Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Day 1 - John 1:1-34

As I read this passage certain things stick out to me, probably because I have heard this passage so many times. In youth group, myself and several other students actually memorized this passage by doing a reader's theater centering on the first 34 verses. We used this theater for various trips, church functions and other events, and I still remember a solid portion of it to this day.


One of the things that strikes me from this passage is this character John, or rather John the Baptist. This passage begins talking about the 'Word', which later is revealed to be Jesus by the end of the passage. However, in the middle we find this conversation about who isn't God, who isn't the Messiah, and who John really is in the story. Verse 19 shows John there baptizing people, when all of the sudden the Priests and Levites are sent in to figure out who this guy is that is baptizing individuals. They ask him several questions:


"Who are you?" (v.21)


"Are you Elijah?" (v.21)


"Are you a prophet?" (v.21)


"What do you say about yourself?" (v. 22)


and finally,


"Why then do you baptize if you are not the Christ, nor Elijah, nor the People?" (v. 25)


The Priests and Levites are in effect asking where he gets his authority from. If John the Baptist was a prophet, if he was Elijah, if he was the Christ, then they could understand his actions. The fact is though, John wasn't any of those things. John was, well John. John was simply a guy doing what God had called him to do, "I am the voice of one calling in the desert, 'Make straight the way for the Lord (v. 23).'" God had called an ordinary man to do something extraordinary. His authority wasn't through titles but through the one who sent him.


So the question is, what has God sent me (you) to do? God has given us the authority, the talents, and the knowledge to do great things, not for your glory but for His. While John knew what he was called to do, he also knew not to take the credit for himself, but to turn the attention and the focus to someone far greater and more powerful than he, the priests, the Levites and the Jews ever could have imagined. Who interestingly shows up on the next day? Jesus.

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