Wax Plant
Friday, 6 September 2024
Then Jesus came from Galilee to John at the Jordan to be baptized by him. Matthew 3:13
Note: You can listen to today’s commentary courtesy of our friends at “Bible in Ten” podcast. (Click Here to listen)
You can also read this commentary, scrolling with music, courtesy of our friends at “Discern the Bible” on YouTube. (Click Here to listen), or at Rumble (Click Here to listen).
“Then Jesus, He comes from the Galilee upon the Jordan unto John to be immersed by him.” (CG)
The previous verse completed John’s words of warning and impending doom spoken to the Pharisees and Sadducees. However, during his speech to them, he had said, “Indeed, I, I immerse you in water to reconsideration, but He coming after me is mightier than I. He is whom I am not adequate to lift His sandals. He, he will immerse you in the Holy Spirit and fire” (Matthew 3:11).
Having said that, the next words become a point of confusion to him. They begin with, “Then Jesus, He comes from the Galilee.”
Luke 3:23 says concerning this same time, “Now Jesus Himself began His ministry at about thirty years of age.” This was at the time that many people were coming to John to be baptized. Thus, what occurs would have been a public event for anyone there to see. This is hinted at in the word translated as “comes,” paraginomai. It signifies to become near. Strong’s adds in the thought “to appear publicly.”
Jesus voluntarily departed from the area He had been raised in and went with purposeful intent to begin His ministry, which was “upon the Jordan.” Rather than “to” as most translations say, the word is epi, upon. The word gives the idea of the superimposition of time, place, order, etc. One can think of the epidermis, which fits over a person.
Jesus has purposefully left the Galilee and has gone to the Jordan. Galilee comes from the Hebrew Galil. It signifies a circular district, it is identical to galil, to pivot or turn. That, in turn, comes from galal, to roll away. The meaning is thus Liberty. In the Hebrew, it is normally preceded by the definite article, ha’galil, the Galilee.
As seen in a previous commentary, the Descender pictures Christ in His incarnation, coming from heaven to earth. The time for this to be made manifest to the world has arrived. Everything about the narrative is purposeful.
One can get a hint of what is being presented. The people need liberty from the bondage of the law. Jesus’ ministry is now about to commence, and so He symbolically leaves Liberty to place Himself under the law in His descending from heaven.
As a Jew, He was born under the law, but the pictures here are being symbolically used at the initiation of His ministry. Thus, He has gone upon the Jordan, the Descender, “unto John,” or Yah is Gracious.
John is being used as the introduction of the ministry of Christ to Israel. The graciousness of the Lord is what is intended to be seen. All of this is reflected in the words of John 1 –
“And of His fullness we have all received, and grace for grace. 17 For the law was given through Moses, but grace and truth came through Jesus Christ. 18 No one has seen God at any time. The only begotten Son, who is in the bosom of the Father, He has declared Him.” John 1:16-18
Jesus came to John “to be immersed by him.” In other words, the event is purposeful. John, and John alone, was to be the immerser of Jesus. It was he who was selected before birth to be the herald of the coming Messiah. It is he who came as the prophesied Elijah recorded in Malachi 4:5. He is he who was to be the final prophet of the Law of Moses, and thus the one whose work would close it out in the sense of messianic anticipation.
From this point on, the Messiah would become the central point of focus for all of Israel’s religious life. The law was to end, and a new economy was at hand. John is the one to initiate this transfer, immersing Jesus in preparation for His glorious ministry.
Life application: The words of the New Testament are understandable, and the ministry of Jesus is readily discerned from them. In reality, however, there is so much in the New Testament that is derived from the Old Testament that an entirely different level of understanding can only be derived from what is presented in the Old.
The two merge together harmoniously because they are both given to explain the intents, purposes, and actions of God as He works through His plan of redemption for humanity. Don’t be afraid to read and carefully consider the Old Testament as well as the New.
The more you read the word, the more it will settle in your mind. Eventually, connections will be made that you had not previously considered. From there, it is then good to study and see if your connections are valid. We can, at times, make faulty connections that need to be corrected. But this is a lifelong process.
Be sure to just keep reading the word and contemplating what God is telling us in this most wonderful treasure. Information about the King of the Universe is being conveyed. Bask in its riches all the days of your life.
Lord God, in Christ Jesus, there is liberty from the penalty of the law. Instead of condemnation, in Him, there is grace, mercy, and eternal salvation. The story of Scripture is Your story as You work out the redemption of humanity through the Person of Jesus Christ. Thank You, O God, for Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.