John the Baptist (Hebrew: יוחנן המטביל, Yo-hanan ha-matbil,
Yahyá AND يوحنا Yūhannā
al-mamadan in arabic, Aramaic:
ܝܘܚܢܢ Yokhanan) (died c 30) was a mission
preacher and a major religious figure who
led a movement of Baptism at the Jordan River
in expectation of a divine apocalypse that would
restore occupied Israel. John followed the example of
previous Hebrew prophets, living austerely, challenging sinful
rulers, calling for
repentance, and
promising God's justice. John is regarded as a prophet in
Christianity,
Islam, the
Bahá'í Faith, and
Mandaeism.
Some scholars maintain that he was influenced by the
Essenes, who were semi-ascetic, expected an
apocalypse, and had rituals similar to baptism, although there is
no direct evidence to substantiate this. John's baptism was a
purification rite for repentant sinners, performed in "living
water" (in this case a running river) in accord with Jewish custom.
John anticipated a messianic figure who would be greater than
himself. Christians believe that
Jesus was
among those whom John baptized. It has been suggested that Jesus
may have been a follower of John.
Herod
Antipas saw John as a threat and had him executed. Many
Christian theologians believe that the
ministry of Jesus followed John's, and
some of Jesus' early followers had previously been followers of
John. Both John and Jesus reportedly preached at times of great
political, social, and religious conflict.
Accounts of John in the New Testament are not incompatible with the
account in
Josephus, whose authority is
respected. Here, Jesus is the one whose coming John foretold. Herod
has John imprisoned for denouncing his marriage, and he is later
executed.
Christians commonly refer to
John as the precursor or forerunner of Jesus, since in the
Gospels, John announces Jesus' coming. He is also
identified with the prophet
Elijah, and is
described by the Gospel of Luke as a relative of Jesus.
Because Scripture described John as endowed with prenatal grace,
the feast day of his birth (June 24) became celebrated more
solemnly than that marking his
martyrdom
(August 29). In art, John's head often appears on a platter because
that is what Herod's stepdaughter, Salome, is said to have asked
for. A theme of Christian art is the
Beheading of St. John the
Baptist. He is also depicted as an ascetic wearing camel hair
and with a staff and scroll inscribed "Ecce Agnus Dei", or bearing
a book or dish with a lamb on it. In Orthodox icons, he often has
angel's wings, since Mark 1:2 describes him as ἄγγελος
(
angelos) (messenger).
In the New Testament
All four Gospels record John the Baptist's ministry. They depict
him as proclaiming Christ's arrival. In the
Synoptics (Mark, Matthew, and Luke), Jesus
is baptized. In Matthew and John, John the Baptist recognizes Jesus
as the one he had foretold.
Birth and infancy
The
Gospel of Luke includes an
account of John's infancy, introducing him as the son of
Zachariah, an old man, and his wife
Elizabeth, who was
sterile. According to this account the birth of John was foretold
by the angel
Gabriel to Zachariah, while
Zachariah was performing his functions as a priest in the temple of
Jerusalem; since Zachariah is described as a priest of the course
of
Abijah, and his wife, Elizabeth, as one of
the
daughters of Aaron this would
make John a descendant of
Aaron on both his
father's and mother's side.
The Gospel of Luke states that Jesus was conceived when Elizabeth
was about six months pregnant; when Mary came to tell her about her
news, Elizabeth's unborn baby 'jumped for joy' in her womb.
Zachariah had lost his speech at the behest and prophecy of the
angel Gabriel, and it was restored on the occasion of Zachariah
naming John. On the basis of Luke's account, the Catholic calendar
placed the feast of John the Baptist on June 24, six months before
Christmas. According to Luke, Jesus and John the Baptist were
related, their mothers being cousins; there is no mention of this
in the other Gospels, and the scholar
Raymond E. Brown has described the relationship as 'of
dubious historicity';
Géza Vermes has
called it 'artificial and undoubtedly Luke's creation'.
The very close similarities between the accounts of the birth of
Samuel in the Old Testament have led scholars
to suggest that this is the model for the Gospel of Luke story of
the birth of John and of the annunciation and birth of Jesus.
Ministry
All four
canonical gospels relate to John's ministry, his preaching and
baptism in the River
Jordan
. Most notably he is the one who recognized
Jesus as the
Messiah,
and on Jesus' request, baptized him. The baptism marked the
beginning of Jesus' ministry. The Gospels of
Mark,
Matthew and (most clearly)
Luke relate that Jesus came from Galilee to
John and was baptized by him, whereupon the Spirit descended upon
him and a voice from Heaven told him he was God's Son. Their lives
(e.g., births) are believed to have been similar, although in
Christianity, John is thought of as the last prophet and Jesus as
the Messiah.
