A reflection for Saint John the Baptist’s Day
“What then will this child become?” Luke 1:66
What did he become?
It’s a question Jesus would himself ask. In Saint Matthew Chapter 11 and Saint Luke Chapter 7, he quizzes them about what they sought in John the Baptist, a reed shaken by the wind, a man dressed in fine clothes, a prophet? “What did you go out to see?” he asks; what has John become? It is a challenge, a probing as to what is in their hearts.
“People from the whole Judean countryside” went out to see John, Saint Mark tells us, “and all the people of Jerusalem”. John became someone of celebrity status, the ordinary people flock to hear him, but so do the rich and the powerful. What was their motivation? What took them out to a barren, inhospitable place to hear the words of this radical preacher?
Some came looking for spiritual renewal, some came because they were curious. Some, we know from John’s denunciation of them as a “brood of vipers” in Saint Luke Chapter 3, saw John as dangerous, a threat to the established order of things.
What John became, what people saw in him depended on what was in their hearts as they went out to hear him. They could have gone to that rough and wild place and seen an odd and eccentric man, a man dressed in a primitive way, hair and beard unkempt, skin weathered and cracked by the elements; a man whose diet was locusts and wild honey; a man who cared nothing for polite company or social etiquette. They could have gone to see John and returned to their homes with tales of a strange sight and wild words.
Had we encountered John, aren’t those the things that would have struck us? Were we telling of what we had seen to people in our own time, wouldn’t we tend to tell of the physical facts, the things we had seen? The spirit of our age is one caught up with what we can see, what we can touch, truth is something surface deep.
Jesus’ question is a challenge to move beyond appearances, to look for deeper truths. To the authorities, he became a rabble rouser, a troublemaker, someone whose removal would be convenient; they do not see beyond their perception of what suits themselves. It is those who can discern the deeper things who see what John really became. They see beyond the physical facts to the spiritual truth; they see God’s grace in the ministry of this homeless preacher.
John became seen as a prophet because there was a capacity to see deeper things; it is that capacity we need to rediscover ourselves.
Haven’t we become like those who might have gone out to see John the Baptist and seen nothing more than a bearded man dressed in rags? Haven’t we lost sight of the profound?
Going out into the wilderness, standing amongst the crowds listening to the preaching, what would we have heard? If our hearts had been open, we would have heard God speaking to us, but that would depend upon us, upon our willingness to hear. When Jesus talks of John’s ministry, he speaks of a need for people to make their own response, “Whoever has ears, let them hear”, he says in Matthew 11:15.
What does John become for us? Seeing the presence of God’s truth in John the Baptist demanded an openness of heart, a willingness to change, an acceptance that there was a need for spiritual renewal. As John the Baptist prepared the way for the coming of Jesus, so the willingness of his listeners to hear and see God’s presence should set an example for us to prepare a way in our own lives.
“What did you go out to see?” asks Jesus of those who went out to see John the Baptist, what has this child become for you?
Had we been among the crowd in the wilderness, listening to John the Baptist, what sort of listeners would we have been—one of casually curious or one of those to whom Jesus said, “Whoever has ears, let them hear”.
Comments
A reflection for Saint John the Baptist’s Day — No Comments
HTML tags allowed in your comment: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <s> <strike> <strong>