Saturday, January 16, 2021

Torn Open


Matthew 3:16-17
As soon as Jesus was baptized, he went up out of the water.  At that moment heaven was opened, and he saw the Spirit of God descending like a dove and lighting on him.  And a voice from heaven said, “This is my Son, whom I love; with him I am well pleased” (NIV).

   As we learned last week, Jesus repented on behalf of people by getting baptized.  Just afterwards, heaven was opened.  In the book of Mark, the phrase used in the NIV is “torn open.”  Dr. Robert Stein, in his excellent book, Jesus the Messiah, makes this statement: “[Mark] uses this same term in only one other place—Mark 15:38.  There he writes that at the death of Jesus ‘the curtain of the temple was torn in two, from top to bottom’” (1)
   This event of the heavens being opened, “torn open,” captured by Matthew, Mark, and Luke, was an event where God was foreshadowing the redemption Jesus would make possible on the cross.  This is a key message!  God was foreshadowing the atonement which would make it possible for people to not only be in the presence of God, yet even be in a loving relationship with God.

   A second occurrence after being baptized: the “Spirit of God” descended on Jesus.  Jesus is the Messiah (Hebrew), the Christ (Greek), both of which translate as Anointed One.  Priests, kings, and I have even argued prophets, were anointed with olive oil.  Jesus was anointed with the Holy Spirit!
   For anyone who believes in Jesus Christ, he or she is baptized with the Holy Spirit, as John the Baptist states in Matthew 3:11.  Being given the Holy Spirit from Jesus happens immediately upon belief, not right after being baptized in water, since Christian baptism is different and of a fuller nature than John’s baptism.  John’s baptism was simply of repentance.  Christian baptism is done in the name of the Triune God, and symbolizes having accepted and shared in the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ.  Christian water baptism is a response to what Jesus has done.

   Thirdly, a voice from heaven spoke!  The proclamation by God was the same as the statement at what is now termed the “transfiguration.”  And Peter states how he heard God the Father make that statement when they were on the “sacred” mountain (see 2 Peter 1:17).  God was truly proclaiming love.
   Love is what this is all about.  Love is the reason Jesus was willing to repent for the sins of all people on their behalf.  Love is the reason God tore open the heavens in the midst of the barrier that was entrenched between God and people due to the sins of people.  Love is the reason Jesus died the unimaginable death on a cross for the sins of all people.  Love is the reason that today God wants you to be saved from your sins, which block His love, and to be in a loving relationship with Him.
   To be saved, you need to believe in Jesus, the One who died as the substitute for you.  Believe in Jesus, and you will be in an everlasting loving relationship with God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit!  He loves you.
Hunter Irvine

(1) Robert Stein, Jesus the Messiah: A Survey of the Life of Christ
(Downers Grove: InterVarsity Press, 1996), 98.

Saturday, January 9, 2021

On our behalf


Scripture passage: Matthew 3:13-15
Then Jesus came from Galilee to the Jordan to be baptized by John.  But John tried to deter him, saying, “I need to be baptized by you, and do you come to me?”
Jesus replied, “Let it be so now; it is proper for us to do this to fulfill all righteousness.”
Then John consented (NIV).

   Luke clearly states the mission of John the Baptist: “He went into all the country around the Jordan, preaching a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins” (Luke 3:3).  John himself stated: “I baptize you with water for repentance” (Matthew 3:11).  Preparation was necessary for the Messiah, and that preparation included repentance.

   By pursuing and accepting the baptism of John, Jesus was repenting.  Yet Scripture clearly states Jesus was sinless (see 2 Corinthians 5:21).  So why would Jesus insist on being baptized by John?  The answer is: Jesus was submitting to a baptism of repentance not for His own sins, rather for the sins of the world.  Jesus was taking the responsibility for the sins of people upon Himself on behalf of all humanity!  Jesus was repenting of sins as a representative of people before the Holy Father.  And Christ’s public sign of repenting on our behalf would lead to being crucified on a cross as the substitute for our sins.

