Chapter 3
Any king in the
ancient world had his heralds, people out in front of him on the point in a
military organisation and these heralds would precede him into cities and
announce his coming so that proper preparation could be made in order to render
homage to the king. Jesus Christ as the King of kings comes to the earth on two
different occasions. One is historical and one is prophetical. He came the
first time in order to provide eternal salvation by going to the cross. He
returns the second time in order to establish a personal reign upon the earth
and to consummate both the human and the angelic conflicts. On both occasions
prior to His coming Jesus Christ is announced by heralds, and since the
ministry of Jesus Christ is related both to the angelic and the human conflict
He has both angelic and human heralds.
For the first advent
of Christ the angelic heralds are found in Luke 2:1-15. The human herald of the
first advent is John the Baptist — Matthew chapter 3. He wasn’t the first
member of the Baptist denomination! The Baptist denomination started in England
in the eighteenth century with a pastor by the name of Brown. They did not
exist up until that time although the Baptists like to think they go back to Zwingly
and the Pedabaptists, but the Baptists and the Pedabaptists are so entirely
different that there is no possible way to bring the two together. John the
Baptist was not a Baptist and, actually, the Greek simply calls him John the baptiser.
Also, when John the Baptist lived there was no Church at all. The heralds of
the second advent: angelic — only one, the mighty angel of Revelation chapter
10; two human heralds, the two witnesses of Revelation chapter 11 — Moses and
Elijah.
The doctrine of
baptisms
The word “baptise” is
not an English word at all. It is a Greek word, baptizw, which means to identify. There are two kinds of
identification in baptism, real identifications and ritual identifications;
and, in fact, every time the word “baptism” is found in the New Testament it
can be one of seven kinds of baptisms. These seven different baptisms are
divided into two categories and the first category are real baptisms, and a
real baptism is nothing more or less than an actual identification.
Real baptisms
1. The baptism of
Moses, 1 Corinthians 10:2. It means that Moses was identified with the cloud
and the people of Israel were identified with Moses. That is how they got
through the Red Sea. The only people
who were immersed on that occasion were the Egyptian soldiers, and they didn’t
come out of it too well. The only people who were immersed in water were the
people who weren’t baptised. This baptism was a dry baptism, and it says
several times in Exodus and where it is repeated in the Psalms, that when the
children of Israel crossed the Red Sea they crossed dry shod.
We like to think of
baptisms in terms of “wet,” so immediately we have missed the point, and you
can’t really understand the wet baptisms until you understand the dry baptisms.
The real baptisms are the dry ones.
2. The baptism of the
cross, called the baptism of the cup in Matthew 20:22. The whole point is that
just as Moses was a double baptism — Moses identified with the cloud; the
people identified with Moses (a double identification) — so we have the same thing
on the baptism of the cup or the baptism of the cross. First of all, Christ
became identified with the human race and it was the humanity of Christ that
actually hung on the cross, the deity of Christ could never be confined to the
cross because the deity of Christ is omnipresent. This means, of course, that
Christ became identified with the human race. Then having become a member of
the human race, having been born without a sin nature, and having lived a life
free from personal sin, He was qualified to become identified with the sins of
the sin nature. So Christ bore our sins in His own body on the tree, and this
is the second identification. He also rejected the human good which comes from
our area of strength and from that time on Human good is rejected as far as God
is concerned. God can never accept under any circumstances energy of the flesh
human good. We have divine good versus human good as the great issue in the
gospel. Every one who decides for Jesus Christ, namely believing in Him,
accepts what Christ did, accepts His work. And this is as simple as “believe on
the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved.” And everyone who rejects Christ
as saviour depends upon his own good deeds and the scripture tells us that
salvation is “not by works of righteousness which we have done, but according
to his mercy he saved us” .In fact, good deeds of man [man’s righteousnesses]
are as filthy rags in His sight.
This is the baptism of
the cross, and again, it is a double identification: Christ identified with the
human race and as a member of the human race bearing the sins of the world, and
therefore solving the sin problem.
3. The baptism of the
Holy Spirit. This is not an experience, it is simply one of the 40 things that
happens to the believer at the moment of salvation and one of the five things
the Holy Spirit. 1 Corinthians 12:13 gives us the mechanics: “For by one Spirit
are we baptised into one body [entered into union with Christ] … “ This is the
baptism of the Spirit. You cannot feel it, you cannot see it, you cannot
experience it; it is something God does for us and if you could experience it
you would burn up very rapidly because the humanity of Christ is seated at the
right hand of the Father. This is the position of every believer and it is the
most misunderstood of all baptisms.
4. The baptism of
fire, the subject at the end of the third chapter of Matthew. This is an
identification with fire. The baptism of the Spirit is connected with the first
advent of Christ, Acts 1:5, where Jesus Christ told the disciples that “John
truly baptised with water but ye shall be baptised with the Holy Spirit in a
few days” — ten days actually, the Day of Pentecost, the day the Church began.
Before that, in John 14:20, Jesus said: “… and ye in me, and I in you,” and
that was the first prophecy of the baptism of the Spirit. The baptism of fire
is connected with the second advent of Christ. When He returns to the earth He
finds two kinds of people: believers and unbelievers. The unbelievers are cast
off and put into fire and the believers go into the Millennial reign of Jesus
Christ.
Ritual baptism
In ritual baptism you
always have water and the water is literal but it always represents something
else. For example we have John’s baptism in which the water represented the
kingdom of God, and for the people who were converted under John’s ministry were
baptised the water represented the their entrance into the kingdom.
The baptism of Jesus
was just as unique as Jesus Himself is; as unique as His hypostatic union, as
unique as His crucifixion. Many, many people were crucified during the course
of preparing the way for pax Romana but
only one person had a unique crucifixion and that is Jesus Christ. Many people
were baptised under the ministry of John but the baptism of Jesus is unique. By
the way, the commonly-heard saying that a person has followed the Lord in
baptism is blasphemy. You can’t follow the Lord in baptism because the Lord is
the God-Man, He is the unique person of the universe; and for you to say that you
are following the Lord in baptism is to say that you were born of a virgin,
that you are perfect, and that you are going to the cross and dying for the
sins of the world. No one follows the Lord in baptism.
What does water mean
for Jesus Christ? It represented the plan of God, the cross, and when Jesus was
baptised He simply said the same thing that one would say in a dedication: “I
am going to the cross and am going to die for the sins of the world.” That is
the baptism of Jesus. Jesus was not a sinner after salvation and witnessing to
the fact. He was not identified with any kingdom because He is the kingdom. So
we need to remember that the baptism of Jesus Christ is unique and the water
represents the cross just as the water in John’s baptism represents the
kingdom.