The problem that Jesus, considered by Christians to be without sin,
received John's baptism, which was for the repentance of sins (Mark
1:4), is addressed in the
Gospel of
Matthew's account, which has John refusing to baptize Jesus,
saying, "I need to be baptized by you," until Jesus convinces him
to baptize him nonetheless (Matthew 3:13-15). In the
Gospel of John John does not baptize Jesus
but introduces Jesus to his disciples as the "Lamb of God" (John
1:29-36).
The Gospel of John reports that Jesus' disciples were baptizing and
that a debate broke out between some of the disciples of John and
another Jew about purification with John explaining that Jesus
"must become greater" while he, John, "must become less" (John
3:22-36). The Gospel of John then points out that Jesus' disciples
were baptizing more people than John (John 4:2). Later, the Gospel
relates Jesus regarding John as "a burning and shining lamp, and
you were willing to rejoice for a while in his light". (John
5:35).
The book of Acts portrays the disciples of John as eventually
merging into the followers of Jesus (Acts 18:24-19:6), a
development not reported by the Gospels except for the early case
of
Andrew, Simon Peter's brother (John
1:35-42). On various occasions the Gospels relate John denying any
claim to be the Messiah and clearly acknowledging his inferiority
to Jesus. However, scholars such as
Harold W. Attridge contend that John's status as a
"self-conscious and deliberate forerunner of Jesus" is likely to be
an invention by early Christians, arguing that "for the early
church it would have been something of an embarrassment to say that
Jesus, who was in their minds superior to John the Baptist, had
been baptized by him."
Imprisonment and beheading
According to the canonical Gospels, John the Baptist's public
ministry was brought to a close when he was imprisoned on orders of
Herod Antipas. The synoptic Gospels
state that Herod Antipas reacted to John's condemnation of his
marriage to
Herodias, the former wife of
his half-brother
Herod II.
Josephus locates John's imprisonment in the
fortress of Machaerus
on the southern extremity of Peraea, nine miles
(14 km) east of the Dead Sea (Josephus, Jewish
Antiquities XVIII:5:1–2). Matthew relates that the
imprisoned John sent messengers to Jesus to ask him whether he was
the Messiah. Jesus indirectly answered in the affirmative and
described John in terms of a return of the prophet Elijah (Matthew
11:2-15).
Regarding John's death, Josephus states that Herod had John killed
to preempt a possible uprising. Matthew links John's death as well
with Herodias, as he related that her daughter
Salome so much delighted Antipas with a dance that he
vowed to grant her any wish to which, after asking her mother
(Herodias), she demanded the head of John the Baptist. (Matthew
14:6-8) The Gospels date John's death before the crucifixion of
Jesus. Josephus places John's death no later than 36 CE.
Neither
Josephus nor the Gospels state where John was buried, though the
Gospels state that John's disciples took his body and placed it in
a tomb
and then told Jesus all that had occurred, to which
Jesus replied that there had been no greater son of woman than John
the Baptist (Matthew 14:3-12). In the time of
Julian the Apostate, however, his tomb
was shown at Samaria, where the inhabitants opened it and burned
part of his bones. The rest of the alleged remains were saved by
some Christians, who carried them to an abbot of Jerusalem named
Philip.
John the Baptist and Old Testament prophecy
Christians believe that John the Baptist had a specific role
ordained by God as forerunner or precursor of Jesus, who they
understand to be the foretold
Messiah. The
New Testament Gospels speak of this role. In Luke 1:17 the role of
John is referred to as being "to turn the hearts of the fathers to
the children, and the disobedient to the wisdom of the just; to
make ready a people prepared for the Lord." In Luke 1:76 as
"...thou shalt go before the face of the Lord to prepare his ways
and in Luke 1:77 as being "To give knowledge of salvation unto his
people by the remission of their sins."
There are several passages within the
Old
Testament which are interpreted by Christians as being
prophetic of John the Baptist in this role. These
include a passage in the
Book of
Malachi 3:1 that refers to a prophet who would
prepare the
way of the Lord:
- Behold, I will send my messenger, and he shall prepare the
way before me: and the Lord, whom ye seek, shall suddenly come to
his temple, even the messenger of the covenant, whom ye delight in:
behold, he shall come, saith the LORD of hosts. — Malachi
3:1
and also at the end of the next chapter in Malachi 4:5-6 where it
says,
- Behold, I will send you Elijah the prophet before the
coming of the great and dreadful day of the LORD: And he shall turn
the heart of the fathers to the children, and the heart of the
children to their fathers, lest I come and smite the earth with a
curse.