   I add that Christian baptism has a fuller meaning.  Jesus would later instigate a water baptism in the name of the Triune God, symbolizing death to sin and new life in Him!

   I had numerous great classes at Colorado Christian University, and I am thankful I studied there.  I still think it is ironic my favorite class was my first semester.  The class was my favorite subject, and the adjunct professor made it fun and engaging.  And I remember one day when Professor Tafoya asked the class, “What was it that Jesus did with the Law?”  (He was referring to the Mosaic Law.)  Students remained silent.  I waited a bit, yet then I said, “He fulfilled it.”  That was the correct answer.  And the Messiah also fulfilled God’s promise to Abraham and the promise to David.

   And fulfillment of the Mosaic Law, and the promises to Abraham and David, required the fulfillment of the promise made to Joseph that Jesus would save people from their sins (Matthew 1:21).  By even repenting for the sins of people, Jesus did fulfill all righteousness, since that was the beginning of His ministry which would culminate in Him being the atonement for sins.

   With forgiveness received, a believer is declared righteous by the Messiah, and is baptized with the Holy Spirit who will be with that person forever.  He or she is adopted as a child of God.  And he or she has entered, upon believing, the New Covenant, which is an eternal covenant indeed.

   The only way a person can be righteous forever in the sight of God is to gain the righteousness of God, which is available only from Jesus, and which is offered by Jesus even today.
Hunter Irvine

Saturday, January 2, 2021

Awaiting the Messiah


Isaiah 40:3
A voice of one calling: “In the desert prepare the way for the LORD; make straight in the wilderness a highway for our God” (NIV).

Matthew 3:1-6
In those days John the Baptist came, preaching in the Desert of Judea and saying, “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is near.”  This is he who was spoken of through the prophet Isaiah: “A voice of one calling in the desert, ‘Prepare the way for the Lord, make straight paths for him.’”
John’s clothes were made of camel’s hair, and he had a leather belt around his waist.  His food was locusts and wild honey.  People went out to him from Jerusalem and all Judea and the whole region of the Jordan.  Confessing their sins, they were baptized by him in the Jordan River (NIV).

   Note the quotation by Matthew of the prophecy of Isaiah is not precise.  When I was a young Christian I became a bit baffled by the fact Old Testament Scripture was often quoted with some variation.  Considering I was told Scripture was the “word of God,” as a fresh college graduate I expected quotations to be precise.  After all, that is what my college professors expected of me!
   I eventually learned people at the time of Christ often quoted the Hebrew Scriptures from a Greek translation termed the Septuagint.  Greek was a common language between folks of different countries in regions in the vicinity of the Mediterranean Sea, so the scholarly Greek translation was popular.  But the translation by scholars of the Hebrew, and a small amount of Aramaic, into a much different language, resulted in some language variance.  Yet the message remained.

   In the past few months, we covered the entire first chapter of Matthew.  The Christmas story continues in the second chapter telling of the Magi who traveled to worship Jesus, and telling of the evil King Herod.  Then there is an escape to Egypt by Joseph, Mary, and their baby.  In due time, they returned home to Nazareth.

   Matthew then jumps ahead in time to when Jesus was about thirty years old, and we are abruptly introduced to an eccentric character.  John the Baptist grew up apparently a hermit in the desert (see Luke 1:80).  John wore camel hair clothes and ate locusts and wild honey (see Matthew 3:4).  Locusts probably taste better soaked in honey, but getting wild honey involves dealing with wild bees.  John seems to make some people a little uncomfortable even after nearly 2,000 years.  I have rarely heard a sermon about him, and I never recall him being discussed in any of my Biblical studies classes.

   Yet people were flocking to him!  “People went out to him from Jerusalem and all Judea and the whole region of the Jordan (Matthew 3:5).