There is a third
baptism and that is the believers of the early church. The water in this case
represented the body of Christ and when the person went into the water he was
saying in effect: “I am identified with Christ in His death,” retroactive
positional truth and/or identification with Christ on the cross. But in this
baptism you have two things: the believer goes into the water and while he is
in the water this is a picture of retroactive positional truth, and when he
comes out of the water he is identified with air and that is a picture of
current positional truth, identification with Christ currently, new creature
area, 2 Corinthians 5:17 — “if any man be in union with Christ he is a new
creature.”
Verses 1-6, the herald
of the King.
Verse 1 — “In those
days.” Between chapter two to chapter three we jump to the time when Jesus was
about thirty years old. We left Him as a boy in chapter two; now He is a man.
And we jump from the time of Augustus Caesar to the reign of Tiberias Caesar.
We are talking about the time of about 29 AD. (The dating of
this scene is given in Luke chapter three, verses one through three) — “came
John the Baptist [John the baptiser]” — John has already had a wonderful
ministry before this chapter begins but we are tying him in with Jesus Christ.
He is the herald of the King and so we are now coming down to the end of his
ministry. Matthew doesn’t begin with John’s ministry at the beginning but he
begins at the end — “preaching.”
Introduction
John was descended
from Aaron. Aaron was the original high priest of Israel. Remember that Reuben
was the eldest son of Israel (Jacob) and Reuben as the eldest son should have
had the sovereignty of the family, he should have been the king. The eldest son
also had the priesthood and he should have been the priest for the family, and
he should have had the double portion. But Reuben lost all of these for the
primary reason which is found in one word: unstable. Generally he was a very
noble person but with all of his nobility of character he was unstable and that
neutralised everything — “unstable as water” is the description of Reuben. So
he lost all of these: he lost the sovereignty to David’s line, the tribe of
Judah; he lost the priesthood to Levi, and that means Aaron; he lost the double
portion to Joseph, and Joseph had two tribes in Israel, Ephraim and Manasseh.
Four tribes picked up where Reuben lost out.
John the baptiser,
then, was directly descended from Aaron and because he was he was the true
priest in Israel. This is very interesting in view of the fact that in the
temple in Jerusalem were people who claimed to be priests. They were not
priests at all, they were not from the tribe of Levi and they were not
descended from Aaron. Out in the desert is John, a true priest in every sense
of the word, he is descended from Aaron. His father Zacharias was a priest from
the course of Abija, 1 Chronicles 24:10, while his mother, Elizabeth, was a
true daughter of Aaron — Luke 1:5. John, in addition to this, was also a Nazarite.
We do not know all that we pretend to know about the Nazarites but they
apparently took a vow to operate under the law of supreme sacrifice. As far as
we can tell this meant getting into the field of certain kinds of food they
abstained from — apparently rich foods, they were minus any alcoholic beverage,
and they were also minus women. The Old Testament concept of the Nazarite is
just about the same with some refinements.
John was preaching.
There isn’t a whole lot more about John that is revealed and there is a reason
for it: it isn’t the man but the message. The word “preaching” is very
important here, it is a present active participle. The present tense is linear
aktionsart (aktionsart is a German
word. Aktion is the abbreviation for Achtung or action; sart means kind of. Kind of action means it is habitual, it keeps
on going, going, going) and it means he keeps on preaching, he doesn’t give up.
We do not have any of the messages of John in detail but we have four different
Biblical references to tell us generally the type of thing he covered in his
messages. So the content of John’s message is fourfold: first of all, John 1:29
— he talked about Jesus Christ: “Behold the Lamb of God who taketh away the sin
of the world.” He related Jesus Christ to the Levitical offerings of Israel.
This made it very clear that he knew the Levitical offerings; he understood how
Jesus Christ was portrayed in the Old Testament and he related these things to
the actual Person who was walking on the earth at this time. Secondly, in his
message John 3:30 gives us a second concept. He makes it very clear that the
more he talks about Jesus Christ the more important it is for the human race
and the more he as a person is phased out. So he talked in terms of his own
personality as related to Christ and he said: “He must increase but I must
decrease.” The point is that through doctrine in his frontal lobe and through
the declaration of it you no longer saw the personality though the personality
was there. He called the religious hierarchy poisonous snakes, in effect, and
in that day as in this day it was construed as an insult. So he was a very
powerful person and he thought nothing of insulting the hierarchy. But even
though he was a strong person in his own right his message phased him out as a
personality and presented someone else. That is preaching. We have the weirdest
idea of what preaching is today — shouting, entertaining, etc. Preaching is so
declaring Christ that the personality is phased out. His message was a message,
not only of declaring Christ, but of declaring Christ and doctrine in such a
way that the doctrine became important and not the person who gave the
doctrine.
Another factor in his
message, which we find in verse 2 — he preached repentance. The modern preacher,
when he talks about repentance, means to feel sorry for sins. Any person who
starts talking about repenting of your sins is just as stupid and ignorant with
regard to the Word of God as anyone could possibly be. In the first place, your
sins and my sins were born by Christ on the cross so that sin is never an
issue. The cross is an issue to the human race and Christ is an issue but
personal sins ceased to be an issue when Christ bore them in His own body on
the cross. So sin isn’t an issue at all. We need to present Christ, not tell
them how horrible or good they are. Human good was also an issue and Christ
rejected human good, and since He rejected human good this is the great issue
in the gospel: you either depend upon divine good, His work, or you depend upon
your own good, and at the last judgement sins will never be mentioned. The sins
of the unbeliever will never be mentioned at the last judgement but all of his
good deeds will be.
The next thing in his
message is: “Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved” — Acts
19:4. So John not only talked about Christ but he told about how to enter into
eternal relationship with Christ. The way of salvation is found in both
“repent” and “believe” — two sides of the same coin. Repent is the mental
attitude toward Christ when you believe; repent is the mental attitude when you
believe and believe is the actual mental mechanics for, after all, believe is
really perception, the only non-meritorious system of perception. So when you
believed in Christ, whether you knew it or not, you repented. You couldn’t have
believed without repenting because repent means to change your attitude toward
Christ. And notice that the word “repent” has absolutely nothing to do with
sin, nothing at all. It has to do with Christ. Take the two transitive verbs
here: repent and believe. The object of repent is Christ; the object of believe
is Christ. Christ is the saviour, here is John’s message: “Behold the Lamb of
God.” The subject is the unbeliever: “whosoever.” The unbeliever changed his
attitude toward Christ, the unbeliever believed in Christ, and that is when he
became a believer.
