Third Sunday of
Advent Year A
If you have ever stepped into an Eastern Orthodox
Church, one of the things that will strike you is that the view of the
sanctuary where the altar is located is concealed by a screen decorated by a
multitude of icons, the iconostasis. For the Eastern Christians, the
iconostasis does not serve as a barrier that separates the nave from the
sanctuary but is actually a doorway into the sanctuary, into the Holy of
Holies. For the iconostasis symbolises the barrier that divides Heaven and
Earth which has been torn. A permanent feature of the iconostasis is the icon
of the Theotokos, who stands on the left of the Royal Door, and an icon of
Christ the Pantokrator, who stands to the right. And then immediately to the
right of the icon of Christ stands St John the Baptist, the Forerunner of
Christ. The Forerunner prepares the Way for Christ’s first coming, and Christ
and the Church honours the Forerunner in perpetuity.
Just as the iconostasis act as a bridge between Heaven
and Earth, St John the Baptist stands as a bridge of continuity between the Old
and New Testament. The Old Testament prophets all looked forward to the time of
John and spoke of the Messiah who was then to appear. The Old Testament closes
with this prophecy of the coming of Elijah (Mal. 4:5, 6) and the New Testament
opens with a record of a fulfillment of that prophecy (Matt. 3:1–3 3). The
prophetic office of the Old Testament times, reached a climax in John when the
old reached its hopes and gave way to the new. This is the reason why in
today’s gospel, our Lord pays the highest tribute to St John. John is
languishing in prison because he had the courage to call Herod to repentance
for marrying his brother’s wife. Soon he would be beheaded for the stand he
took.
As he approaches his own death, St John the Baptist
must now be certain that his mission is complete, that the One, whose Way he
had been preparing, had actually arrived. So having heard reports of Jesus’
exploits, John sends his disciples to question our Lord, “Are you the one who
is to come, or have we got to wait for someone else?” Many Christians are
perturbed by John’s question; isn’t he the cousin of our Lord? Didn’t he
baptise our Lord at the river Jordan and announce Him to be the Lamb of God who
takes away the sin of the world? Some commentators have tried to understand
this by arguing that it was John’s disciples who had doubts, and therefore,
John had sent them to our Lord for the purpose of clearing their doubts and
with the hope that they will now follow Him. Others would explain John’s
actions by saying that he expected a powerful Messiah that would baptise with
Spirit and fire, and now there appears this gentle one who “will not quench a
smoldering wick” (Isaiah 42:3).
Whether it was John or his disciples or both who
harboured doubts, Our Lord calms their disquiet by showing him that the
prophecy is being fulfilled in himself, “Go back and tell John what you hear
and see; the blind see again, and the lame walk, lepers are cleansed, and the
deaf hear, and the dead are raised to life and the Good News is proclaimed to
the poor; and happy is the man who does not lose faith in me.” Our Lord is
alluding to the prophecies of the Prophet Isaiah. He is telling John’s
disciples that He is indeed the fulfillment of the prophecies.
But Our Lord adds this beatitude at the end, “Happy
(or Blessed) is the man who does not lose faith in me.” Of course, the
beatitude can be taken to apply to everyone, to all Christians who do “not lose
faith” in Christ. But this is spoken to the Baptist in the first instance. It
must have come as a powerful assurance to John, for John is indeed the one who
did “not lose faith” in Christ. These words were meant as an encouragement to
John, despite his seemingly bleak condition and uncertainty, to continue to
believe in Jesus as the Messiah, and not lose or falter in his faith. These
words still have great relevance for us Christians today. Many of us go through
seasons in our Christian life where we struggle with doubts and faith in God,
in Christ and in His Church, especially now when we are confronted with the
darkness of unbelief, the enveloping darkness of sin, the scandal of sexual
abuse, the confusing reports we receive about the happenings and controversies
within the Church. In such dark times, it is easy to doubt and to lose heart.
But our Lord assures us again, “happy is the man who does not lose faith in me.”
Like St John the Baptist, we are invited to look at
our Lord and all His works in this chaotic world of ours. In the midst of
darkness, there is the light of His grace; in the midst of confusion, there is
clarity of His teachings; in the midst of hopelessness, there is His promise of
salvation. In different ways, we too are called to give witness to this faith
as St John the Baptist did. As St Paul
tells us, “you too have to be patient, do not lose heart, because the Lord’s
coming is soon.”
Then comes the part where our Lord states that John
the Baptist is a true “witness” to His mission and ministry. The Greek word for
witness is “matyron” from where we derive the word “martyr.” Some have
questioned whether St John the Baptist could be accurately described as a
martyr for Christ, since he preceded Christ and his imprisonment and execution
appears to have been occasioned by his outspoken opposition to Herod. Well, the
Venerable St Bede had this answer, “There is no doubt that blessed John
suffered imprisonment and chains as a witness to our Redeemer, whose forerunner
he was, and gave his life for him. His persecutor had demanded not that he
should deny Christ, but only that he should keep silent about the truth.
Nevertheless, he died for Christ. Does Christ not say: I am the truth?
Therefore, because John shed his blood for the truth, he surely died for
Christ.” John was indeed a martyr for Christ. He was not a “reed swaying in the
breeze,” his conviction did not falter and his faith did not stumble in the
face of death. He would not be moved. He
would not change his message when the religious big shots showed up. And
finally, it was his uncompromising stand for Truth that got him thrown in
prison and finally beheaded.
So, our Lord was right when He made this
pronouncement, “of all the children born of women, a greater than John the
Baptist has never been seen.” Having paid such a great tribute to this man, our
Lord adds this cryptic verse, “yet the least in the kingdom of heaven is
greater than he is.” Who is our Lord referring to? After Our Lord Jesus died
and rose again, everything that the Old Testament prophets and St John the
Baptist looked forward to, we Christians know and have. Everything they had
hoped for, we understand. All that they believed would come, we know has come.
John could never truly preach the gospel, because the gospel is all about the
death and resurrection of Christ, but we can, we who have been baptised into
Christ’s death and have risen with Him in baptism. St John the Baptist never
experienced the coming of the Holy Spirit on Pentecost, but we have at our
baptism and confirmation. Yes, we are the ones our Lord was referring to “the
least in the kingdom of heaven.” This is
because as our Lord tells us in Luke’s gospel (10:23-24), “Blessed are the eyes
which see the things you see, for I say to you, that many prophets and kings
wished to see the things which you see, and did not see them, and to hear the
things which you hear, and did not hear them.” Well, we have seen and heard
what St John the Baptist longed to hear and see.
Our Lord gave this glowing tribute to John. And my
brothers and sisters, as hard as it is to believe, one day if you are faithful to
Him unto death, if you are not a “reed swaying in the breeze”, if you patiently
wait and not lose heart, He will give you a glowing tribute before everyone who
has ever lived. Live with this conviction. Deny yourself as St John did and
live unto Christ. Don’t live for the approval of man, but for the approval of
God. And on that final day, you too will receive praise from the very lips of
Jesus Christ. What higher goal could we possibly live for?
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