Difference between revisions of "John the Baptist"

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*This page is edited by [[Gabriele Boccaccini]], University of Michigan
#REDIRECT [[:Category:John the Baptist (subject)]]


*SCHOLARLY AND FICTIONAL WORKS: see [[:Category:John the Baptist (subject)]]
*ANCIENT SOURCES: see [[John the Baptist (sources)]]
'''John the Baptist''' (1st century CE) was a Jewish religious leader.
See [[Annunciation to Zechariah]] / [[Birth of John the Baptist]] / [[Childhood of John the Baptist]] / [[John the Baptist in the Desert]] / [[Preaching of John the Baptist]] / [[Baptism of Jesus]] / [[Question about Fasting]] / [[Messengers from John the Baptist]] / [[Beheading of John the Baptist]] / [[Question about Authority]]
==Overview==
[[John the Baptist]] is mentioned both in Christian sources and in the writings of Flavius Josephus.
John was a Jewish religious leader who preached in the wilderness of [[Perea]] across the [[Jordan River]]. The location itself seems to suggest some eschatological reference to the experience of the Jews in the desert before the entrance into the Promised Land. [When the Gospel Matthew says that John preached "in the wilderness of Judea", it reflects anachronistically the situation after the year 44 CE, when [[Perea]] was annexed to Judea and became "the region of Judea beyond the Jordan" (Mt 19:1).]
According to Christian sources, John's teaching was centered on the announcement of the imminent end of time and the coming of the [[Messiah]] as the eschatological Judge. John urged people to be baptized "with water" for forgiveness of sin, in order to avoid the destruction of the imminent baptist "with fire" of the Last Judgment (the reference to the "Holy Spirit" should be taken as a later attempt to connect John's announcement to the Christian baptism).
Christian sources insist that John did not make any messianic claim. [[Josephus]], who omits any reference to the eschatological teaching of John, also stresses that John did not claim any authority to forgive sins, but intended his baptist as an act of atonement and an invocation to God.
Christians valued John as the precursor who prepared the path for the ministry of Jesus (and the Christian baptism), and later sources (especially the [[Gospel of John]]) would present John as the conscious witness of the messiahship of Jesus. In earlier sources (Gospel of Mark, and Q) however the relationship between John and Jesus is not as direct and obvious. Josephus also is not aware of any connection between the two.
That Jesus was baptized by John, seems to be beyond doubt, as the Christian tradition had no interest in creating such an embarrassing event. Being baptized meant an acknowledgment of the authority of John and a recognition, from Jesus' part, that he was a sinner and in need of God's forgiveness. The Christian tradition solved the problem by turning the Baptism into the setting of an heavenly revelation, followed by a time of spiritual initiation in the desert (see [[Temptation of Jesus]])
We see a clear progression in Christian tradition. According to the earliest Gospel (Mark [followed by Luke]), Jesus was among the many who were baptized by John and there was no special interaction between the two (even the voice from heaven addressed, and was heard by, Jesus only: "You are..."). On the contrary, in Matthew the two characters interact and the voice from heaven makes a sort of public announcement: "This is...". In John, the Baptist is "the witness" who explicitly invites his disciples to join Jesus the Messiah: "Here is the Lamb of God... This was he of whom I said...". Historically, however, the disciples of John and the disciples of Jesus remained two distinct groups, divided on the crucial issue of the coming of the Messiah, which the disciples of John (along with the Pharisees) continued to see as a future event (see [[Question about Fasting]], and [[Messengers from John the Baptist]]).
John the Baptist was certainly imprisoned and executed by [[Herod Antipas]]. The reason must have been some criticism expressed by John toward Herod's marriage with [[Herodias]]. This situation was at the origin of the popular legend of the Banquet of Herod, which is reported in the Gospels of Mark and Matthew.
Equally unreliable from the historical point of view is Luke's account of the infancy of John, which repeats traditional Jewish patterns about the miraculous birth of prophets and religious leaders. The later Christian tradition would heavily elaborate on these legends and fill the "hidden years" of John's life with narratives about his meetings with the infant Jesus and his education in the wilderness.
==John the Baptist in ancient sources==
*See [[John the Baptist (sources)]]
==John the Baptist in Scholarship==
==John the Baptist in Fiction==
==Related subjects==
*[[:Category:Herod Antipas (subject)|Herod Antipas (subject)]] / [[:Category:Herodias (subject)|Herodias (subject)]] / [[:Category:Salome (subject)|Salome (subject)]]
*[[:Category:Jesus of Nazareth (subject)|Jesus of Nazareth (subject)]]
==References==
*'''John the Baptist''' / [[Joan E. Taylor]] / In: [[The Eerdmans Dictionary of Early Judaism (2010 Collins / Harlow), edited volume]], 819-821
==External links==
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_the_Baptist Wikipedia]
*[http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/08486b.htm Catholic Encyclopedia]


[[Category:Annunciation to Zacharias (subject)| John the Baptist]]
[[Category:Birth of John the Baptist (subject)| John the Baptist]]
[[Category:Baptism of Jesus (subject)| John the Baptist]]
[[Category:Question about Fasting (subject)| John the Baptist]]
[[Category:Question about Authority (subject)| John the Baptist]]
[[Category:Preaching of John the Baptist (subject)| John the Baptist]]
[[Category:Death of John the Baptist (subject)| John the Baptist]]
[[Category:Relics of John the Baptist (subject)| John the Baptist]]
[[Category:John the Baptist & Jesus of Nazareth (subject)| John the Baptist]]


[[Category:Child John the Baptist with Jesus (subject)| John the Baptist]]


[[Category:Index]]
[[Category:Index]]
[[Category:People]]
[[Category:People]]

Latest revision as of 16:42, 1 January 2021