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Sermons

Jesus is King of the Universe

Jarvis Williams

The presidential election is finally over! But the results are shocking! Trump won the presidency by an enormous landslide. His victory has brought joy to many, but grief and fear into the lives of others.

Minorities, immigrants, and Muslims are especially anxious by Trump’s victory due to the many statements that he made during his campaign interpreted by these groups as racist, bigoted, and xenophobic. But during these uncertain times all Christians (red and yellow and black and white) must rest in this very real fact: Jesus Christ is still king of the universe, even though Trump won the election. In fact, Jesus reigns as Lord and Christ over President Elect Trump.

Jesus’ Baptism (Mark 1:9-11)
In Mark’s Gospel, after John’s announcement that Israel’s God of salvation is coming, Mark now focuses his audience’s attention on the one whom John came to proclaim. Mark immediately records Jesus’ baptism by John in the Jordan in 1:9 and God’s anointing and affirmation of him in vv. 10-11.

Mark gives us a rather abbreviated explanation of Jesus’ baptism in comparison to Matthew and Luke. Each of the 3 accounts mention that at his baptism, the heavens were opened (Mark 1:9; Matt. 3:13-17; Luke 3:21), the Spirit descended (Mark 1:9; Matt. 3:13-17; Luke 3:21-22), and God the Father affirms him as his anointed Son (Mark 1:9; Matt. 3:13-17; Luke 3:21-22).

Mark gives us no editorial comment that explains the purpose of Jesus’ baptism, whereas Matt. 3:15 adds “to fulfill all righteousness.” Mark provides no explicit answer for the purpose of Jesus’ baptism. He just asserts that he was baptized. We can confidently say, however, that Jesus wasn’t baptized because he needed forgiveness of sins, (1) because Mark asserts that Jesus is Yahweh in vv. 2-3 with his citations of Isa. 40:3 and Mal. 3:1, (2) because the Baptist states that he’s unworthy to loosen Jesus’ sandals in v. 7, (3) because God pronounces that “you [Jesus] are my beloved Son in whom I am pleased” in v. 11, (4) because Jesus resists Satan’s temptation in vv. 12-13, and (5) because Mark presents Jesus as obeying God’s commands throughout the gospel.

Rather, since Mark has emphasized that John’s mission was to proclaim the coming of the promised, coming one: Jesus, the Christ, the Son of God (vv. 2-10), Jesus was possibly baptized to express public agreement with John’s pronouncement, and to demonstrate that he was indeed this coming one to whom John bore witness. Upon this reading, Jesus embraces John’s baptism to show that it was a baptism that pointed to him.

Mark 1:10 says the Spirit descends “as a dove,” whereas Luke says “in bodily form as a dove” (Luke 3:21-22). Both a visual (dove as a Spirit) and a verbal (God’s voice) affirmation supports that Jesus is exactly the one whom John proclaimed that he was: namely, the coming Messiah.

The Spirit’s presence at the baptism of Jesus recalls the OT promise that a messianic figure would be endowed with God’s Spirit (Isa. 11:2; 32:1; 61:1). The combination of this gift of the Spirit with the concept of anointing in Isa. 61:1 (as in 1 Sam. 16:13) makes it a particularly appropriate mark of the mission of Jesus Christ.

When God speaks at Jesus’ baptism, he identifies Jesus as His beloved Son (Mark 1:11). Jesus’ sonship is well attested in the NT (Matt. 2:15, 3:17; 4:3; John 1:49). According to Nathaniel’s response to Jesus in John 1:49 (“you are the Son of God; you are the king of Israel”) when Jesus informed Nathaniel that he had always known him, at least some Jewish Christians believed that the Messiah was God’s Son (cf. Matt. 1:1; Mark 12:35).

The term in John’s gospel (even if Nathaniel doesn’t really understand what he’s saying) highlights Jesus’ unique relationship to the father: he is God’s Son to whom he has made an heir of the kingdom; he is Messiah over that kingdom, and he is God (John 1:1-5). This is supported by the fact that Jesus is also called David’s son (Matt. 1:1). This doesn’t mean that Jesus is literally from David’s physical posterity, but that Jesus is uniquely connected to David and to his throne by virtue of being part of David’s Jewish heritage (Rom. 1:3; cf. Matt 1:1) and by virtue of God appointing Jesus to be David’s successor to his throne at his resurrection (Rom. 1:4).