“preaching in the
wilderness of Judaea,” he didn’t preach in a church. The Greek word for
“wilderness” is desert. The desert of Judaea is a rugged piece of terrain and
there is one thing that characterised this desert: no one was there! Lots of
snakes, locusts and animals, but no people. But when John started preaching out
there, people came. This is very important. Some people who are going into the
ministry may feel that they have to stay with some established organisation to
be sure they can get a church. If you have a message God will provide a hearing
but if you don’t have a message you’d better get in one of the organisations where
they can guarantee that you will have a church because people will have to
listen to you because it is a part of the rules — they call it program — and
you have to bore them to death! That’s the program. A good time is had by all
but no one gets a message. For the man with the message God will provide the
hearers.
Verse 2 — “Saying
[preaching],” — he kept on saying. This was a part of his message but, as you
know, only one part. In Acts 19:4 Luke presents another aspect of the message
of John, as does John in John 1:29. They are all part of the same message but
John emphasises the person of Christ — Son of God; Luke in Acts emphasises how
people were saved under John by believing in Christ; Matthew is talking about
and emphasising the King and, therefore the people of John’s day and, as a
matter of fact in the days of Jesus on the earth, were saved because they
recognised Him for what He was, the King. They changed their minds about Him.
“Repent ye” — the word
“repent”: there are two Greek words. There is the word metanoew, which is mental
and means a complete change of mental attitude, changing the mind; the second
word is metamelomai, an emotional
word which means to feel sorry for something that you have done, usually
something that you have done that is wrong. This word is used for Judas
Iscariot and we will be studying this when we get to chapter twenty-seven —
Judas felt sorry for his sins. Feeling sorry for sins never saved anyone and
never will. However that isn’t what John preached, John preached: “Change your
mind.”
Metanoew is our word in
Matthew 3:2 and it means change of mind. It is used in the scripture for God as
the subject. One of the greatest of all of the anthropopathisms in the
scripture is, God repents. If repenting has anything to do with sin then God is
a sinner and that is blasphemy. Cf. Genesis 6:6; Exodus 32:14; Judges 2:18; 1
Samuel 15:35; Jeremiah 15:6; Amos 7:3,6; Hebrews 7:21. In all of these passages
God does the repenting, He is the subject. And God is not a sinner and God
doesn’t feel sorry for sins — which He couldn’t commit and He didn’t commit.
When it says that God repents it is simply an anthropopathism ascribing to God
a human characteristic in order explain something God is doing in context.
We have some passages
on repentance and salvation: Luke 13:3,5; 15:7,10 — the sinner who repents. The
sinner is the subject, the object is Christ — 16:30,31; Acts 17:30,31; 20:21;
Romans 2:4; 2 Peter 3:9.
“Repent ye” — present
active imperative. This is a command; “for the kingdom of heaven.” What is the
kingdom of heaven? The word occurs 32 times in the book of Matthew. Generally
speaking, the word “kingdom” when it is used in Matthew refers to the kingdom
which belongs to the King who is the subject of Matthew. The subject of Matthew
is Jesus Christ, and the kingdom refers to the kingdom that Christ will have in
eternity. In this particular case in Matthew it refers to the born again Jews.
But sometimes the kingdom is held out to the unbeliever, telling him to seek
it. And when the King is on earth the kingdom is on earth and therefore the
kingdom of God is life, the kingdom of heaven is life. You will find believers
and unbelievers mentioned in context, the true kingdom is made up of the
believer but the unbeliever has the opportunity of entering that kingdom by
believing in Christ, and this explains some of the passages, parables and so
on, where the kingdom of heaven includes both believers and unbelievers in the
context.
“is at hand” — now we
switch tenses and we go to the perfect tense. The word means “it is here; it is
approaching.” In the perfect tense in the Greek it is something that happens
with results that continue. In the context the results are defined as continuing
forever, or at least repercussions that will go on. So the fact is that Christ
is now here, since He is the kingdom, and the result: there will be results
which go on and on — salvation of John’s converts is one of them. The kingdom
of heaven approaches in the Person of the King, He is the only saviour;
therefore, entrance into the kingdom of God is based upon believing in Him.
Verse 3 — the prophecy
of the herald: a quotation from Isaiah 40:3. “For this is he,” simply
identifies John the baptiser, “that was spoken of by the prophet Esaias [the
Greek form of Isaiah], saying, The voice of one crying in the desert.” John was
willing to be a voice, and this is how, even though he was a very strong
personality and a very strong person, because of the nature of his message he
became simply a voice. The word “voice” emphasises the content of his message
which phases out his personality.
Voice
1. It isn’t the man
but the message.
2. A voice requires a
brain! A voice has vocabulary and the larger the vocabulary the greater the
capacity for thought. For example, you cannot think in mathematics unless you
have the vocabulary. Hence the man with a message must have a frontal lobe
filled with doctrine. This is the primary requirement for any messenger of God.
3. No one can teach
unless he has something to teach.
“crying” — means to
proclaim or to speak dogmatically.
“in the desert” —
people came because John had the message to change lives. It is the message
that changes lives, not the messenger.
We have noted that
John was a voice and the word “voice” emphasises the content of the message
rather than the personality of the individual. This brought out the principle
that it isn’t the man but the message which is important. The messenger must
have a mind full of doctrine in order to be effective and this is the primary
requirement for a pastor and teacher. No one can teach without something to
teach; hence, no one can teach without doctrine in the frontal lobe. John
“cried” [proclaimed] in the desert and the people left the city, the synagogue,
to hear John’s message. Why? Because John was a “voice.” It was the message
which had the power to change lives, not the person himself. Again the
principle: the message is indispensable but not the messenger. The proclamation
of the Word is not a popularity contest, it is the study of doctrine and its
communication to men.
Verse 3 — “Prepare ye
the way of the Lord.” We have two categories with regard to this message. The
first is salvation — “Prepare ye”; the second is a rebound command to
believers. This is broken down categorically for one reason: to show that not
only did John evangelise but he trained in doctrine those who responded to his
message. It is not enough to evangelise. The ones who are evangelised and
become believers must be oriented to the plan of God. “Prepare ye” is an aorist
active imperative and this in contrast to the next imperative we find at the
end of verse three: “make straight his paths.” These are the two verbs here:
one is in category one — “Prepare ye”; the second is “make straight,” a present
active imperative. The aorist tense refers to salvation, the point at which the
individual believes in Jesus Christ. “Make straight” is a present active
imperative and it means literally, “make upright.” This refers to the second
area and this is rebound, 1 John 1:9, or the operation of phase two. So John
not only taught them the way of salvation but he showed them at the same time
how to live as a believer on this earth, and his emphasis was on the principle
of rebound. In contrast to the aorist tense, a once and for all thing, the
present imperative is linear aktionsart, it indicates an habitual or continuous
thing, and we have to habitually rebound when ever it is necessary.
Verse 4 — the life of
the herald. “And the same John had.” We go to another tense, imperfect active
indicative. The imperfect meant that this kept on being true of his phase two.
