Text: John 1:29-34
Date: Wednesday of Epiphany I + 1/10/07
The beginning of blessed St. John’s Gospel is mystically arranged as a week of seven days in which is announced all the main themes of our Lord’s earthly ministry. After the majestic prologue announcing the Eternal Word becoming flesh and the brief introduction of John the Baptist, today’s Gospel begins with the words, “The next day.” If the first day of the week, Sunday, is St. John’s “Christmas,” celebrating the incarnation of the Son of God, “the next day,” Monday, marks the inauguration or ordination (if you will) of our Lord’s active earthly ministry at His baptism when He was about 30 years old. The account of Jesus’ baptism in the Jordan River is recorded in the synoptic Gospels, Matthew [3:16], Mark [1:10], and Luke [3:22]. Presuming that you are already familiar with those accounts, the Apostle and Evangelist John does not narrate the act of the baptism for you again but emphasizes the divine sign of revelation given to the Baptist by which he was to know that Jesus is the promised, one-and-only Messiah, namely, “He on whom you see the Spirit descend and remain, this is he who baptizes with the Holy Spirit” [John 1:33 (ESV)]. The Evangelist says the Baptist “saw” Jesus, “saw” the Spirit descending and remaining on Jesus, and bore witness, saying, “I have seen and testified that this is the Son of God.” Our faith is firmly founded on the eye-witness testimony of the Baptist, the Apostles and the elders or pastors of the Church at Ephesus who had John include their words at the end of his Gospel, “This is the disciple who is bearing witness about these things, and who has written these things, and we know that his testimony is true” [John 21:24].
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