Colour
Supplement
Articles
by Christians around the world
Sunday
December 10 2006
Opening act
by Herbert
O'Driscoll

Malachi 3:1-4;
Luke 1:68-79; Philippians 1:3-11
People who introduce
themselves as bearing a message from God do not
commend themselves to us easily. If we do turn
an ear to them out of curiosity, or perhaps out
of an amused and sometimes horrified
fascination, they tend to wear out their welcome
quickly. We have learned only too well that such
self-styled messengers of God can carry out
deeds of unimaginable ferocity in the name of
their particular vision of God.
But does it follow that no messenger who claims
to be from God can or should be given a hearing?
We might recall the passion of Alexander
Solzhenitsyn when he first came to the West from
the Soviet Union. As had John the Baptist,
Solzhenitsyn was formed in harsh and solitary
places. The Siberian winds of the Gulag were as
brutal in their frigidity as John's Middle
Eastern desert was brutal in its heat. Both were
places where life could hang by a thread. Both
the Baptizer and Solzhenitsyn saw themselves as
the bearers of a moral challenge to what they
regarded as a tired and effete society. Both
brought a stern and uncompromising style and
substance. One returned to his homeland
dispirited and humbled, no less sure of his
convictions but defeated, not so much by an
immoral West as by a place where the very idea
of the moral had become a matter for discussion
or contemptuous dismissal. The Baptizer knelt in
the filth of Herod's dungeon to be butchered to
satisfy a drunken royal whim.
Yet one person in particular accepted John's
harsh style. One person admired his tenacity and
single-mindedness, someone whose opinion we
cannot lightly dismiss. Jesus not only welcomed
John's ministry, he gave it the highest praise.
"I tell you," he said of John, "among those born
of women no one is greater than John: yet the
least in the kingdom of heaven is greater than
he."
Coming from Jesus, such praise must be given
immense significance. Here is John, who sees his
life and work as conveying a message from God
for his time, utterly sure of his role, piercing
in his assessments of a society and a people.
And here is Jesus, who sees everything about him
as admirable. We need to know why. We need to
know what it is about this particular messenger
that commends him so deeply to our Lord. Then
perhaps we can find some criteria by which we
can judge others who claim that they possess
such messages.
Perhaps the overwhelming single attribute that
commends John to us is that his whole being is
directed to a focus beyond himself. He has
hardly appeared on the public scene when he
insists that this is not about him but about
preparation for another who has not yet come
into public consciousness.
At a time when response to his ministry seems to
have peaked, John shows nothing less than
nobility of spirit when he points two of his
remaining disciples toward the approaching
Jesus. Nothing could be more generous and
unselfish than John's statement referring to
Jesus: "He must increase but I must decrease."
If we had heard nothing else from John's lips,
those seven words would assure us that he was no
demagogue trumpeting an agenda of the self. Here
is a sure way to assess the claims of anyone
professing to have a message for us from God.
We hear not a word of resentment from John when
public acclaim shifts away from him. The
evidence points to his ministry continuing in
other ways. He shows extraordinary courage in
his readiness to criticize the lifestyle of
Herod himself. John's reputation was such that
even Herod—whom we can assume was in today's
terms a petty dictator—hesitated to attack John
directly.
Nothing shows the faithfulness of John more than
his last moments. At some stage in a ghastly
imprisonment in Herod's dungeon, beset by all
the agonizing questions and doubts that come in
solitary confinement, wrestling with a faith
that has undergirded and energized his life for
most of his adult years, John manages to smuggle
out a message to Jesus that comes from the
depths of his being. "Are you the one who is to
come, or are we to wait for another?" What is
beautiful and moving in this question is the
unquenchable longing to be faithful to another,
to someone he deems greater than himself.
The irony of John's life is that while he is
passionately proclaiming his message of judgment
on his own society, we come to realize what a
magnificent human being he is. It may be that he
remains significant for us because he is the
preparer—as he called himself—for Jesus'
appearance on the scene. But John is far from
being—to use a phrase from pop culture—the band
that warms up the audience for the main act. He
brings the music of his great humanity, his
courage, his generosity of spirit, his
unaffected humility, his faithfulness in the
face of suffering and even of death itself. No
wonder Jesus thought the world of him.
One can't but wonder if anyone ever told John
what his father— even then, as Luke gently puts
it, "getting on in years"—sang at the birth of
his baby son. "You [my son] will go before the
Lord to prepare his ways." One wonders if
Zechariah knew the quality of the man his child
would become, a person who would not merely
point to the coming of one greater then himself,
but would live so magnificently as to prepare us
for him who would live perfectly.
Herbert O'Driscoll is
an Anglican priest who lives in Victoria,
British Columbia.
Copyright
2003 CHRISTIAN CENTURY. Reproduced by permission from
the November 29 2003 issue of the CHRISTIAN CENTURY.
Subscriptions: from $49/year from P.O. Box 378, Mt.
Morris, IL 61054. 1-800-208-4097. Visit the
Christian Century website.
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