The Jews of Jesus' day expected Elijah to come before the Messiah;
indeed, some modern Jews continue to await Elijah's coming as well,
as in the Cup of Elijah the Prophet in the
Passover Seder. This is why the disciples ask
Jesus in Matthew 17:10, 'Why then say the scribes that Elias must
first come?.' The disciples are then told by Jesus that Elijah came
in the person of John the Baptist,
- Jesus replied, "To be sure, Elijah comes and will restore
all things. But I tell you, Elijah has already come, and
they did not recognize him, but have done to him everything they
wished. In the same way the Son of Man is going to suffer
at their hands." Then the disciples understood that he was
talking to them about John the Baptist. — Matt. 17:11-13
These passages are applied to John in the
Synoptic Gospels.
Josephus
An account of John the Baptist is found in all extant manuscripts
of the
Jewish Antiquities (book 18, chapter 5, 2) by
Flavius Josephus (37–100):
- Now some of the Jews thought that the destruction of Herod's
army came from God, and that very justly, as a punishment of what
he did against John, that was called the Baptist: for Herod slew
him, who was a good man, and commanded the Jews to exercise virtue,
both as to righteousness towards one another, and piety towards
God, and so to come to baptism; for that the washing [with water]
would be acceptable to him, if they made use of it, not in order to
the putting away [or the remission] of some sins [only], but for
the purification of the body; supposing still that the soul was
thoroughly purified beforehand by righteousness. Now when [many]
others came in crowds about him, for they were very greatly moved
[or pleased] by hearing his words, Herod, who feared lest the great
influence John had over the people might put it into his power and
inclination to raise a rebellion, (for they seemed ready to do any
thing he should advise,) thought it best, by putting him to death,
to prevent any mischief he might cause, and not bring himself into
difficulties, by sparing a man who might make him repent of it when
it would be too late. Accordingly he was sent a prisoner, out of
Herod's suspicious temper, to Macherus, the castle I before
mentioned, and was there put to death. Now the Jews had an opinion
that the destruction of this army was sent as a punishment upon
Herod, and a mark of God's displeasure to him.
As with other passages in Josephus relating to Christian themes
concern remains over whether the passage was part of Josephus's
original text or instead a later interpolation. Skeptical writer
Frank Zindler argues that the passage
is an interpolation by a
Sabian. The passage
dates back to at least the early third century as it is quoted by
Origen in
Contra
Celsum. It was also quoted by
Eusebius of Caesarea in the fourth
century.
According to this passage, the execution of John was blamed for a
defeat Herod suffered ca. 36 CE. Divergences between the passage's
presentation and the Biblical accounts of John include baptism for
those whose souls have already been "purified beforehand by
righteousness" is for purification of the body, not general
repentance of sin (Mark 1:4). Biblical scholar
John Dominic Crossan differentiates
between Josephus's account of John and Jesus like this: "John had a
monopoly, but Jesus had a franchise." To get baptized, Crossan
writes , you went only to John; to stop the movement one only
needed to stop John (therefore his movement ended with his death).
Jesus invited all to come and see how he and his companions had
already accepted the Government of God, entered it and were living
it. Such a communal praxis was not just for himself, but could
survive without him, unlike John's movement.
In the main Christian traditions
Eastern Orthodox Church
The
Eastern Orthodox believe
that John was the last of the
Old
Testament prophets, thus serving as a
bridge between that period of
revelation
and the
New Covenant. They also teach
that, following his death, John descended into
Hades and there once more preached that Jesus the
Messiah was coming, so he was the Forerunner of Christ in death as
he had been in life. According to
Sacred Tradition, John the Baptist appears
at the time of death to those who have not heard the
Gospel of Christ, and preaches the Good News to them,
that all may have the opportunity to be saved. Orthodox churches
will often have an
icon of St. John the Baptist
in a place of honor on the
iconostasis,
and he is frequently mentioned during the
Divine Services. Every Tuesday throughout
the year is dedicated to his memory.
The
Eastern Orthodox Church
remembers Saint John the Forerunner on six separate feast days,
listed here in order in which they occur during the
church year (which begins on September 1):
- September 23 — Conception of St. John the Forerunner
- January 7 — The Synaxis of St. John the
Forerunner. This is his main feast day, immediately after
Theophany on January 6 (January 7
also commemorates the transfer of the relic of the right hand of
John the Baptist from Antioch
to Constantinople
in 956)
- February 24 — First and Second Finding of the Head of St. John
the Forerunner
- May 25 — Third Finding of the Head of St. John the
Forerunner
- June 24 — Nativity of St. John the
Forerunner
- August 29 — The Beheading of St. John the
Forerunner
In addition to the above, September 5 is the commemoration of
Zechariah and
Elisabeth, St. John's parents.