The imperfect tense is linear aktionsart in past time. This characterises the
whole life that he had out in the desert. This brings up a principle: there was
nothing in John’s personality or dress or appearance or social background or
education which demanded a hearing from the people. John was a man who was a
channel and through this channel went divine power and divine message. He was
in his own right a great man by background. He came from the family of the
priesthood, he was of the tribe of Levi and he was directly descended from
Aaron through his mother, and also his father was descended from one of the
courses of the Levites. He was also a strong personality and an eloquent
speaker but these were not the ingredients of his success. His success came
from the utilisation of divine power which means orientation to the grace of
God. His clothes were very simple and no one went out to him to see what the latest
fashion was. The Pharisees, by contrast, wore beautiful white robes with gold
trimming.
John was now
apparently operating under the law of supreme sacrifice. It was God’s will for
him to operate in the desert where it is much more primitive than in the
country, although he probably grew up in the city. Whatever he had enjoyed by
way of luxury in the past he definitely was living out in the desert now and
because he had a message the people came to him. That is the way it should be.
The minister who runs around and calls on his congregation is ignorant of the
Word of God. That is simply running around in order to stimulate the ego of
people. If they have problems they can come to him; if they want the message
they can come and hear it.
God set the pattern
when He sent this man out into the desert where there are no people.
Immediately there is a test: what do you want when you go to the desert? When
the people come they come of one of two reasons: first, they come because they
are hungry for the truth, and John has the truth, and they go into the desert
because they desire to hear the truth. They are not getting the truth in the
temple in Jerusalem and they are not getting the truth in the synagogues, and
secondly, there was the religious crowd who went out to find out what the
secret was to drawing crowds, the temple had been rather empty.
Verse 5 — the response
to the herald. “Then” is an adverb that means after he did what God wanted him
to do, it indicates that he was in God’s will; “went out to him” — imperfect
tense, which means that as long as John preached people kept on going out to
the desert; “to him” is the preposition proj plus the accusative, which means face to face with
him. They not only went out into the desert but they went out so that they
could come face to face with him and actually hear him preach — “those of
Jerusalem, and all Judaea, and all the region round about Jordan” — city of the
temple is Jerusalem, headquarters for religion and legalism. The crowds kept
coming out and they were hungry for the truth. And notice that the desert not
only means no people but it also means separation from religion. There are many
ministers today who are born-again believers and who seek to teach the Bible,
but their ministry is destroyed because they are compromising with religion,
they have not separated themselves from apostasy. The idea is often to
straighten everything out from within but that isn’t the way God works. God
takes a man, puts him in an impossible place, gives him a message, and this
tests the volition of the populace. No man can be effective in a pulpit and
compromise with religion. John separated himself from religion.
Principle: When a man has a message then God
will provide the hearers. No one can preach until he has this message. John was
prepared and there is only one source of this message — Bible doctrine, and he
knew it well. Preachers come and preachers go but the Word of God abides
forever.
Verse 6 — the
post-salvation experience of John’s converts. There are two experiences which
come under phase two. The first is a ritual and the second will be rebound
itself. Ritual here is baptism, a witness to salvation; rebound is the means of
getting back into fellowship with God.
“And were baptised of
him in the Jordan.” The word “baptise” means identification, and in the case of
a water baptism we have a ritual identification where the water actually
represents the kingdom (in the case of John’s baptism) — “I am identified with
the kingdom of regenerate.” Coming out of the water is the picture of the new
life which is maintained by rebound. The word “baptise” is a Greek word and it
means to be identified with. The imperfect tense means that there was a
constant stream of new converts being baptised — “were baptised” is in the
passive voice in the Greek, and the passive voice means the converts received
the action of the verb, they received baptism as a testimony to their
salvation. They weren’t saved by baptism but they received baptism as a
testimony; “of him” — the preposition is u(po, which means under the
authority of — a preposition of authority. In other words, they recognised the
authority of John as a bona fide messenger from God and therefore they
submitted to one point of ritual. This gives us the additional reason for the
ritual. Over in the temple there was a great deal of ritual, they were offering
all kinds of sacrifices which had great significance as far as Christology was
concerned. The priesthood was going through a ritual which pointed to Christ
but it had lost its meaning because religion had taken over in these things.
Out in the desert John has a point of ritual which is baptism, and baptism had
a second principle besides witnessing for Christ. These people who found Christ
as saviour in the desert, recognised the authority of John as a bona fide
messenger of God and they separated themselves from the animal sacrifices,
recognising that the scribes and the Pharisees and the Sadducees had lost their
representation and their authority as far as God is concerned. So baptism was
also a means of declaring their separation from religion. No one can be
effective in the service of the Lord and be in any way under religion.
“in the Jordan” — this
was an immersion. The word “baptise” means immerse in the sense of complete
identification, so there is no question as to the mode of baptism which is
practised when water baptism is practised; “confessing their sins,” the second
of the two post-salvation experiences. This is nothing more or less than 1 John
1:9. It is not a part of salvation but a post-salvation experience. The present
tense in the Greek of confessing indicates that this was a post-salvation
experience and was not in any way identified with their salvation. The present
tense is linear aktionsart to demonstrate to you and to me that after we are
saved we are going to sin many times, and every time we sin our only hope and
basis for getting back in fellowship is rebound.
In verses 7-17 we have
the baptism of the King. But before we have the baptism of the King we have to
condemn religion. The reason is because Jesus Christ is going to be baptised,
baptism is a ritual, and we must understand the true nature of religion before
we get into the ritual of our Lord’s baptism so that we will never identify the
ritual with religion. Remember that religion uses as a front a lot of ritual.
Verse 7 — the
identification of religious leaders. “But when he saw many of the Pharisees,”
exponents of traditional Judaism, “and Sadducees,” religious rationalists,
“come,” present tense, which means they came to present themselves for baptism.
They thought this would give them some super power. The present active
participle indicates they kept on coming and offering themselves for baptism, and
he turns them down because they aren’t saved. He will not compromise with
religion. The word “come” meant that they came to present themselves as
candidates. They thought they might derive some benefit or some power from this
ritual performed by John. In other words, they wanted ritual without reality
and there is no power in ritual without reality. “O generation of vipers.” The
viper is a very poisonous snake that lives out in the desert. John had seen
brush fires out in the desert and had seen these snacks crawling away from the
fires toward their holes. And so he says: “O generation of vipers, who hath
warned you to flee from the wrath to come?” The wrath to come is the baptism of
fire which will come at a future time. When these religious leaders opened
their mouths and spoke in the name of God they may as well have been striking
the members of their congregation, they filled them with poison. Now they are
simply running, they are not accepting. They are unbelievers and the principle
here is: no decision, no conversion, no baptism.
