Intro
So, there was John the Baptizer living up to his name and baptizing!  And the 
Jewish leadership of his day chafed in discomfort because of it.  So, they 
confronted him: “Why are you baptizing?”  We also ask, “Yes, John, why are you 
baptizing?”  For 2,000 years later, we’re clueless about those baptisms taking 
place before Jesus instituted His baptism in the New Covenant.  

Main Body
So, John was baptizing.  Was this something that he started?  No, John didn’t 
invent this washing with water.  But how do we know?  We can tell by the 
question the priests and Levites asked him.  They asked, “WHY are you 
baptizing?”  They didn’t ask, “What are you doing?”  They didn’t ask as if they 
had never seen water being used in such a way.  For that word, baptism, even to 
be in their vocabulary showed that they knew about baptism.  So, baptism was 
nothing new to the Jews.  

Yet, that still leaves us perplexed.  For if you were to read through the 
entire Old Testament, you would find that it never mentions baptism, not even 
once!  The Old Testament only mentions washings and sprinkling with water, both 
of which prefigure and point to the baptism that Jesus would command His 
Apostles to do.  Even the Old-Testament Apocrypha, written between the 
Testaments, is silent on baptism. 

Now we have a mystery.  After all, John was doing something that wasn’t that 
strange.  Even Jesus approved what John was doing.  More than that, Jesus 
insisted that John even baptize Him to fulfill all righteousness.  How can that 
be?  For there’s not a single sentence of Old-Testament Scripture that John can 
quote to support the baptism he is doing.  

So, unless John was some guy who made it up as he went along, what was his 
authority for baptizing?  It was this: John was working within the context of a 
living tradition.  In other words, such Old-Testament baptisms developed from 
within God’s Old-Testament Church.  

Within a couple of hundred years before Christ, baptism became a way to bring 
Gentiles into the Jewish faith.  It was then that a Gentile male was not only 
circumcised according to God’s mandate, but he was also baptized.  Females were 
also baptized.  

Now, if only one Gentile became a Jewish believer, he was baptized and brought 
into the community.  But if a Gentile head of household became a believer in 
the one, true God, then he and his entire family were baptized.  That’s sound 
especially New Testament-like, doesn’t it?

Well, what was the purpose of this Old-Testament baptism?  You won’t find the 
answer in Scripture but history.  Such a baptism showed a Gentile leaving 
behind his Gentile ways that kept him away from God.  He was now a new person, 
someone who believed in the Lord.  His sinful, Gentile ways that contradicted 
his new life in God and even the Messiah to come were now no longer part of his 
life.  That was his old life, washed away, cleansed, and now no more a part of 
his new life. 

That’s where John got his baptism.  That’s the baptismal practice that he 
inherited.  He didn’t invent it or start some novelty.  It developed from 
within the Old-Testament Church.  

But there was something different that John did do that made the priests and 
Levites angry with him.  And it was this: John was baptizing Jews as if they 
were Gentiles!  Yes, John was baptizing Jews as if they were Gentiles!  (See 
NICNT, Revised Commentary on John, pg. 123)  That was the abrasive salt that 
chafed the wound. 

That was why the Jewish leadership was angry with John.  “John, are YOU the 
long-promised Messiah?  Are YOU Elijah?  Are YOU the Prophet, Jeremiah (2 
Maccabees 15:12-15)?  If not, then on whose authority can you conduct such 
baptisms?  Who are YOU to be doing this?”

And John answered that he was a voice crying out, preparing the way for the 
Lord, who was the promised Messiah Himself.  That’s what John was doing--he was 
preparing the way.  But to do that, he had to call his own people, the Jews, to 
repent.  

John’s own Israelites needed to turn from their wrongful ways.  For although 
they still had the proper, outward forms that God had commanded: circumcision, 
Passover, and the sacrifices, they had lost what those Old-Testament 
“sacraments” were supposed to do.  

You see, those Old-Testament acts, which God had commanded, was how He bought 
people into His Old Covenant and graced them with His forgiveness.  Yet, by 
Jesus’ day, the Jews had turned it all around and gotten it all wrong.  For 
them, it was all about doing what God had commanded.  For them, it was all 
about being righteous in God’s eyes because they were doing what God had 
commanded.  How sad: They lost the treasure about God bringing His people His 
grace and forgiveness through such ways.  

