LOCUSTS + WILD HONEY

Of John the Baptist in the book of Isaiah:
The voice of one crying in the wilderness:
"Prepare the way of the Lord;
Make straight in the desert
A highway for our God."
Out from the wilderness came a humble man with a bold message and a roaring voice. It was a message for dwellers of the darkness, and for the inert in the light. A new way of life, the philosophy of Jesus, barreled toward humanity, to pierce it like the sun's rays do the earth. It was John's duty to prepare them. John the Baptist was faith in action; he prepared the people to become righteous vessels of the Holy Spirit, and obedient instruments for the hands of God. He prepared them for reversal, for submersion and for reconstruction. 

In his mother's womb, John leaped in the presence of Jesus in Mary's; he was predestined and ready to fulfill his purpose, to scoop and carve and clear the way for the ministry of Jesus and presence of God. If it was necessary then, to clear a place and construct a foundation, a basis of faith within one's life, it is necessary now.

Prophecy of the life of John the Baptist foretold several things: he would be a prophet of God, he would prepare the way for the ministry of Jesus, he would inform the people of salvation obtained by the remission of sins, give light to those who sit in darkness and the shadow of death, and to guide feet into the way of peace.


DWELLERS OF DARKNESS
In order to prepare for God and the word of God to preside in our lives, we must identify ourselves as either a dweller or darkness or one who is inert in the light. A dweller of darkness is one who lives separate, perhaps even in opposition to the word of God. Few of us would identify ourselves as such. But if the word of God has not made a life-altering impact on our way of life, a reversal of how we see and behave in the world, we are a dweller of darkness. A dweller of darkness has not yet been appointed by the light for a purpose of the light. 

John called the people to repentance, and thus to soul-deep revolution. The presence of God on the earth amid humanity meant recovery from the darkness, salvation from the sin. Every person John dipped into the Jordan confessed their sin; but it is important to understand the intimate process of confession of sin. We confess our imperfection, our mistakes and failures, and our uglier tendencies to God. By confessing them, we acknowledge them. One-on-one with God, we realize and claim and thus decide the areas where we most need His grace and mercy; discipline and instruction. Repentance is the first step not to condemnation but to reconstruction. We must realize all the places of darkness within us that are stemming the light.

In order to leave the darkness, we must leave impatience and greed beyond. Self-interest cannot come with us. Anger and anxiety must be dissolved by forgiveness and trust in God. It is a process, a journey out of the dark, but as long as we are not inert in the darkness, we are active in the light. We move into the light when we leave darkness behind. Our new focus, in every situation, relationship, or mood we find ourselves in must be on:
"whatever things are true, whatever things are noble, whatever things are just, whatever things are pure, whatever things are lovely, whatever things are of good report, if there is any virtue and if there is anything praiseworthy (Philippians 4:8)."
For light, the fruit of the spirit  is:
"is love, joy, peace, forbearance, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control (Galatians 5:22-23)."

SHADOW OF DEATH
Alternately, John was also sent to those who dwell in the shadow of death. That is: all of us. We all live in the shadows cast by disparity and injustice. We are all hosted by temporary bodies; we all love and befriend souls hosted by temporary bodies. John came to prepare us for a drastic change in our shadowed journey. Our walk through "the valley of the shadow of death", Psalm 23, takes on new characteristics: we are shepherded, led by the River of courage and comfort from which to draw.  

As we mold ourselves receptive to the ministry of Jesus, we adopt our eternal nature. Receptive to the ministry of Jesus, we become privy to God's purposes and plans. We become agents of God's purposes and plans. We realize that that which is wrong or cruel is not absolute. We begin to see, all over the world, construction zones. Project sites commissioned by the Holy Spirit, led and supported by advocates, fellow-workers of His peace.

The shadow of death therefore is a precursor to the light of eternity. John was sent to us to inform us that we are not stuck in death's shadow; this life is a beginning, not an end. John prepared them, and us, for Jesus to explain precisely how.

INERT IN THE LIGHT
It is not enough to bask in the light. From John, an itinerant preacher, we should learn that we are meant to move, to speak, to act. Submersion is in his title: John the Baptist; John the baptizer.  Submersion in the river Jordan was symbolic of submersion in faith. Our objectives shift, our purpose is established, our values are chosen by God, our wisdom is gleaned from Him. We are meant to use all of that. 

God provides the light, that is, the peace and comfort and hope and advocacy. He provides those things for a purpose... for our purpose. For our mission, our life's work in faith. What would we need advocacy for if we were inert? If we aren't breaking chains why do we need strength? If we aren't speaking out in defense of the meek, why do we need confidence? If we aren't going to love, why do we need comfort? If we aren't going to bear the burns of forgiveness and the bruises of compassion, why do we need healing?

We receive for a purpose. His advocacy is to advocate for us while we walk, while we speak, while we work.

 HOST OF THE HOLY SPIRIT 
For the Holy Spirit to arrive and reside in our life, we must foster within ourselves the climate in which It thrives. Only a righteous host can host Righteousness. This is why it was so essential for John Baptist to prepare the way. This is why it is so essential for us to prepare the way for God to arrive in our lives. We suffocate our faith when we foster a toxic atmosphere. 

We cannot allow impatience, anger, greed, temptation, or injustice to fester in the place where we expect God to be. We have to behave selflessly in moments we feel most inclined to be selfish. We must sacrifice and give when our desire flares. We must choose justice even when it does not equate with a status elevation of ourselves. In the day-to-day, the thought-to-thought, we have to create a habitable soul for the Holy Spirit to fill. 

The ministry of Jesus reached a region which had been prepared for it because this lifestyle is not one that can reside on, or reside with, another. It cannot be contradicted, it must be absolute. We cannot have one foot in the dark and one in the light; a house divided cannot stand. What we think, say and do will never be steadfastly perfect. But our intention to think, say, and do things worthy of, like God, must be! Our commitment to this lifestyle must be steadfast and absolute. Faith unfed will starve, and our faith's provision comes from what our minds, and voices and hands produce. Faith will not subsist on the wrong food.



John was appointed to guide feet to the path of peace. Within the ministry of God, we walk a new road: a path of peace. He cleared the brambles, he trod the path for us to follow. As we walk into the Kingdom, we delve into comprehensive peace. He taught us to prepare ourselves, to prepare our lives for change and reversal, for purpose and new direction. Because beside Jesus, fear is illogical, shame is removed, chaos is ordered, safety is ensured, provision is provided, defense is absolute. Beside Jesus, peace is established and upheld.

John was a simple man who came from the countryside; he lived as a minimalist, eating only locusts and wild honey. God prepared him for great, prophetic, action-packed purpose yet he remained a humble man. The symbolism is that he subsisted on the natural, incredible, honey that is God's word and he crushed his enemies with the movements of his life. Locusts are used in the Bible to symbolize the enemy, the sin that corrodes the world. Imitate John, live humbly by the light and act boldly against the dark.