Verse 8 — the
principle of reality before ritual. “Bring forth [produce] therefore fruits
[production] meet [fit] for repentance.” “Repentance” simply describes
salvation in context as a change of attitude toward Christ. He will not have
anything to do with them until they demonstrate they are saved. What will it
take to produce production fit for repentance? They would have to declare their
personal faith in Jesus Christ. That is what verse 8 actually means. They will
not declare their faith in Christ, they want the ritual but they will not
declare that they are believers. The principle here is that there must be
reality before you can have the ritual. John would not baptise religious
leaders because they were not saved.
Verse 9 — the
inadequacy of physical birth. “And think not to say within yourselves” — this
is what they were thinking. This is why they wouldn’t believe in Christ. Faith
in Christ is the second birth. These religious leaders say that they are born
Jews. As Jews they are born from the line of Abraham and therefore being the
seed of Abraham they were saying that they were saved because they were Jews.
But John was pointing out to them that being Jews doesn’t save them, being of
the physical seed of Abraham doesn’t save them There is a spiritual seed of
Abraham which is the principle of faith and regeneration, brought out in Romans
9:6-14. The thing that made Abraham a Jew was that he was born again. The thing
that distinguished Isaac from his brother Ishmael was a that he was born again.
The line of Israel was begun through regeneration. That is the thing that
counts: regeneration. And these Pharisees think that being saved is only a
matter of being born a Jew and living under the Mosaic law — “we have Abraham
to our father.” In other words, John is going to tell them that there are no
assets in physical birth whereby one can attain eternal salvation; “for I say
unto you, that God is able of these stones,” and he points to stones around the
Jordan banks, “to raise up children unto Abraham.”
This scene took place
at the Jordan river where Joshua had used some of these same stones to teach
Israel that salvation is a relationship with God, not a system of
self-righteousness — Joshua 4:5-9 these same stones were used to demonstrate
what these religious men had rejected. In Joshua chapter four we have the
stones of Gilgal. These stones were on the bank of the Jordan river. Joshua
said to the Jews, to one representative from each tribe, after the water had
come back and there was a dry river bed: “Pick up a rock and carry it into the
dry river bed.” Eventually they had a monument of twelve stones and when the
water came back it covered these stones. In the instructions Joshua had said to
take the stones from the bank. But then Joshua himself picked up the twelve
stones, one at a time, and he carried them over to a place called Gilgal, which
means circle, eternal.
Now we have two sets
of stones. John the Baptist said God could raise up children of these stones,
and immediately that brings to mind the whole thing that Joshua did with the
stones when the Jews crossed the Jordan.
First of all, the
stones for Gilgal were the stones transferred from the Jordan. The twelve
stones were put in the Jordan. What is this a picture of? First of all, we are
identified with Christ in His death, identified with the cross — retroactive
positional truth. Then we are identified with Christ in His life — current
positional truth. This is the story of the two sets of stones. The stones at Gilgal,
that is, the stones that were taken out of the bed of the Jordan, were brought
to Gilgal which means circle or eternity. So they are taken out of death and
put into life. Then Joshua himself carried twelve different stones back into
the river bed, and those stones represent retroactive positional truth. So the
stones of the Jordan were a memorial to the grace of God in salvation and when
John turned to these stones and said that God could raise up children unto
Abraham from these stones it was a reminder to the religious crowd of the necessity
for regeneration. It was a reminder to them that you have to be born again,
that salvation is a relationship with God through a new birth, whereas religion
is seeking to gain the approbation of God on the basis of human works. God will
not accept human works. So this was a very dramatic moment and it was a great
slap in the face to these people.
Verse 10 — the baptism
of fire illustrated. It is illustrated and then later on declared and then
defined. “And now also the axe is laid unto the root of the trees.” We have
already seen how John the Baptist called the religious crowd, the religious
leaders, a generation of vipers. He was saying that religion is lethal in its
approach. It strikes and it poisons you and it kills you. He said in effect
that these religious leaders are just exactly like poisonous snakes. John did
his job as unto the Lord, let the chips fall where they may, and he didn’t take
any orders from anyone as to how he should speak to the Pharisees. The “root of
the trees” happened to be the Pharisees and he said that they are going to get
the axe and everyone like them will get the axe. Again, he doesn’t pull any
punches. The axe is the operation of divine judgement — “is laid” is a present
passive indicative and it means to cut out completely, to destroy; “the root of
the trees” refer to the religious leaders, in this case the Pharisees —
“therefore every tree which bringeth not forth good fruit is cut down” — and
this refers to the Pharisees who were the good-deeders of the day.
Notice that John
attacks them at the point where they think they are strong — “every tree which bringeth
not forth good fruit,” and the word “good” means good of intrinsic value. And
that is exactly what they cannot produce because they are religious but not
regenerate. They are religious leaders but they are not born again, and because
they are not born again they do not have the ability to produce the kind of
production that is mentioned here — “good fruit” which refers to the divine
good only. So John tells them they are going to get the axe. Human good gets
the axe: “it is hewn down and cast into fire,” and this is the first reference
to the baptism of fire.
Verse 11 — a very
interesting verse in which three baptisms are mentioned, one water and two dry
ones. First of all we have a ritual baptism which we simply designate John’s
baptism — “I indeed [in truth] baptise you in water.” “I baptise” is a present
active indicative. Baptizw is a Greek word,
not an English word. It has simply been adopted in the English language and it
is most unfortunate that it has. If someone had had the courage to translate
this word instead of transliterate it half of our problem would be solved. The
word “baptise” is a Greek word which means to identify. When John says, “with
water,” then he identifies the objects of his baptism with water, the
candidates are identified with water. The present tense means that this was his
habit, a habit which came from the fact that he had converts and this was their
public declaration. This was the transition from maximum ritualism to minimum ritualism.
Remember that in the temple at this time the priesthood, the scribes the
Pharisees, the Sadducees, the high priest and all the priesthood were carrying
on with ritualistic activities. In fact they had distorted these things. Ritual
was a bona fide way of teaching the Lord Jesus Christ and teaching salvation in
the Old Testament but by this time in the 4th cycle of discipline we have a
terrible apostasy. All of this ritual has been distorted and is ritual without
reality which means that people were going through the ritual of the Passover,
the ritual of the firstfruits, the ritual of unleavened bread, the ritual of
the Levitical sacrifices, etc., but they were not saved. Therefore it was
meaningless. Ritual without reality is meaningless.
