In today’s passage, Luke 7:19-23, we get our last glimpse of John the Baptist before Herod Antipas has him executed. John the Baptist represents the ultimate, faithful prophet. He is a picture of great faithfulness to the Lord. Yet, whether it is Elijah in the wilderness or John the Baptist in prison, we see that they were only men doing their best to do the right thing in trying situations. They had to battle with doubts just like you and me.
It is an error to think that those who are faithful never have doubts, or that those who are courageous never have fears. So if you have fears and doubts, take heart today. It doesn’t mean you can’t exercise great faith and courage. In fact, it is the presence of fears and doubts that makes faith and courage remarkable.
Back in Luke 3:20 we were told that Herod had imprisoned John. So let’s look at the background to this. The day to day history of the Herods is equal to any soap opera today. Herod the Great, who ruled when Jesus was born, died a few years later while he was still a toddler. Rome then divided the kingdom among Herod’s sons. Two of them were Herod Antipas and Herod Philip. Herod Antipas ruled over the area on the east side of the Jordan and around the Sea of Galilee. Over the course of time, Herod Antipas fell in love with Philips wife, Herodias. She wanted him as well. So, Antipas divorced his wife and married Herodias. On top of all of this Herodias is actually their niece. This gives you an insight into the lack of morals within these royal families. John the Baptist had publically rebuked Herod Antipas for these actions. It was then that he had John imprisoned, reasoning that John had a lot of followers and they might be inclined to revolt.
However, Herod was afraid to kill him because he saw John as a righteous prophet. Furthermore, he would have John brought out of prison before him, from time to time, because he liked to listen to John’s preaching. However, Antipas liked his preaching more like someone likes a song. It sounds lovely, but he is not going to change his life because of it. He was a man ruled by passions and filled with many conflicting emotions. It is in this environment that we read John sending two of his disciples to Jesus.
Most likely John was held in prison up to a year. So it is understandable that he began to question his understanding about who Jesus was. John’s questions are twofold. Is Jesus the Messiah? Or, is he just another forerunner like John? Now John had already publically testified on numerous occasions that Jesus was the Messiah, the coming one. However, he now wonders if perhaps he was mistaken. In the moment when Jesus was being baptized it was very clear to John who he was. But, given time in a prison he began to lose his clarity.
We might also point out that John doubts Jesus, not God’s promise to send a Messiah. Just like the disciples were confounded by what Jesus did and allowed to happen, so John is perplexed. Surely Jesus would have taken his place as king of Israel by now. This central issue of who Jesus is has continued to be the main thing to this very day. However, it does require a foundational belief that God has made promises that He will keep. To a world that believes in a creator we must convince them that Jesus is the Son of God sent to perform salvation. But to a world that doesn’t believe in any supernatural Creator, we must convince them that such a God exists. Jesus is the key to this.
Part of the problem here is that John most likely didn’t foresee ending up in prison. Remember that while John is in prison Jesus is teaching that He came to set the captives free. It is here that we see the importance of the spiritual message behind what Jesus was saying. If Jesus meant he came to empty the prisons of the Herods then he failed miserably. Clearly Jesus was speaking spiritually. Faith is always tried when the physical situation seems more important to us than the spiritual. John is in the furnace.
In these moments discouragement sets in. Physical pains and difficulties over a long period of time wear us down and deflate our courage. Of course, John doesn’t ultimately lose faith. But his faith was severely tried. When he had doubts he sought answers from Jesus and this is exactly what we must do in our times of doubt. It is difficult to be under a cloud of discouragement. It would be easy to condemn those who are discouraged for not having enough faith. I would challenge you that discouragement is part of the process of purifying faith. It is a necessary opponent that we must battle. Instead of condemning discouragement, we need to be like Barnabas was. Saul who was a new Christian was not trusted by most of the Christians. In this discouraging time Barnabas came along side of him and promoted him to the brothers. Love encourages people to turn to the Truth. And that is exactly what John the Baptist did. He sought an answer from Jesus.
As John’s disciples arrive with the questions, they witness a scene in which Jesus is healing and preaching. At some point when there is a break they are able to ask their question.
Jesus first says, “Go tell John all the things you have seen and heard.” The blind were seeing, the lame walking, lepers cleansed, deaf hearing, and the dead raised. Notice that in each of these a deficiency is met with the sufficiency of Jesus. In fact all of these are pictures of spiritual problems. We can be spiritually blind, lame, blighted with a deteriorating disease, deaf, and even dead. Jesus is the answer to them all. This is exactly what the Messiah was supposed to do.
At the end of this part he also says to tell John that the Gospel is preached to the poor. The Gospel is the good news that they can have a part in the Kingdom of God through Jesus. In light of the way John describes the earlier healings we could say that the poor receive the riches of heaven, Jesus himself. This is intended to reach the heart of John the Baptist. In his heart he knew that the Jews had mangled the Truth of God and instead of healing the hurting were making things worse. Jesus was changing all of that. Just like the Scriptures said that the Messiah would.
Lastly, Jesus adds a powerful statement, “Blessed are those who do not stumble because of me.” Now remember this is intended to be an encouragement to John and to us. He is reminding John of the stumbling stone of Isaiah 8 and 28. In one place Isaiah says that God is going to take a stone that the builders reject and make it the capstone. Notice the builders stumble in their analysis of God’s Rock. In the other place we are told specifically that the Messiah would be a stumbling stone. “He will be a sanctuary, but a stone of stumbling and a rock of offense to both the houses of Israel, as a trap and a snare to the inhabitants of Jerusalem. And many among them shall stumble; they shall fall and be broken, be snared and taken.” Isaiah 8:14-15. Paul notes this in Romans 9 when he says that many in Israel stumbled over the Messiah because they sought righteousness by their own works of the Law, rather than throwing themselves by faith upon the mercy of God. They trusted themselves over God.
Do you have doubts and fears? Then hear the Truth about Jesus. All the physical miracles He did point to spiritual issues that only He can heal. Take hope in the reality of those things that Jesus has done. He will do what God has said He will. Don’t lose faith. Remember that God is concerned about those who are ground down in this life and offers the riches of heaven to all who will respond. You are a part of that group. Don’t give up. Lastly, you will be blessed if you don’t stumble over Jesus. Many people today stumble over Jesus. They do so by either totally rejecting him, or remaking him into an image that they can be comfortable with. Both lead to destruction and cannot help. Save yourself from this wicked generation, believe on the Lord Jesus, and be saved from the coming judgment. And, like John, even if you are to lose your head for your faith in Jesus continue to go to Him for the answers you need to continue in faith. Faithful to the end.