Likewise, Jesus has a unique relationship with God. Since the gospels present Jesus as doing the sorts of things that only God can do (healing the sick, raising the dead, forgiving sins), Jesus’ sonship places Jesus as an equal to God. Thus, when God calls Jesus his Son in Mark 1:11, he’s speaking with reference to Jesus’ unique and divine relationship with the father. An ancient Jewish Christian text call Sibylline Oracles 8.470 attests to this idea. This oracle is clearly a Christian oracle since it briefly mentions Jesus’ incarnation without mentioning his name and his birth narrative (Sib. Or. 8:456-75). Sib. Or. 8.470 (ca. AD 195) states: “In time it was made flesh and came to life in the womb, and was fashioned in mortal form and became a boy by virgin birth. For this is a great wonder to men, but nothing is a great wonder for God the Father and God the Son.”

Jesus is both Messiah and God’s unique Son. His relationship to God as his Son is one that distinguishes him from others who have a relationship with God through faith since it is a divine title when applied to Jesus, for Jesus provokes fear into the demons (Mark 3:11; 5:7); he casts out demons (Mark 1:21-28); he heals the physically marginalized (Mark 2:1-12; 10:46-52); he forgives sins (Mark 2:1-12), and he resurrects from the dead (Mark 16:1-8).

Thus, God’s affirmation that Jesus is his beloved Son at his baptism is a proclamation that Jesus is his Son. God is announcing what is true (cf. Mark 9:2—the voice announces what has already been proven to be true throughout the gospel through Jesus’ deeds). Verses 9-11 could then be the centerpiece of 1:1-13. What Mark has said about Jesus in his introduction, namely, he’s Yahweh in the flesh, the Messiah, and God’s Son (1:1-3), is now confirmed by God himself (1:11). Yahweh himself has come in Jesus, and Yahweh himself testifies to this at Jesus’ baptism.

Christians living in trepidation because of a Trump victory and an eventual Trump presidency must remind themselves of this very fact: Jesus Christ is God and reigns victoriously over all things in heaven and on the earth, including over Trump. Because Jesus Christ is the Lord of all, all Christians must take great comfort in the fact that Jesus our one and only King will reign forever, regardless of the one ruling on earth in the oval office as president of the U.S.

5 thoughts on “Jesus is King of the Universe

  1. Mar Dabo

    LOL
    How did that
    work out
    for you?

  2. Kathleen McH

    Um, I don’t know where you got the notion of “landslide” (Fox News no doubt), but at current count, Trump is way behind Hillary who has 1.5 million more votes over him. And with much of the California numbers still coming in, her lead is virtually certain to increase.

    I’d recommend you tune into a more reliable news source.

  3. Jim May

    “Trump won the presidency by an enormous landslide.” I should think when one loses the popular vote by close to a half million votes it would be difficult to reference an enormous landslide. I feel a mystery has been gifted on the people-maybe a paradox of a “rigged election” or a parable to be challenge understanding and faith.

  4. g

    Hi Karen. “Just because we’re resilient doesn’t mean we want pain and suffering.” This struck me. I want the church to stand against injustice too. I agree with Dr. Williams, and probably you, that justice is a crucial component in a complete gospel message.

    So I am no one to begin to understand or judge your degree of pain and suffering because of the lack of justice. But in my own pain I ask: what if pain and suffering is normal, good and necessary like James chapter 1 says? And what if God were going to discipline those church leaders who deal in partiality as declared in James chapter 2? What if I could flourish in the painful suffering of the Christians I read about in scripture and church history?

    Preaching these truths to myself gives me hope at this time even while I cry out in pain and suffering with you. Perhaps we can be a witness now more than ever because we know that God has not made a mistake according to Romans chapter 13.

    I personally think a majority of the church has been fooled, “even the elect if it were possible”. Even so, the King as Dr. Williams describes Him, should allow me to have a sure hope regardless of how I am treated.

    I preach this to myself first and I ask you to consider it too. Maybe this is your time to shine a light of grace under pressure. You probably can be used by God more than ever now. I want your best. Your brother in Christ. Praying for us now.

  5. Karen Gonzalez

    Dr. Jarvis, I really respect your work, but I must respectfully disagree with the entire tone of your post. First, we did not interpret Trump’s remarks as bigoted and racist–he in fact said bigoted, racist, misogynist, and Islamophobic things. Secondly, surely you know that Christ has always been king. He was before creation. And yet under his kingdom there has been genocide of native Americans, the Holocaust, the enslavement of Africans and their descendants int he US, Jim Crow, mass incarceration, the Chinese Exclusion Act, and I could go on. So we people of color, immigrants, and Muslims have much to fear if our white siblings don’t stand up and stand with us. Just because we’re resilient doesn’t mean we want pain and suffering.

Leave a Reply to Kathleen McH