In John’s ministry his
baptism was all the ritual he had. He didn’t have a temple out in the desert or
a brazen altar or animal sacrifices. His was a transitory ministry, it was the
end of the line for ritual. This was the beginning of something that would be
developed to the maximum in the Church Age, and in this sense John is a
transitional preacher. He bridges the gap between the dispensation of Israel
and the dispensation of the Church and therefore the only ritual he had was the
Jordan river. So he took the people down to water. There was actually no
precedent for this in Old Testament practice except the brazen laver was a type
of rebound, it was used by the priests only. But here John takes people to the
water and he puts them into the water; he identifies them with the water and in
so doing he set a precedent for an entire new order. He anticipated the Church
Age; he anticipated the decline and the removal of ritual — except as we study
it in the Word of God — as having any meaning in worship. Today we do not offer
animal sacrifices, today we do not have any sanctuaries, today there is not any
altar in any building, today we do not have the Passover and unleavened bread
and the firstruits, today we do not have the ritual of the Levitical
priesthood. It is removed entirely and we study it as a basis for learning more
Christology and soteriology but we do not have ritual any longer as a bona fide
approach to God or as a basis of representing our relationship with God.
Ritual was very
wonderful in its day, especially when you remember that people could not read
or write generally. The exception would be the Jews who were quite literate. So
this became a wonderful means of communicating the gospel and communicating
teaching with regard to Jesus Christ. But John lived in the day when the
transition was beginning and he had one authorised bit of ritual in his entire
ministry and that was water baptism.
John himself did the
baptising and as far as we know he had no assistants. No one else did it but
John himself. This might appear to be a rather difficult thing in view of the
fact that while John had disciples as far as we can tell from the scripture none
of them were authorised to baptise. As a matter of fact Jesus Himself did not
baptise. Jesus Himself was baptised of John but He Himself did not baptise. So
it would appear that John’s ministry and baptism was absolutely unique and no
one else performed an act of water baptism until the time of the apostles. And,
as far as we can tell, in Acts chapter two Peter and the apostles performed
acts of water baptism on the day of Pentecost, the day the Church began, but
until that time no water baptism was performed by anyone except John. When John
died no one was baptised from that time until the apostles baptised on the day
of Pentecost. This means that baptism was a special operation of John and that
is why, for example, he refused to baptise the Pharisees when they came down to
be baptised. He baptised only those who he was convinced had personally
accepted Christ as saviour. And so he was addressing himself to believers when
he said: “I make it a habit of baptising you” — present tense — habitual
concept — active voice, only John did this. The reason apparently that John was
authorised to do it: this was the way that God would make it possible for the
herald to contact the King. There has to be a basis of contact and the herald
will contact the King when the King offers Himself as a candidate for baptism.
And at first the herald will refuse because he was accustomed to baptising
converts. But it will be spelled out to him that the water can represent more
than the kingdom of God, it can represent the plan of God.
It must be remembered
that when John baptised he used water and he put the bodies in the water. The
water represented the kingdom of God, the kingdom of regenerate, and these
people who were saved were taken to the water and put into the water to
indicate they were identified with the King and the kingdom which John was
proclaiming in his message. This was their testimony. But when the King Himself
comes the King is the kingdom and therefore the water will not represent the
kingdom when He comes. Christ is not a sinner who has been saved, he is not a
convert Himself, and so the water will represent the plan of God the Father for
operation phase one. And when Jesus goes into the water His baptism is unique
and no one will ever follow Him in baptism.
The point is that God
used this means of doing two things: of bringing Jesus Christ in His humanity
to the point of decision before He began His ministry, that He would be willing
to do the Father’s will. The plan of the Father is the cross, the will of the
Father for the humanity of Christ is the cross and when Jesus goes into the
water to be baptised He is saying in effect: “I will go to the cross, I will
die for the sins of the world, I will fulfil the plan of the Father, not my
will but His be done.” All of this is involved in the baptism of Jesus but in
the meantime John is baptising his converts as a testimony and as a principle.
Now the principle is this: there will be a little ritual left for the Church
Age but not enough ritual so that it can be distorted. So all of the ritual
that is left to us is the Lord’s table and the water baptism. The reason is
that the back of ritual must be broken. This doesn’t keep religion from having
a full blown operation of ritual today, all of which is totally meaningless and
is not the mean by which we approach God. This is the story of the book of
Hebrews — Heb. 10:1, the law had a shadow of good things to come but was not
the reality. We no longer deal with shadows.
The word “unto” is a
very interesting preposition. It is the word e)ij in the Greek and it was in a time of transition at
the time of the first century in Koine Greek. Up to this time the word e)n was used for the
preposition “in,” but this word was gradually changing and was coming to mean
“by” more than “in” although all Greek prepositions have four or five uses;
usually two primary uses and six or seven secondary uses. Now e)ij is a preposition which
gradually took over the concept of “in” so that in modern Greek e)ij means “in.” But at this
time e)ij was going
through its transition and it meant “because of.” It is important to understand
“upon” or “because of” because this same preposition e)ij occurs in Acts 2:38 and it
is used usually in front of “repentance” — “Let each one be baptised because of
the remission of sins,” not “for the remission of sins.” So here we have: “I
baptise you with water because of (your) repentance.” As we have previously
seen the word “repentance means a complete change of mental attitude toward
Christ. It is the mental attitude which immediately precedes or is coterminous
with faith in Christ. Actual salvation occurs at the second that you believe in
Jesus Christ. Immediately before that you repent, which means you change your
mind about Christ. So first of all you have a change of mind about Christ and
then as a result of that change of mind, or coterminous with it, you believe in
Christ. Remember that “repent” does not mean to feel sorry for sins.
“but” — now he is
talking about the One who is to come. Remember that John is a herald and the
herald announces the coming of the King; “he that cometh after me” refers to
the Lord Jesus Christ. “That cometh” is a present tense which is dramatic. The
coming of Christ is a dramatic moment — “after me” is a technical idiom for a
herald saying: “After me cometh the King.”
“is [keeps on being]
mightier than I” — ablative adjective of comparison. He keeps on being mightier
than I, there never will be a time when He isn’t mightier than I; “he shall
baptise,” future tense. It must be understood at this point that the future tense
is very important. Both the baptism of the Holy Spirit and the baptism of fire
are future from this point. They have not occurred yet at all. No one ever had
the baptism of the Holy Spirit in the Old Testament. Active voice: Jesus does
the baptising in this case. The indicative mood is the reality of two more
kinds of baptism, the baptism of the Spirit and the baptism of fire.
“with the Holy Spirit”
— this is an instrumental case. He shall baptise through the instrumentality of
the Holy Spirit. This refers to the doctrine of the baptism of the Holy Spirit.