The
Russian Orthodox Church
observes October 12 as the Transfer of the Right Hand of the
Forerunner from Malta
to Gatchina
(1799).
Roman Catholic Church

The presumed 'Head of St John',
enshrined in Rome

Head of John the Baptist - Residenz -
Munich
The Roman Catholic Church commemorates St. John the Baptist on two
feast days:
Relics
According
to ancient tradition, the burial-place of John the Baptist was at
Sebaste
in Samaria
, and mention
is made of his relics being honored there
around the middle of the fourth century. The historians
Rufinus and
Theodoretus record that the
shrine was
desecrated
under
Julian the Apostate around
362, the bones being partly burned.
A portion of the rescued relics were
carried to Jerusalem
, then to Alexandria
, where on May 27, 395, they were laid in the
basilica that was newly-dedicated to the
Forerunner on the former site of the
temple of Serapis. The tomb at Sebaste continued,
nevertheless, to be visited by pious
pilgrims, and
St. Jerome
bears witness to miracles being worked there.
What became of the head of John the Baptist is difficult to
determine.
Nicephorus and Symeon Metaphrastes say that Herodias
had it buried in the fortress of Machaerus
(in accordance with Josephus). Other writers say
that it was interred in Herod's palace at Jerusalem; there it was
found during the reign of Constantine
I, and thence secretly taken to Emesa
, in Phoenicia
, where it was concealed, the place remaining
unknown for years, until it was manifested by revelation in 453. However, the
decapitation cloth of St. John is kept at the Aachen
Cathedral
. The Coptic Christian Orthodox Church also
claim to hold the relics of St. John the Baptist. These are to be
found in a monastery in Lower Egypt between Cairo and Alexandria.
It is possible, with permission from the monks, to see the original
tomb where the remains were found. An obscure and surprising claim
relates to the town of Halifax in West Yorkshire , where the
Baptist's head appears on the official coat-of-arms. A legend first
recorded in the late 16th century and reported in Camden's
'Britannia' stated that the first religious settlers of the
district brought the 'face' of John the Baptist with them and this
accounts for the town's place-name - 'halig' (holy) and 'fax'
(face) .
Over the centuries, there have been many discrepancies in the
various
legends and claimed relics throughout
the Christian world. Several different locations claim to possess
the severed head of John the Baptist. Among the various claimants
are:
- The Knights Templar. In medieval
times it was rumored that they had possession of the saint's
severed head, and multiple records from their Inquisition in the early 1300s make reference to
some form of head being worshiped by the Knights.
- San Silvestro in Capite
in Rome
- Amiens Cathedral
, France, brought home by Wallon de Sarton from the
Fourth Crusade in Constantinople
- Turkish Antioch

- The
Umayyad
Mosque
in Damascus
- The
Residenz
Museum
in Munich, Germany, the official residence of the
Wittelsbach Family, the rulers of Bavaria from 1385 to 1918.
The Schatzkammer (Treasury) portion of the museum has treasures and
relics accumulated over ten centuries. The museum currently claims
to have and is displaying the head of St. John the Baptist and his
mother. (See photo.)
Istanbul
claims to possess the saint's arm and a piece of
his skull in the Topkapi
Palace
, as does the Coptic
Orthodox Monastery of Saint
Macarius the Great in Scetes
, Egypt
, while
John's right hand, with which he baptised Jesus, is said to be in
the possession of the Serbian
Orthodox Cetinje monastery in
Montenegro
, and also at the Romanian
skete of the
Forerunner
on Mount Athos.
Armenians believe that Gandzasar
Monastery
's Cathedral of St. John the Baptist, in
Nagorno Karabakh, too contains or
contained in the past St. John's head. A discussion about
how St. John's head ended up in medieval Armenia's province of
Artsakh, and in Gandzasar
, can be found in the “History of the Land of
Aghvank,” a collection of texts attributed to the medieval Armenian historian Movses Kaghankatvatsi.
The
fourth century Armenian Monasery of Surb Karapet
(Monastery of Saint John the Baptist, now in
southeastern Turkey
) established
by Saint Gregory the
Illuminator contained the relics of Saint John the Baptist; its
fate is unclear after the complete destruction of the church by the
Turkish army.
Other views
Islamic view
John the Baptist is known as
Yahya in Arabic and in the
Qur'an. The
Qur'an, in
the
sura Maryam, identifies John as
the son of
Zachariah and
maternal cousin of
Jesus. It relates an
account similar to that of the Gospel of Luke, including the
barrenness of Zachariah's unnamed wife and his doubts, though
Zachariah is not described as actually mute but only that the sign
of the coming of John was that he would not speak for three nights.