The purpose of God’s sacrifices had become upended.  It’s a bit like those in 
the Church today who say that baptism is only about someone showing that he is 
a Christian.  They, too, have it backwards, just like the Jews whom John called 
to repent.  For Scripture tells us, “Baptism now saves you” (1 Peter 3:21). 

So, for the Jews to receive the Messiah who was just around the corner, they 
needed to change course.  If they didn’t, they wouldn’t get what He would teach 
and preach.  If they didn’t, it would be as if Jesus was speaking a different 
language--as if He were from some alien world.  

The Jewish people needed to repent!  That was why John was baptizing them as if 
they were Gentiles.  For they had drifted so far from God that they were now 
outside the Church, even while still being within the churchly institution.  

But, they were circumcised!  How could they be outside God’s family?  True 
enough, they were circumcised, which meant that they didn’t need to be 
re-circumcised--if such an act were even possible!  Besides, such a 
re-circumcision wouldn’t be needed anyway.  After all, wouldn’t God’s promise 
to bring someone into His Old Covenant still hold true?  Yes, so 
re-circumcision wasn’t needed--repentance was!

So, there was John.  What could he do to help prepare the way for the Messiah?  
What could he do to show the people that they had strayed so far from God’s 
ways that they were nearly Gentiles, although technically still being Jews?  
Ah, he could baptize the Jews as if they were Gentiles!  And that was what John 
did. 

In St. Matthew’s Gospel, John cried out, “Repent!  For the kingdom of God has 
come near” (Matthew 3:2).  And so, this day, I ask you: “Where have you strayed 
from God’s ways?  Where have you become like the Jews of old, outside the 
Church, even while still being within the churchly institution?”  This is for 
real, for keeps.  This is not some game.  That’s why we don’t play at our 
worship, because what takes place here even echoes into eternity. 

Repentance is not a matter as the Christmas song says of being naughty or nice. 
 It’s about admitting that, apart from the Messiah, Jesus Christ, we are 
naughty all the way down to the core.  Like the Jews John was calling to 
repent, we, too, need to be brought in line with Jesus the Messiah.  It is not 
we who are to shape and mold Jesus to our way of thinking.  

In John’s day, most of the Jews wanted a Messiah to fit their expectations.  
All the while they were yearning for the false Messiah of their own liking the 
real Messiah was right before them.  Don’t be like those who refused to repent 
and chased after the Messiah of their own liking.  Such a Savior can’t save 
you.  Only the real Savior, to whom John pointed, can save you.  As it was back 
then, so it is today.  

Jesus is the real deal.  Turn from the god you want to the God who is.  Admit 
that part of you wants a god made in your own likeness.  You want a god who 
will smile down on you, approve all that you may be doing, and affirm all your 
thoughts and deeds.  That was what the Jews wanted in Jesus’ day.  And to those 
expectations, John cried out: Repent!  To those expectations, I cry out: Repent!

Only the real Jesus, the real Messiah, saves.  Any other Jesus is too weak to 
right your wrongs.  Any other Jesus does not give you His righteousness for 
your sins and failures.  For a Jesus in your own image only has your own sins 
to offer.  And what you have on your own isn’t clean enough to prepare you for 
eternity. 

Where you have failed and faltered, only the real Jesus, whom John proclaimed, 
can right your wrongs.  So, live in His rightness and let go of your wrongness. 
 That’s what repentance is--letting go of your wrongness, so you can live in 
the rightness of Jesus. 

Conclusion
That was John the Baptizer’s message.  So, listen to his voice still crying out 
today.  After all, his message is just as timely today as it was back then, for 
his message still rings true.  It’s only in the rightness of Jesus that you 
have eternal life.  That’s what Jesus’ incarnation is all about: Giving you His 
life in place of your death. 

So, come now to receive His life that He gives you.  For in His Supper a 
marvelous exchange takes place: Jesus gives you His life in His body and blood 
while He takes away your death.  For where humbled bodies and souls will 
receive Him still, the Messiah still comes to give life and salvation.  Amen. 


 --
Rich Futrell, Pastor
Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church, Kimberling City, MO
http://sothl.com 

Where we receive and confess the faith of the Church (in and with the Augsburg 
Confession): The faith once delivered to the saints, the faith of Christ Jesus, 
His Word of the Gospel, His full forgiveness of sins, His flesh and blood given 
and poured out for us, and His gracious gift of life for body, soul, and 
spirit.  

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