The doctrine of
the baptism of the Spirit
In the King James
version we have the word “ghost” here. It is the Greek word pneuma. At other times
we have the word “Holy Spirit.” The word which is translated “Spirit” is the
Greek word pneuma. What is the
difference between the two words? Absolutely nothing. The problem is that the
Westminster crowd wanted to be different from the Oxford crowd of translators
so they translated it “ghost” and the other group translated it “spirit” .There
is no difference. In Attic Greek, which is Classical Greek, there is a word for
“ghost” which should be translated “shades” — shades from the underworld. There
is actually no word for “ghost” in the Koine Greek.
The word pneuma originally meant
air — invisible. It eventually came to mean spirit or that which is invisible.
Spirit simply means that which is a reality yet is invisible.
“Spirit” is used three
ways in scripture: for the Holy Spirit, for the human spirit [the invisible
part of man that has fellowship with God], and it is also used for angels.
1. The baptism of the
Holy Spirit did not occur in the Old Testament.
2. The baptism of the
Spirit was prophesied by Jesus during His earthly ministry — John 14:20; Acts
1:5.
3. The mechanics of
the baptism of the Spirit are given in 1 Corinthians 12:13 — “by means of the
Spirit are we [once and for all] baptised [identified] into Jesus Christ.” The
baptism of the Spirit is obviously then something you do not feel. It is not an
experience or an emotional activity.
4. Unification of
believers is achieved by the baptism of the Spirit — Ephesians 4:5. All
unification of believers is based upon the fact that we have the same Lord, we
are all saved exactly the same way, and we all enter into union with Christ by
the work of the baptism of the Spirit.
5. The baptism of the
Spirit is the only place of equality in the human race — Galatians 3:26-28.
6. The baptism of the
Spirit provides retroactive identification — Romans 6:3,4.
7. The baptism of the
Spirit begins the Church Age — Matthew 16:15; Acts 1:5; 2:3; 11:15-17.
8. The baptism of the
Spirit is the basis of current positional truth — Ephesians 1:3-6.
9. The baptism of the
Spirit is not an experience, not ecstatics, not speaking in tongues; it can
neither be felt nor experienced.
Verse 11 — “and with
fire.” “With fire” is one word in the Greek, instrumental case. The baptism of
the Spirit actually began the Church Age, it is the way that the Church is
formed. The Church is formed by union with Christ. The moment any person
believes in Christ he is entered into union with Christ during the Church Age.
The Church universal is the body of Christ and the body of Christ is formed by
the baptism of the Spirit. Eventually we have the Tribulation and the second
advent of Christ. The Church is taken out of the world at the Rapture before
the second advent and at the point of the second advent we have the next
baptism, the baptism of fire. The baptism of fire is a baptism of judgement
just as the baptism of the Spirit is the baptism of blessing. It points out a
principle: those who believe in Christ are in a place of eternal blessing;
those who reject Christ are in a place of identification with fire. Remember
that the baptism of the Holy Spirit is identification with Christ, union with
Christ, the place of eternal security. Both of these baptisms are connected
with Jesus Christ in verse 11. Notice it says: “He shall baptise you with the
Holy Spirit and with fire.” The baptism of fire is an identification that takes
place off from the earth. Positional truth is a baptism — baptism of the Spirit
— whereby we are positionally in heaven while experientially on the earth. The
baptism of fire is also removing people from the earth at the second advent,
and it is removing the unbeliever.
The doctrine of the
baptism of fire — the instrument for
divine judgement at the second advent.
1. We have some
Biblical statements with regard to the baptism of fire: Matthew 3:12; Luke
3:16,17; 2 Thessalonians 1:7-9.
2. Analogy to the
baptism of fire: Matthew 24:36 — a passage which has often been taught as a
passage dealing with the Rapture of the Church, the time when the Church is
removed from the earth, when the Lord meets believers in the air between the
earth and the third heaven. At that point the believers go out and the
unbelievers stay on the earth. At the point of the second advent the believers
stay on the earth and the unbelievers are removed from the earth. Matthew 24:36
refers to the baptism of fire.
3. We have parables
that declare the baptism of fire: the parable of the wheat and the tares —
Matt. 13:24ff; the parable of the good and the bad fish, Matt. 13:47-50; the
parable of the ten virgins, Matt. 25:1-13. E.g. the wheat and the tares —
wheat: believers going into the Millennium; tares: unbelievers cast out.
4. We have the Gentile
baptism of fire in Matthew 25:31-46.
5. We have the Jewish
baptism of fire in Ezekiel 20:32-38.
Verse 12 —
amplification of the baptism of fire. “Whose” — relative pronoun referring to
the Lord Jesus Christ; “fan” — a grain shovel, a special type of shovel to
separate the wheat from the tares by which the harvest was tossed up into the
wind which effected the separation; “and he will thoroughly purge his floor.” John
5:22 tells us that all judgement is committed to Jesus Christ and when He
returns to the earth He personally has charge of this particular operation. The
future tense here indicates that the baptism of fire is future. “His floor”
refers to the earth which he takes charge of at the moment of His return and
sets up perfect environment; “and gather his wheat into the garner.” The
gathering of the wheat simply means the keeping of the believers on the earth.
The wheat refers to the believers on the Tribulation who will continue in their
physical bodies in the Millennial reign of Christ. The garner simply means a
granary or storehouse for grain; “but,” conjunction of contrast, “he will burn
the chaff.” The word for “burn” here is not the ordinary Greek word for burn — katakaiw. Kaiw means to burn,
and this is the ordinary Greek word for burn. Kata is the
preposition in the Greek of norm, standard, and criterion, and this word means
to burn according to a norm or a standard. This is not haphazard burning; it is
no accident. The norm or the standard for this burning which takes place at the
second advent is attitude toward the person of the Lord Jesus Christ, and those
who reject Christ are burned and they keep on burning forever, and those who
believe in Christ go into the Millennium; “with unquenchable fire” — the word
“fire” is dative of disadvantage, the word “unquenchable” is most interesting,
it is a)sbestoj which in the
Greek is just the opposite to how we use it. It is a Greek word for when you
start to burn you never stop. That is what unquenchable means.
Verses 13-17, the
baptism of Jesus. This is the baptism where Jesus declares that He will go to
the cross and die for the sins of the world. This is the unique baptism of all
water baptisms. No one ever follows Jesus in baptism. There was a water baptism
before the baptism of Jesus and that was the baptism of John. It came first
because it was the herald’s baptism, anticipating Christ. The baptism of Jesus
is unique because Christ was unique and because it represents His unique work,
the cross. The baptism of the believer in the Church Age is that which follows
and indicates the peculiar position of the Church. The believer goes into
water, identification with Christ in His death; the believer comes up into air,
identification with Christ in His resurrection as He is seated at the right
hand of the Father.