John, whose tidings are foretold by the angels, is exhorted to hold
fast to the Scripture and was given wisdom by God while still a
child. (Surah 19:7-12). He is described as "pure", "devout",
"dutiful towards his parents" and as "not arrogant or rebellious"
(Surah 19:7-15) and is called "a Prophet of the Righteous" coming
"to confirm a
word from Allah". (Surah 3:39)
Mandaean view
John the Baptist plays a large part in some
Mandaean writings, especially those dating from
the Islamic period. Mandaeans highly revere him and may possibly
have some remote connection with his original disciples. They
believe John the Baptist, called
Yahya in the
Sidra
d-Yahia ("Book of John"), was the last and greatest of the
prophets. While Mandaeans agree that he baptized
Jesus (
Issa), they reject the latter as
either a saviour or prophet. They view John as the only true
Messiah. According to the text of the
Ginza Rba, John died at the hand
of an
angel. The angel appeared as a
three-year-old child, coming to John for baptism. John knew the
angel for what it was, and that once he touched its hand, he would
die immediately. John performed the baptism anyway, and died in the
process. Afterward, the angel covered John's body with mud.
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
According to
The Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, latter-day revelation
confirms the biblical account and also makes known additional
events in the ministry of John the Baptist. According to this
belief, revelation reveals that John was "ordained by an angel,"
when he was 8 days of age, to overthrow the kingdom of the Jews and
to prepare a people for the Lord. They also claim that he was
baptized while yet in his childhood.
The Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints teaches that John the Baptist appeared on the
banks of the Susquehanna River
near Harmony Township, Susquehanna County,
Pennsylvania
(present-day Oakton), as a
resurrected being, to Joseph Smith,
Jr. and Oliver Cowdery on May 15,
1829, and ordained them to the Aaronic priesthood. According to
LDS doctrine, John the Baptist's ministry has operated in three
dispensations: he was the last of the prophets under the law of
Moses; he was the first of the New Testament prophets; and he was
sent to confer the
Aaronic
priesthood in our day, the
dispensation of the fulness
of times. They also believe John's ministry was foretold by two
prophets whose teachings are included in the
Book of Mormon:
Lehi and his son,
Nephi (Book of Mormon 1 Nephi 11:27; Nephi
31:4-18;).
Bahá'í view
There are numerous quotations in the writings of
Bahá'u'lláh, Founder of the
Bahá'í Faith mentioning John the
Baptist. He is regarded by Bahá'ís as a
lesser Prophet.
Bahá'u'lláh claimed that His Forerunner, the
Báb, was the spiritual return of John the Baptist.
In His letter to Pope
Pius IX, Bahá'u'lláh
wrote:
"O followers of the Son!
We have once again sent John unto you, and He, verily,
hath cried out in the wilderness of the Bayán: O peoples of the
world!
Cleanse your eyes!
The Day whereon ye can behold the Promised One and
attain unto Him hath drawn nigh!
O followers of the Gospel!
Prepare the way!
The Day of the advent of the Glorious Lord is at
hand!
Make ready to enter the Kingdom.
Thus hath it been ordained by God, He Who causeth the
dawn to break."
However, Bahá'ís consider the
Báb to be a
greater Prophet (
Manifestation of
God) and thus possessed of a far greater station than John the
Baptist.
Gnostic and anthroposophic views
In
Gnosticism, John the Baptist was a
"personification" of the
Old Testament
prophet
Elijah. As an Old Testament prophet,
Elijah did not know the True God (the God of the
New Testament), and thus had to be
reincarnated in Gnostic
theology. As predicted by the Old Testament prophet
Malachi, Elijah must "come first" to herald
the coming of Jesus Christ. Modern
anthroposophy, initiated by
Rudolf Steiner, concurs with the idea that
the Baptist was a reincarnation of Elijah, in line with the
Synoptic Gospels (e.g. Mark
9:11-13,Matthew 11:13-14,Luke 7:27), although the
Gospel of John explicitly denies this (John
1:21).
Furthermore, after his beheading at Machaerus
his soul is said to have become the inspiring group
genius of Christ's disciples. According to Steiner, the
painter
Raphael and the poet
Novalis were more recent incarnations of John the
Baptist.
Unification church
The
Unification Church teaches
that
God intended that John help Jesus during
his public ministry in Judea. In particular, John should have done
everything in his power to persuade the Jewish people that Jesus
was the Messiah. He was to become Jesus' greatest disciple. John's
failure to do so was the chief obstacle to the fulfillment of
Jesus' mission.