   What was John doing?  First he was preaching.  Second, he baptized people in water.  But water baptism was not a command under the Mosaic Law, and most of these folks were probably Jewish.  A scholar in the 1700’s, Dr. John Gill, said there was no written record of baptism before the time of John the Baptist. (1)  (Have any such writings been discovered since the 1700’s?)
   And no Jewish writings exist which record Jewish baptism, distinct from Christians who were Jewish, after the time of Christ’s ministry on earth until the Talmuds, and the Jewish Talmuds were written centuries after Christ.  There are statements in Talmuds of Jewish people baptizing Gentiles who desired to convert to Judaism, (2) though it was not done in the name of God. (3)  And there is a mention of some Jewish women being baptized, possibly since they did not have the covenant sign of circumcision. (4)  But applying the practice of Jewish baptism for converts to a period several centuries earlier is scholarly speculation, which Dr. Gill disagrees with.

   However, baptism did not seem foreign to some Pharisees.  When some Pharisees questioned John as recorded in John 1:24-25, they seem to be familiar with the practice of baptism.  I consider baptism had possibly become a practice at some juncture before the time of Christ, where Jewish people would immerse people who were not ethnically Jewish in water as a sign of their conversion to Judaism.  Yet I speculate the practice was done only for a short period of time before the time of Christ, and was probably uncommon.

   The bottom line is Jewish male infants were circumcised on the eighth day, as commanded by God to Abraham (Genesis 17:12).  Jewish infants, youth, or men were not baptized.

   So the question is clear: Why would Jewish people flock to a vagabond who was doing an act, baptizing in water, which was either a foreign act or an insulting act for a Jewish man?

   I think there were two main reasons.

   First, I think a minor reason John was not shunned was the fact he was in the priestly line of Aaron.  We learn from Luke, who like Matthew gives details about the “Christmas story,” that John was a descendant of the high priest Aaron, the brother of Moses.  Both the dad and the mom of John the Baptist were descendants of Aaron (Luke 1:5).  And only descendants of Aaron were eligible to be Hebrew priests.
   Now John apparently was not an ordained priest like his dad, and he did not serve in the Temple like his dad had.  John was radical, yet I think people in that region knew the lineage of John.

   Second, I think the primary reason people flocked to John and were baptized was they were anticipating the Messiah, and they thought John might be Him.  The prophet Daniel gave a prophecy which included a time period when the Messiah would arrive (see Daniel 9:25).  And there were likely those who still recalled the testimony which the angel of the Lord gave some shepherds about thirty years before (see Luke 2:8-12).  Jewish people at the time of Christ were expecting the Messiah, which is subtly shown in several Scripture passages, for example, Luke 3:15- “The people were waiting expectantly and were all wondering in their hearts if John might possibly be the Christ.”  If John was the Christ, they were willing to carry out the sign of repentance.

   John clearly stated he was not the Christ (see John 1:20).  Yet he told of the One who was to come who would baptize with the Holy Spirit.  Indeed John’s mission was to prepare people for the start of the ministry of Jesus the Messiah.  And preparation required the need for repentance and a water baptism symbolic of repentance.  Jesus would later instigate a water baptism in the name of the Triune God, symbolizing death to sin and new life in Him!

   Repenting to God is simply recognizing your wrong doings and saying sorry to God.  Repenting to a person is simply recognizing your wrong doings which have hurt a particular person, and saying sorry to that person.  Repenting does not mean you are the only one who has done something wrong.  It is simply facing up to your own wrong doings.
   All people need to repent of our sins to God, admitting our sins, and saying sorry.  Jesus, who is God the Son, came into the world to be our Savior and intercessor.  We need no other intercessor besides God the Son.  Anywhere and anytime, you can say sorry to Jesus!
Hunter Irvine


(1) John Gill, A Dissertation concerning the Baptism of Jewish Proselytes (London: George Keith, 1771), 47.
{Note this was previously one section of a book by Dr. Gill, A Body of Practical Divinity, which was likewise published by George Keith in 1770.}
(2) Ibid., 52.
(3) Ibid., 69.
(4) Ibid., 52.