Coming
exactly six months before Christmas, the Birthday of Christ, we
celebrate the Birthday of His Cousin and Forerunner, St
John Baptist. The placement of these two holy days in the calendar
represents a happy
coincidence.
The Baptist said (John 4:30), “He must increase, but I must decrease.” The
Birthday of Christ falls just after the winter solstice,
the
“shortest day of the year,” the time when we have the least daylight
to
enjoy, but when we know that the days will begin to get longer. The
increase
of sunlight proclaims the gradual revelation of the Saviour’s
glory.
But the birthday of the Forerunner comes just after the
summer solstice,
when the days are long and we are reminded that daytime
will begin to
diminish.
The natural order itself serves to illustrate the Baptist’s
pronouncement,
“He must increase, but I must decrease.”
This cryptic saying of this strange man refers to the
progressive
magnification of Christ: first in His resurrection,
ascension, and
enthronement
at His Father’s right hand; next as His earthly reign
advances
in history; and finally as He, through the agency of His Spirit,
transforms
wretched sinners into glorious saints. When the Baptist made that
prophecy, all of this lay in the future. His hearers, puzzled and incredulous,
did not foresee the exaltation of Christ shortly to be
accomplished
before their every eyes. We likewise do not see the activity of Christ
here and now.
When John said, “I must decrease,” he was speaking of the
end of the Old Testament era, when the Temple ,
its sacrifices, and even prophecy itself would shortly come to an end. He
was speaking moreover of his own temporary role as the Forerunner of the King
who reigns forever. In a larger sense he was speaking for all of us, as
Christ grows in us, the
image
of God is restored, and we are reduced to our proper size. We must be
humbled in order to be exalted.
For St John Baptist, this was all a matter of consummate
joy. In John 4,
he spoke of Christ as the bridegroom (the One who takes the
Church as His bride, His beloved). Therefore he spoke of himself as “the
bridegroom’s friend,” the “best man.” John declared, “The friend of the
bridegroom, who stands and hears him, rejoices greatly at the bridegroom’s
voice. Therefore this joy of mine is now complete.”
Proud arrogant rebels that we are, the Gospel of Jesus
Christ comes as
utter embarrassment and humiliation to creatures utterly
unable to escape from our predicament. We are lost and cannot find our
way home. What fools we are! But when we, with St John Baptist, hear the
Bridegroom’s voice, as He comes to woo us, claim us as His own, and take
us to His home, then we too may say with certainty, “this joy of mine is now complete.”
May we be diminished that Christ be enlarged.
LKW
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