In art
John has been one of the saints most frequently appearing in
Christian art. The
Baptism of Christ was one of the
earliest scenes from the
Life of
Christ to be frequently depicted in
Early Christian art, and John's tall
thin, even gaunt, and bearded figure is already established by the
5th century. Only he and Jesus are consistently shown with long
hair from Early Christian times, when the apostles generally have
trim classical cuts; in fact John is more consistently depicted in
this way than Jesus. In
Byzantine art
the composition of the
Deesis came
to be included in every
Eastern
Orthodox church, as remains the case to this day. Here John and
the
Theotokos (Mary) flank a
Christ Pantocrator and intercede for
humanity; in many ways this is the equivalent of Western
Crucifixions on
roods and
elsewhere, where
John the
Evangelist takes the place of John the Baptist (except in the
idiosyncratic
Isenheim
Altarpiece).
John the Baptist is very often shown on
altarpieces designed for churches dedicated to him, or where the
donor patron was named for him or there was some other connection
of patronage - John was the patron saint of Florence
, among many other cities, which means he features
among the supporting saints in many important works.
Image:Deesis.jpg|12th century Byzantine
DeesisImage:Iconostasis in Moscow.jpg|"Deesis
row", as usual at the centre of the Iconostasis; Cathedral of
the Annunciation
, Moscow
Kremlin
, by Theophanes the
Greek, 1405.Image:Codex aureus Gnesnensis.JPG|11th
century
Baptism of Christ
with a typical medieval solution to the problem of depicting the
river.
Image:Rogier van der Weyden 015.jpg|Rogier van der Weyden
Baptism, from an altarpiece with
three scenes from the life of John (Gemäldegalerie, Berlin
).
A number
of narrative scenes from his life were often shown on the predella of altarpieces dedicated to John, and
other settings, notably the large series in grisaille fresco in the
Chiostro del Scalzo, which was
Andrea del Sarto's largest work,
and the frescoed Life by Ghirlandajo in the Tornabuoni Chapel
, both in Florence. There is another
important fresco cycle by Filippo
Lippi in Prato
Cathedral
.
These include the typical scenes: the
Annunciation to Zechariah, John's birth, his naming
by his father, the
Visitation,
John's departure for the desert, his preaching in the desert, the
Baptism of Christ, John before Herod, the dance of Samome,
and his beheading.
His birth, which unlike the
Nativity of Jesus allowed a
relatively wealthy domestic interior to be shown, became
increasingly popular as a subject in the late
Middle Ages, with depictions by
Jan van Eyck (?) in the
Turin-Milan Hours and Ghirlandajo in the
Tornabuoni Chapel being among the best known. His execution, a
Church feast-day, was often shown, and by the 15th century scenes
such as the dance of Salome became popular, sometimes, as in an
engraving by
Israhel van Meckenem, the interest of
the artist is clearly in showing the life of Herod's court, given
contemporary dress, as much as the martyrdom of the saint. Salome
bearing John's head on a platter equally became a subject for the
Northern Renaissance taste for images of glamourous but dangerous
women (
Delilah,
Judith
and others), and was often painted by
Lucas Cranach the Elder and engraved
by the
Little Masters. These images
remained popular into the Baroque, with
Carlo Dolci painting at least three versions.
John preaching, in a landscape setting, was a popular subject in
Dutch art from
Pieter Brueghel
the Elder and his successors.Image:Cappella tornabuoni, 10,
annuncio dell'angelo a zaccaria.jpg|The
Annunciation to
Zachary, as usual shown officiating at the Temple in
Jerusalem.
Tornabuoni Chapel
Image:Meister 'G' des Turin-Mailänder
Gebetbuches 001.jpg|Above, the Birth, below, the
Baptism of
Christ, perhaps
Jan van Eyck,
Turin-Milan Hours.Image:Giovanni
di Paolo 001.jpg|John (shown twice) sets off for the desert, a
predella scene by
Giovanni di Paolo.Image:Cole Thomas
Landscape Composition Saint John in the Wilderness 1827.jpg|John
preaching in the wilderness, a 19th century depiction
As a child (of varying age), he is sometimes shown from the 15th
century in family scenes from the life of Christ such as the
Presentation of
Christ, the
Marriage
of the Virgin and the
Holy
Kinship.
Leonardo da
Vinci's versions of the Virgin of the Rocks were
influential in establishing a Renaissance fashion for variations on
the Madonna and Child that
included John, probably intended to depict the cousin's reunion in
Egypt
, when after Jesus's Flight to Egypt John was believed to have
been carried to join him by an angel . Raphael in particular painted many compositions of
the subject, such as the
Alba Madonna,
La belle jardinière,
Aldobrandini Madonna,
Madonna della seggiola,
Madonna dell'Impannata,
which were among his best known works. John was also often shown by
himself as an older child or adolescent, usually already wearing
his distinctive dress and carrying a long thin wooden cross -
another theme
influenced
by Leonardo, whose equivocal composition, reintroducing the
camel-skin dress, was developed by Raphael
Titian and
Guido Reni among
many others. Often he is accompanied by a lamb, especially in the
many
Early Netherlandish
paintings which needed this
attribute
as he wore normal clothes.
