The Gospel for this Sunday proposes three topics for our
consideration: the Baptizer, Jesus’ ministry, and Jesus’
disciples.
John The Baptizer
John is in prison; he will shortly be put to death. Matthew, Mark, and
Luke make it clear that Jesus does not begin his own ministry until
the Baptizer has completed his. In John’s Gospel, Jesus begins
his ministry before the Baptizer’s imprisonment.
All the Gospels indicate that the Baptizer had a successful and
effective ministry in his own right. During Jesus’ ministry,
people often confused Jesus with or identified him as the Baptizer (Mt 1:13-14).
One plausible explanation for this confusion, proposed by contemporary
scholars, is this. Moved to conversion by John’s preaching,
Jesus became his disciple. When John was imprisoned, Jesus ventured
out on his own and gathered disciples (Mt 4:18-22) but continued to baptize and broaden his ministry (Mt 11:2-6). Soon he began to experience the ability to cast out demons and
realized he had a distinctive ministry of his own (Mt 12:22-28). With this, Jesus stopped baptizing and came into his own.
Jesus’ Ministry
After John’s imprisonment, Jesus moves from Nazareth, his tiny
hometown, to Capernaum, a larger crossroads town by the Sea of
Galilee. He continues preaching John’s message: “Repent,
for the reign of heaven has approached” (Mt 4:17).
Matthew encapsulates Jesus’ ministry in a summary statement (Mt 4:23): Jesus was teaching in the synagogues; preaching the good news, and
healing.
In Jesus’ day the synagogue was a gathering place, like a modern
community center, where males could meet on every day of the week to
study or pray. Here Jesus read and listened to Torah, disputed and
argued with others, but did not attend Sabbath services, since there
were none at that time. For the ordinary first-century Jewish believer
the Sabbath was not a day of worship; it was simply a day of rest.
As for his healing program, Jesus is clearly a “folk”
healer and not a “professional.” In contrast to the
latter, Jesus attempts to heal people. He doesn’t just talk
about healing.
The First Disciples
Jesus’ act of calling disciples is a common event in the Middle
East. Usually, a person with a grievance invites people to join him in
resolving the grievance. We don’t know Jesus’ grievance,
but the disciples certainly did. This in part explains why they
dropped everything to follow him. In unified groups there is
strength.
Moreover, this is the dry season. Farmers simply wait for the harvest.
Fishing partners can leave the fishing to others for the time being.
Now is the time to be out and about, to be seen and heard, to pursue
group interests.
Such group orientation or connectedness permeates this reading as it
does the entire Bible. The lives of the Baptizer, the disciples, and
healed clients are entirely intertwined with Jesus.
Jesus’ group-oriented culture lived by second nature what people
like Samuel Gompers and Saul Alinsky would later have to teach to
modern American individualists: Organize! Build your network!
It’s the only way you can win.