Verse 13 — the baptism
of Jesus Christ, the unique application for baptism. “Then” is a Greek particle
that means “next on the agenda”; “cometh Jesus,” “cometh” is a dramatic present
tense, He made a dramatic appearance. Here is John giving a message and as he
is saying that there was one coming after him whose sandals he was not worthy
to lace, etc., He will give you real baptisms, suddenly there appears in the
audience the one who knew that. “Then Cometh” means while John was talking
about these things Jesus suddenly appears. Jesus made His first public
appearance at the Jordan after coming from Galilee; “unto John” — He comes to
John; He came forward to talk with him, and “to be baptised by him” .
“To be baptised”
1. The word “baptise”
means identification.
2. We have the aorist
tense which means now in this point of time. He made application then.
3. The passive voice
is what shocked John. In the passive voice the subject receives the action of
the verb and Jesus is coming to be baptised by John.
4. The infinitive
indicates that this was the purpose of Jesus, to have His herald baptise Him.
5. Why? The baptism
begins the public ministry of Jesus Christ.
In John’s baptism you
have people who were lost or unsaved. These people would believe and be saved.
Then to give public testimony and to demonstrate their salvation they would be
baptised. It can be imagined how John feels when the King suddenly stands
before him, and He is not a sinner and He has not been saved because He doesn’t
need salvation. Why then would He be baptised? This is why John is going to
say, No.
Verse 14 — the
refusal. “But John forbad him.” The word “forbad” means to refuse permission.
It is an imperfect tense which indicates that he kept on refusing. “I have need
to be baptised of you, and why comest thou to me?”
Verse 15 — “Suffer
now,” permit it now [in this point of time] is an aorist active imperative. The
imperative mood is an order.
Why? The water does
not represent the kingdom of God, the kingdom of God is here in the form of the
King. The water represents the will of God. The will of God must be exercised
before the kingdom of God can be a reality. By the kingdom of God is meant the
eternal kingdom of regenerate. You cannot have a kingdom of born-again people,
you cannot have saved members of the human race living forever and ever and
ever unless you have a bona fide King, and you cannot have the King before the
cross, the cross must come before the crown. So the will of God must come
before the kingdom of God. The baptism of Jesus is unique because the water
represents the will of God; “for thus it becometh us” — John the Baptist who
will perform the ritual of baptism and Jesus who will be baptised — “becometh”
means proper, it is proper for us; “to fulfil all righteousness” — “to fulfil”
is aorist tense, at a point of time, right now.
“All
righteousness”
1. All righteousness
is fulfilled at the cross. When Christ died on the cross He rejected human
righteousness — Isaiah 64:6. He fulfilled all righteousness because: in His
deity He was +R; in His humanity He was +R; and therefore He was qualified to
bear sins other than His own and to be judged, and by bearing our sins which
were imputed to Him on the cross, and rejecting human righteousness, He
fulfilled the Father’s will and/or righteousness. When we talk about divine
good the standard is the cross. Why? At the cross the one who is all
righteousness did all the work; salvation is the work of Christ.
2. Behind this statement of point 1 is the doctrine of
redemption in which the saviour must be perfect righteousness to purchase the
freedom of the human race.
3. Righteousness
brought Jesus where sin brings us, the human race, to the cross for salvation.
4. The ritual of
baptism was unique in the case of Jesus who in this manner declares His
positive volition in going to the cross.
Verse 16 — “And Jesus,
when he was baptised,” aorist passive participle, when he had received baptism;
“went up,” aorist active indicative, the action of the aorist participle
precedes the action of the main verb. He first of all was baptised, then He
sent up. And why do we have this grammatical construction? For the simple reason
that Jesus Christ died for our sins before He went to heaven. He “went up”
afterwards. The aorist passive participle has Him down in the water and the
aorist active indicative has Him coming out of the water. This is the order,
you cannot have the crown before the cross. Jesus has said by going into the
water He will go to the cross, by coming out of the water He will take the
crown. In the next chapter Satan is going to offer the crown without the cross.
It was a bona fide offer and it was refused. We have the same principle today.
The whole system of liberal theology today wants the crown without the cross.
“and, lo, the heavens
were opened,” aorist tense: they suddenly opened; passive voice: they received
opening; “unto him, and he [Jesus Christ] saw” — no one else saw it. No one has
ever seen the Holy Spirit. Why did Jesus see the Holy Spirit? Because Jesus is
God. The gospel writers knew it because of revelation; “like a dove” is an
analogy to fast movement. Also, the dove was used in Noah’s day. Why is the
dove used for an analogy to the Spirit? The ark had one window through which
the dove was released when the water started to go down. Why was the dove
released? Because the dove is a bird which will not alight if there are any
dead bodies around and it will not alight on water. It will only alight on
something that is clean. When the dove comes back to announce that things are
safe now it comes back with a twig in its mouth, something clean. The point is
that the dove will only go on something clean, and the dove will alight upon
Jesus Christ because Christ is clean, perfect. So the analogy of the dove is an
indication of the fact that God the Holy Spirit has to control you and He has
to have a clean vessel — the need of rebound — and as far as Jesus was
concerned He is perfect, a clean vessel.
Doctrine of the sustaining ministry of the Holy
Spirit
1. The Holy Spirit
sustained Jesus Christ — prophesied, Isaiah 11:2,3; 42:1; 61:1,2.
2. The Holy Spirit was
given without measure to the incarnate Christ — John 3:34.
3. The Holy Spirit
guaranteed to sustain the humanity of Christ during His earthly ministry by the
appearance at the baptism — Matthew 3:16. In other words, the Holy Spirit
appeared to guarantee to Jesus Christ that He would be sustained during the
next three years from the point of the baptism to the point of the cross. Ten
days before Pentecost Christ breathed on the disciples the Holy Spirit because
that is the only way they could be sustained for ten days.
4. The Holy Spirit
empowered the humanity of Christ during His earthly ministry. Not only did He
sustain Him but He gave Him power to perform miracles. Jesus did not use His
deity to perform miracles, He utilised the omnipotence of the Holy Spirit —
Matthew 12:18,28; Luke 4:14,15,18.
5. Jesus was guided by
the Spirit — Matthew 4:1.
6. The ministry of the
Holy Spirit was continued during the last three hours of the cross when Christ
bore our sins. During that time the Holy Spirit departed from Him and became
His judge, along with the Father.
7. The Holy Spirit
participated in the resurrection of Jesus Christ — Romans 8:11; 1 Peter 3:18.
Verse 17 — the
Father’s approval. “And, Lo, a voice from heaven, saying,” present active
participle, dramatic present; “this [this one] is [keeps on being] my own
beloved Son,” indicating the uniqueness of Christ; “in whom I am well pleased,”
aorist tense, point of time right here; active voice: the Father is pleased;
indicative mood: the reality of the Father’s pleasure in the humanity of Christ
agreeing to go to the cross and provide eternal salvation.