30 Prophets of the Bible ยท Luke 1; Matthew 3; Mark 1; John 1

Session 28: John the Baptist - The Prophet Who Prepared the Way

Luke 1; Matthew 3; Mark 1; John 1

John the Baptist -- The Prophet Who Prepared the Way

Series: 30 Prophets of the Bible - Dr. Randy White

I. Identity of John the Baptist

Name and Known Facts

  • John was the son of Zacharias the priest and Elisabeth, both of the house and lineage connected with Israel's priesthood (Luke 1:5).
  • His birth was announced before his conception, and his name was given by divine instruction rather than family custom (Luke 1:13, 60-63).
  • He was filled with the Holy Ghost from his mother's womb and was separated from ordinary life by a distinctive prophetic calling (Luke 1:15).
  • Scripture calls him "the prophet of the Highest" and places him in the line of Israel's prophetic expectation (Luke 1:76).

Prophetic Role

  • John was the forerunner sent to prepare Israel for the coming of the Lord (Isa. 40:3; Mal. 3:1; Matt. 3:3).
  • His ministry centered on Israel, repentance, the kingdom of heaven, and the public manifestation of Jesus as Messiah.
  • Jesus said John was "more than a prophet" and identified him with the promised messenger who prepared the way (Matt. 11:9-10).

II. Historical Setting

Israel Under Rome

  • John ministered in the days of Herod and in the early public setting of Jesus' earthly ministry.
  • Israel had the temple, priests, synagogues, and Scriptures, but remained under Gentile dominion.
  • John's wilderness setting recalled Israel's prophetic history and placed his message outside the polished religious centers of Jerusalem.

The Wilderness and Jordan

  • John appeared in the wilderness of Judaea, preaching and baptizing in Jordan (Matt. 3:1-6).
  • His clothing and manner were intentionally prophetic, recalling Elijah (2 Kings 1:8; Matt. 3:4).
  • The people came from Jerusalem, Judaea, and the region around Jordan, showing a wide public response.

III. Nature of John's Ministry

A Call to National Repentance

  • John's message was direct: "Repent ye: for the kingdom of heaven is at hand" (Matt. 3:2).
  • His baptism was "the baptism of repentance for the remission of sins" in connection with Israel's preparation (Mark 1:4).
  • He demanded "fruits meet for repentance" and warned against trusting merely in descent from Abraham (Matt. 3:8-9).

A Witness to Christ

  • John did not present himself as the Christ, Elijah in person, or "that prophet" (John 1:19-23).
  • He identified Jesus as "the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world" (John 1:29).
  • His own summary of ministry was humble and exact: "He must increase, but I must decrease" (John 3:30).

IV. Major Themes

Preparation for the King

  • John prepared the way of the Lord by calling Israel to repentance before the appearing of Messiah.
  • His ministry belongs to the prophetic program concerning Israel and the kingdom, not to the later revelation of the mystery given through Paul.
  • This distinction helps keep John's baptism, message, and audience in their proper historical setting.

Judgment and Separation

  • John warned that the axe was laid unto the root of the trees (Matt. 3:10).
  • He spoke of the One coming after him who would baptize with the Holy Ghost and with fire (Matt. 3:11).
  • His imagery of wheat, garner, chaff, and unquenchable fire presents Messiah as Judge as well as Deliverer (Matt. 3:12).

Moral Courage

  • John rebuked religious leaders who came without evident repentance (Matt. 3:7).
  • He gave practical answers to publicans and soldiers without softening the call to righteousness (Luke 3:10-14).
  • He reproved Herod for unlawful marriage and other evils, leading to imprisonment and execution (Luke 3:19-20; Mark 6:17-29).
  • From prison, John sent disciples to ask Jesus, "Art thou he that should come, or do we look for another?" (Matt. 11:3). Jesus answered by pointing to the works being done, and then publicly defended John's prophetic greatness (Matt. 11:4-11).

V. Structure of John's Prophetic Ministry

Luke 1 -- Birth Announced and Interpreted

  • Gabriel announces John's birth and mission to Zacharias (Luke 1:5-17).
  • Zacharias prophesies that John will go before the face of the Lord to prepare His ways (Luke 1:76-79).

Matthew 3; Mark 1; Luke 3 -- Public Preaching

  • John preaches repentance and announces the nearness of the kingdom.
  • He baptizes in Jordan and confronts empty religious confidence.
  • He baptizes Jesus, and Jesus is publicly identified with approval from heaven.

John 1; 3 -- Witness and Withdrawal

  • John testifies that he is the voice crying in the wilderness.
  • He identifies Jesus as the Lamb of God and the Son of God (John 1:29-34).
  • He rejoices as the friend of the bridegroom and willingly steps back as Christ's ministry becomes public (John 3:25-30).

Matthew 11; Mark 6 -- Question, Vindication, and Death

  • John's prison question shows the difficulty of waiting for kingdom fulfillment while the King is present and rejection is growing (Matt. 11:2-6).
  • Jesus does not rebuke John as a false prophet; He calls him greater than those born of women and connects him again with Malachi's messenger (Matt. 11:7-11).
  • John's death under Herod shows the cost of prophetic faithfulness and anticipates Israel's rejection of the greater Prophet, Priest, and King.

VI. Why John the Baptist Matters

The Prophet at the Threshold

  • John stands at the threshold between the Old Testament prophetic expectation and the appearing of Christ in Israel.
  • He confirms that the promises of Isaiah and Malachi had not been abandoned.
  • He shows the spiritual condition of Israel at Messiah's appearing: interest, crowds, religious resistance, and the need for repentance.
  • He is not the founder of the church; he is the God-sent forerunner of the King, calling Israel to be ready for the Lord.