Caravaggio
painted an especially large number of works including John, from
at least five largely nude
youths attributed to him, to three late works on his death -
the great
Execution
in Malta, and two sombre Salomes with his head,
one
in Madrid, and
one
in London.
The death
of John remained a popular subject throughout the Baroque period, and then enjoyed a considerable
revival at the end of the 19th century with Symbolist painters such as Gustave Moreau and Puvis de Chavannes (National
Gallery, London
). Oscar Wilde's
play
Salome was illustrated
by
Aubrey Beardsley, giving rise to
some of his most memorable images.
Commemoration
As a patron saint
John is patron saint of Xewkija-Gozo, Malta, which remember him
with a great feast on the Sunday nearest to June 24. A band march
takes place on Thursday of that that week and is the best one in
Gozo.
Saint John the Baptist is the patron saint of Puerto
Rico, and its capital city San Juan
bears his name. In 1521, the island was
given its formal name "San Juan Bautista de Puerto Rico", following
the usual custom of christening the town with both its formal name
and the name which
Christopher
Columbus had originally given the island, honouring John the
Baptist. The indistinct use of "San Juan Bautista" and "Puerto
Rico" for calling both the city and the island led to a reversal in
practical use by most inhabitants due largely to a map-making
error. Therefore by 1746 the name for the city (Puerto Rico) had
become that of the entire island, while the name for the island
(San Juan Bautista) had become the name for the city. The official
motto for the island of
Puerto Rico also references the saint,
Joannes Est Nomen
Eius (translated, "John is his name").
He is
also a patron saint of Jordan, French
Canada, and Newfoundland
. The Canadian cities of St. John's,
Newfoundland
(1497) and Saint John, New Brunswick
(1604) were both named in his honor.
In the
UK
Saint John the Baptist is the patron saint of
Penzance
, Cornwall
. His feast day is June 24, celebrated in
Quebec
as the
Fête Nationale du
Québec, and in Newfoundland as Discovery Day. Also on the night
from June 23 to 24, Saint John is celebrated as the patron saint of
Porto
, the second largest city in Portugal
. An article from June 2004 in
The Guardian, remarked that "Porto's
Festa de São João is one of
Europe's liveliest street festivals, yet it is relatively unknown
outside the country".
He is also patron of the Knights Hospitaller of Jerusalem,
Malta
, Florence
, and Genoa
,
Italy. Saint John the Baptist is also the patron
saint of Jordan
, his
beheading is believed to have taken place in Machaerus
in central Jordan.
The
Baptistines are the name given to a
number of
religious orders
dedicated to the memory of John the Baptist.
Saint John is also
the patron saint of Lian, Batangas
, San Juan, Metro Manila
(Philippines
) and the Roman Catholic Diocese of
Charleston which comprises the entire state of South
Carolina
.
St. John the Baptist is (along with St. John the Evangelist)
claimed as a Patron Saint by the fraternal society of
Free and Accepted Masons (better known as the
Freemasons).
Festivity
In many Mediterranean countries the
summer solstice is dedicated to St. John.
The associated ritual is very similar to
midsummer celebrations on the Anglo-Saxon world
inspired in the Celtic festivity of
Samhain.
Churches and other establishments in his name
.jpg/180px-Surp_Garabed_Vank_(Hampikian,_1923).jpg)
Monastery of Saint John the Baptist
(4th c.) in the Taron province of historic Armenia

St. John's, Newfoundland and The
Basilica of St. John the Baptist
- Monastery of
Saint John the Baptist
, a 4th century Armenian monastery in the Taron province of historic Armenia
that contained the relics of Saint John the Baptist
(which were moved there from Caeserea)
- St.
John The Baptist church, Štorje
,
Slovenia.
- Maronite
Catholic Monastery of Saint John the Baptist, Beit Mery, Lebanon

- Armenian Apostolic Monastery of
Gandzasar
, Nagorno
Karabakh
- Romanian Skete Prodromos
(the name is the Greek for "The Forerunner") on
Mount Athos, holding relics believed to
be of John the Baptist
- St John's College of The University of
Oxford, Oxford
, England
- Puerto Rico was
originally named San Juan Bautista; San
Juan
(then called Puerto Rico) is now its capital
city.
