Reflection: The Divine Promise
Jesus didn’t enter the world like a surprise party: ‘Wow, this is unexpected, but we’re glad you’re here!’ He was long awaited.
Israel held fast to centuries of biblical promises and the Messiah who would fulfil them. John writes his Gospel as a master weaver, threading ancient Messianic expectation into a picture of Jesus for our belief (John 20:31).
And yet … the Jewish elite missed the mark entirely. Among many alarming oversights, they ignored John the Baptist. Asking who he was, he replied clear as day:
[In] the words of Isaiah the prophet, “I am the voice of one calling in the wilderness, ‘Make straight the way for the Lord.’ (John 1:23)
But a nobody from the wilderness, preaching a confronting message, clothed in camel’s hair, eating bugs and wild honey? Surely this can’t be it, they thought. Rejecting John, they became bolstered in their blindness.
John anticipated Jesus as much with his words as with his way. So ultimately, Jesus was no more palatable. Instead of commending him, they crucified him.
The beautiful mystery? That was the plan all along, even from the beginning of all creation (Ephesians 1:3-14). Life flows forth for the fallen, even for those who crucified him, as his blood washes us clean of our sin (see Acts 2:14-41).
Prayer:
Father Almighty, give us humble hearts to behold Christ as he truly is, not as we might wish him to be. Amen