is
exhibited in the department of
general intellectual life, some
great poets of modern times can
certainly give us information.
They would inform the critic how
very often the pregnant language
of a man of genius exceeds his
everyday insight. Of a prophet
this is doubly true; and if John
was ever to be the complete
herald of Jesus, and therefore
the herald of His sufferings,
which he was to be, the moment
must contribute to it in which
he met the Messiah in the
identical mood of triumphant
renunciation of the world.3
Under these circumstances, the
Baptist developed his testimony.
‘This,’ said he, ‘is He of whom
I said, After me cometh a Man
who is preferred before me, for
He was before me.’ In these
words he declared that Jesus was
identical with the Messiah, whom
he had designated in similar
terms to the deputation from the
Sanhedrim.
The words just mentioned form,
accordingly, the official
testimony of the Baptist, which
is found in its original form in
his address to the deputation (ver.
26), while here He repeats it
before his disciples. But what
the Evangelist John had already
communicated respecting this
testimony, was his own account
respecting this second
declaration.4
Then he tells his disciples how
he arrived at the knowledge of
this most important fact. ‘And I
knew Him not; but that He should
be made manifest to Israel,
therefore came I baptizing with
water.’ He next utters his
testimony respecting the
extraordinary event on which his
knowledge of the Messiahship of
Jesus rested. ‘I saw the Spirit
descending from heaven like a
dove, and it abode upon Him. And
I’ (he again affirmed) ‘knew Him
not till then.’ Whatever he
might at any time have otherwise
known of Him as a relation or a
friend—all that constituted no
prophetic certainty, no divine
assurance, of the Messiahship of
Jesus. But now he says that he
was certain of it; that is, so
certain of it, that as a prophet
he could testify of Him in
Israel.5 For the same Being who
had sent him had also given him
this sign, that He on whom he
should see the Spirit descending
and remain would be another
Baptizer—One who would baptize
with the Holy Ghost. This sign
was therefore given him in the
same prophetic state of mind in
which he had received his own
commission. So that, in the same
ecstasy in which he had received
the divine assurance that he
should be the forerunner of the
Messiah, he received also the
certainty that the want of the fulness of the Spirit marked the
difference between himself and
the Messiah, and that the
Messiah would be manifested to
him by the fulness of the Spirit
resting upon Him as the real
divine baptism. This sign
appeared to him over the person
of Jesus; wherefore he was now
made divinely certain as a
prophet. ‘And since I have seen
this’ (the Baptist concludes his
declaration), ‘I am decidedly
convinced that this is the Son
of God.’ In these words he
expressed in what sense he
announced the priority of Jesus
to the deputation from the
Sanhedrim.
On that day he must have
expressed himself publicly with
the most elevated feelings
concerning Jesus. In
recollection of that event, the
Evangelist writes (ver. 15),
‘John testified of Him
(continually). He exclaimed
aloud, This was He of whom I
spoke: He that cometh after me
is preferred before me; for He
was before me.’
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Notes
1. Strauss justly asserts (i.
367) that, according to the
fourth Gospel, the Messianic
idea of the Baptist has the
marks of atoning suffering and
of a heavenly pre-existence. But
the first objection raised
against the truthfulness of such
a representation amounts to
this—that such a view of the
Messiah was foreign to the
current opinion. The prophet,
therefore, is made dependent on
the current opinion, which,
moreover, in relation to the
Messiah, differed as much in
Israel as in Christendom. The
second difficulty is presented
in the question, If the Baptist
knew the mystery of the
suffering Messiah, which the
disciples of Jesus never knew,
how could Jesus declare that he
stood low among the citizens of
the kingdom of heaven? (Mat
11:11.) But the greatness of
John was the greatness of his
personal elevation on the Old
Testament stand-point; the
greatness of the least in the
kingdom of heaven was a generic
greatness, or a general
elevation on the New Testament
stand-point. The least Christian
was so far above John and
exalted over him as his
stand-point was higher—he stood,
as we may say, on his shoulders.
But it is well to observe, with
Hoffmann, that, on the one hand,
in John the glimpses of his
higher knowledge were not a
ripened and developed insight,
and that, on the other hand, the
disciples of Christ, before His
ascension, could not be
considered as decided citizens
of the kingdom of heaven in its
New Testament spiritual glory.
Christ discerned the littleness
of the great John in this, that,
in his Old Testament zeal, he
was in danger of being perplexed
at his own quiet spiritual
working without violent action,
while the greatness of the least
Christian consisted in
understanding this course of
Christ in the spirit, and
exhibiting it in his own life.
If John, as is admitted, in his
reference to the Lamb of God,
was supported by the passage in
Isa. 53, his word is a voucher
that this passage was referred
to the Messiah by the
enlightened Israelites of his
time. On the meaning of that
passage, let the reader consult
the admirable discussion by Lücke,
Commentar, i. 401-415. The
expedients which have been
adopted to make the passage in
question non-Messianic are at
once rendered nugatory, if the
principle be first settled, that
every prophetic expression in
the Old Testament must find its
ultimate aim in the Messiah and
His kingdom. But this principle
results from the whole
constitution of the Old
Testament prophecy, and nowhere
does the Messianic character
appear more conspicuous than in
the prophecies of Isaiah,
without any distinction of the
different parts of the book. If
we apply this principle to our
passage, the sufferings of the
servants of God must, at all
events, according to the spirit
of the prophet, find their
highest fulfilment in the person
of the Messiah—even should the
prophet set out in his
contemplation from his own
person, or from the elect
portion of the theocratic
people, or from any historical
type whatever of the Messiah.
3. That the πρῶτός μου ἦν (vers.
30, 15) must denote no mere
abstract pre-existence of
Christ, results indeed, first of
all, from the religious weakness
of this conception; secondly,
from this, that this earlier
existence could be no sufficient
ground for the earlier authority
of Christ in Israel. Rather the
predicates, ‘the earliest’ and
‘the only one,’ are always
identical when Christ’s priority
is spoken of. Christ was before
John in Israel, because He was
above him in eternity; He had
the precedence in rank, because
He was his essential Chief (Fürst).
Hence this testimony of John
finds a distinct correspondence
in Mal 3:1, as Hengstenberg has
shown in his Christology (iv.
186), and probably there was a
conscious reference to it. But,
after all, John found the reason
for his assertion in the entire
Messianic character of the Old
Testament. The Messiah as a
spiritual form was ‘before’ him
in Israel, precisely on account
of His eternal glory in God.
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1) Hug, Gutachten über das Leben Jesu, 134 2) Strauss, i. 368. 3) Comp. W. Hoffmann, das Leben Jesu, 292. 4) That is, on the testimony in ver. 26 the reference in ver. 30 is founded, and on this the statement in ver. 15 5) On the strange supposition of the well-known critic, that, he ought to have announced the faith of his mother publicly as a prophet, see the preface to the first volume of this work. In the declaration of the Baptist there lies as little a contradiction to Matt. iii. 14, 15 (as Lücke, i. 417, supposes); for though the Baptist felt the highest reverence for the person of Jesus, yet this did not amount to objective certainty.
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