- St. John's,
Newfoundland
, was founded on his feast day June 24,
1497.
- Exactly 34 years later San Juan del
Río
, Querétaro
, Mexico
was
founded on June 24, 1531.
- Saint John, New Brunswick
was named after the Saint John
River
which was named by Samuel de Champlain
- St. John's
University
located in Queens, New York; St. John's is the
second largest Roman Catholic university in the United
States.
- Saint John's
University located in Collegeville, MN
; a Roman
Catholic-Benedictine liberal arts university.
- Fête nationale du Québec
— also known as la St- Jean-Baptiste — is the
provincial holiday of Quebec
, celebrated
on June 24 of every year.
- Prince Edward Island
, a Canadian
province, was originally called Île de
St-Jean or St. John's Island.
- St. John's wort is named after
St. John because it is traditionally harvested on his feast day,
June 24.
- 12th
century cathedral in Kamień Pomorski
(Poland
) with a
famous 17th century organ
- St.
John's Regional College in Dandenong Melbourne
(Australia)
- St. John
the Baptist Parish
in the southern portion of the American state of
Louisiana
. In Louisiana, a civil parish is equivalent to a county elsewhere in North America.
- St.
John's Avenue in Staten
Island
, New
York
, overlooks the Atlantic Ocean
, Brooklyn
, the Verrazano Narrows Bridge
, New York Harbour, and Manhattan
- St. John Ambulance and the
Venerable Order of St.
John.
- Sovereign Military Hospitaller Order of St. John of Jerusalem,
of Rhodes and of Malta (commonly referred to as the Sovereign Military Order of
Malta)
- Mission San Juan Bautista
, one of the original 18th century missions in
northern California
.
- St.
John the Baptist Mission, Clatskanie
, Oregon
- St.
John the Baptist parish, Tiaong
, Quezon
- St.
John the Baptist Lodge No.39, Exeter
, UK
Famous churches


- Two
different Churches of St. John the Baptist in Ein Karem
, traditional place of his birth
- Basilica of St. John Lateran

- St.
John the Baptist of Coventry

- St. John the Baptist
at St. John's
, Newfoundland
(Basilica-cathedral)
- San
Giovanni Battista di Rimini
(cathedral)
- San
Giovanni Battista di Torino
(cathedral)
- Saint-Jean-Baptiste d'Audresselles

- St.
John's Cathedral of Valletta

- St
John the Baptist Located on Ha-Notsrim street in the Christian
Quarter, Old Jerusalem

- Church of St. John the Baptist, Mudgee,
New South
Wales
, Australia
- St. John's (Episcopal) Church, Elizabeth,
New Jersey
, where the youngest signer of the United States
Constitution is buried, Jonathan Dayton, and the 1769 wedding site
of the parents of Elizabeth Ann
Seton (first American Roman Catholic saint)
- Chapel of St. John the Baptist (Capela de São João Baptista),
18th century, at the time an expensive chapel in Europe.
It is in
the Igreja de São Roque

- Cathedral of St John the Baptist, Warsaw, Poland. Coronation
and Burial Site of Stanislaw August Poniatowski, last King of
Poland.
- Monastery of St John The Baptist Bigorski, Macedonia. Built in
1020, destroyed by the Turks in the XVIth century and then rebuilt
in 1743. Famous for its iconostasis.
- Cathedral of St John the
Baptist
in Charleston
, South Carolina
- St. John the Evangilist Parish (Bergenfield, NJ)
See also
References
Notes
Books on John the Baptist
- Brooks Hansen (2009) John the
Baptizer: A Novel. New York: W.
W. Norton.
ISBN 978-0-393-06947-1
- Murphy, Catherine M. (2003) John the Baptist: Prophet of
Purity for a New Age. Collegeville: Liturgical Press. ISBN
0-8146-5933-0
- Taylor, Joan E. (1997) The Immerser: John the Baptist
within Second Temple Judaism. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans. ISBN
0-8028-4236-4
- Webb, Robert L. (1991) John the Baptizer and Prophet: a
Socio-Historical Study. Wipf and Stock Publishers. ISBN
978-1597529860 (first published Sheffield: JSOT Press, 1991)
Accounts in ancient literature
- Josephus wrote that "...Herod slew him,
who was a good man, and commanded the Jews to exercise virtue, both
as to righteousness towards one another and piety towards God, and
so to come to baptism; for that the washing would be acceptable to
him, if they made use of it, not in order to the remission of some
sins, but for the purification of the body; supposing still that
the soul was thoroughly purified beforehand by righteousness."
(Josephus, AJ, 18.5.2)
Passages in the Qur'an
External links