willemina said:
This verse in the Bible I cannot understand and all the commentaries we have cannot help me either. Can somebody help me? It is especialy the second half of that verse.
Lk 7:28 "For I say unto you, Among those that are born of women there is not a greater prophet than John the Baptist: but he that is least in the kingdom of God is greater than he." (KJV)
Behold, I send my messenger before thy face,
Who shall prepare thy way before thee.
That Mal. 3:1 refers indeed to John the Baptist as Messiah’s herald is clear from the fact that this way-preparer is evidently “Elijah the prophet” of Mal. 4:5, who, in turn, is John the Baptist, according to Christ’s own words as recorded in Matt. 11:14. We are justified in saying, therefore, that this is Christ’s own interpretation of Mal. 3:1. Thus interpreted, the meaning, in brief, of Mal. 3:1 must be:
“Take note, I, Jehovah, send my messenger, John the Baptist, to be the forerunner of thee, the Messiah. The forerunner’s task is to prepare everything—especially the hearts of the people [Mal. 4:6]—for thy coming.”
The meaning is “to pave the way” for Messiah’s first coming, but in view of the fact that the first coming and the second coming are as it were two stages whereby God comes to his people in Immanuel, therefore also the way for his second coming. When applied in the latter sense the appellation my messenger attains a broader meaning, from which neither John the Baptist nor Christ’s apostles nor their successors throughout the new dispensation can be excluded. Though it is true that the immediate context of Mal. 3:1 reaches forward to the final judgment (see especially verses 2 and 3), Luke very legitimately applies the prophecy especially to the first phase of the coming, or, to put it more simply, to the first coming.
It was in a marvelous manner that John the Baptist had fulfilled his task as herald. Hence Jesus is able to continue as follows: 28. I tell you, Among those born of women there is no one greater than John.
As already indicated, John was greater because he was not only a prophet but one whose arrival upon the scene of history had been prophesied. It may well be questioned, however, whether this is all that Jesus meant when he made the tremendous statement found here in 7:28, introducing it with the formula, “I tell you.”
Is it not very probable that the Lord was thinking not only of the simple fact that John the Baptist, the herald, arrived in fulfilment of prophecy, but also of the marvelous manner in which this forerunner had fulfilled his task?
He had done exactly what a herald must do. First, he had very clearly announced the arrival of Messiah, directing the people’s attention to that Great One: “Look, the Lamb of God who is taking away the sin of the world” (John 1:29). Secondly, he had emphasized the necessity of conversion (including repentance) as the only way for the sinner to enter Messiah’s kingdom (Matt. 3:2 and parallels; see also Luke 1:76, 77). And thirdly, since it is the duty of the herald to recede to the background when the One whom he has introduced has fully arrived upon the scene, so John had resisted the temptation to call attention to himself. Instead, in humility of spirit he had said, “He must increase, but I must decrease” (John 3:30). Now in view of the fact that Jesus himself, in describing the nature of true greatness, always links it with humility (Matt. 8:8, 10, cf. Luke 7:6, 9; Matt. 18:1–5, cf. Mark 9:33–37 and Luke 9:46–48; Matt. 20:26, 27, cf. Mark 10:43–45; Matt. 23:11; and see also Matt. 15:27, 28), is it not altogether probable that he does this also in the present case? This humility, in turn, must be viewed as a gift which John had received from the Holy Spirit. Thus the word of the angel addressed to Zechariah, “He shall be great … and filled with the Holy Spirit from his mother’s womb” (Luke 1:15), had been and was being fulfilled.
Surely, all of this—(a) John not only “the prophet of the Highest” but himself the fulfilment of prophecy, (b) as such one who in a most humble manner fulfilled his task, (c) being filled with the Holy Spirit and this from his mother’s womb—must be taken into consideration in order to do justice to the full meaning of Luke 7:28. When that is done it will be clear that the statement is not in any sense an exaggeration.
To this Jesus adds: yet he who is least in the kingdom of God is greater than he. This cannot mean that John, after all, was not a saved man. Perish the very thought! Rather, the statement must be explained in the light of 10:23, 24, “Blessed (are) the eyes that see what you are seeing! For I tell you that many prophets and kings wanted to see what you are seeing but did not see it, and to hear what you are hearing but did not hear it.”
The one least in the kingdom was greater than John in the sense that he was more highly privileged, for the Baptist in his prison was not in such close touch with Jesus as was this least one. And was it not this very circumstance which had also contributed to the herald’s confusion with respect to whether or not Jesus was truly the Messiah?
As Luke has indicated (7:20, 21), at the very moment when the messengers sent by John submitted his question to Jesus, the latter was busily engaged in the act of healing and restoring. Is it not true that actually seeing all this happening before one’s very eyes would be more likely to ring memory’s bell, recalling to mind Isa. 35:5, 6; 61:1 ff., than would a dismal prison atmosphere, with no opportunity even to see, much less to speak to the One about whom the prisoner was thinking? Yes, in a sense the kingdom had already arrived: the afflicted ones were being delivered from their ills, the dead were being raised up, and the words of life and beauty were proceeding from the heart and lips of the Master. But in his sovereign providence, which no one has a right to question, John was not an immediate participant or even a direct witness. Also, he was not to see Calvary nor to experience Pentecost.
However, he was not being forgotten or neglected. The message Jesus sent him (7:22, 23) was sufficient to reassure him. It was thus that Jesus defended John in front of people who, as verses 24, 25, 33 clearly indicate, were beginning to find fault with the Baptist.
Hendriksen, William, and Simon J. Kistemaker. Vol. 11, New Testament Commentary : Exposition of the Gospel According to Luke. Accompanying biblical text is author's translation. New Testament Commentary, Page 396. Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1953-2001.