The Last Prophet
The story of the Jewish people moves through Exodus to the Judges to the Kings to the Prophets. It culminates in Christ, the culmination of all things. He is Priest, Prophet, and King, and in Baptism we come to share this designation as well.
We do not all share the gift of prophecy, of course, but to see it continuing to our day, you can took to people as diverse as G.K. Chesterton and Pope Paul VI.
And yet, the Old Testament Prophets reach their peak in the person of Saint John the Baptist, even while he is the herald of Christ.
The Orthodox often call him Saint John the Forerunner, for he is indeed the forerunner of Christ, the “voice of one crying out in the desert, ‘Prepare the way of the Lord, make straight his paths.'” (Matt 3:3).
He is, in effect, the hinge of the two testaments.
Saint Augustine puts it this way:
John, then, appears as the boundary between the two testaments, the old and the new. That he is a sort of boundary, the Lord himself bears witness, when he speaks of the law and the prophets up until John the Baptist. Thus he represents times past and is the herald of the new era to come. As a representative of the past, he is born of aged parents; as a herald of the new era, he is declared to be a prophet while still in his mother’s womb. For when yet unborn, he leapt in his mother’s womb at the arrival of blessed Mary. In that womb he had already been designated a prophet, even before he was born; it was revealed that he was to be Christ’s precursor, before they saw one another.
Today the Church celebrates the Solemnity of the Nativity of Saint John the Baptist. Of human beings, only the Blessed Virgin Mary is held in higher esteem, and today’s feast is one of the oldest in the church.
Normally we celebrate a saint’s day on the anniversary of his or her death, but
Jesus, the Virgin Mary and Saint John the Baptist, while not being exceptions to this rule, also have feast days that celebrate their earthly birth. The reason is that St. John (Luke 1:15), like Jeremiah (Jer 1:5) and the Blessed Virgin, was purified from original sin before his very birth, though not in the instant of conception as in the latter case.
For all Saint John’s greatness, his foretold birth and his prophetic gift, he nevertheless becomes the first Christian ascetic. He “wore clothing made of camel’s hair and had a leather belt around his waist. His food was locusts and wild honey.” (Matt 3:4) Even in his icons, he is made to look like a first century Grizzly Adams.
The Desert Fathers take their inspiration from him, and from them comes the entire Christian monastic tradition.
So remember: if you are called to the contemplative life, whether in the monastery or in the world, you are also called to be a voice, crying in the wilderness.