June 24th is the celebration of the Solemnity of the Nativity of Saint John the Baptist.
John the Baptist was a contemporary of Christ who was known for evangelization and his baptizing of Jesus Christ.
John the Baptist was born through the intercession of God to Zachariah and Elizabeth, who was otherwise too old to bear children. According to scriptures, the Angel Gabriel visited Elizabeth and Zachariah to tell them they would have a son and that they should name him John. Zachariah was skeptical and for this he was rendered mute until the time his son was born and named John, in fulfillment of God's will.
When Elizabeth was pregnant with John, she was visited by Mary, and John leapt in her womb. This revealed to Elizabeth that the child Mary carried was to be the Son of God.
John began public ministry around 30 AD, and was known for attracting large crowds across the province of Judaea and around the Jordan River. When Jesus came to him to be baptized, John recognized him and said, "It is I who need baptism from you."
Jesus told John to baptize Him anyway, which he did, whereupon the heavens opened, and the Spirit of God was seen like a dove. The voice of God spoke, saying, "This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased."
John instructed his followers to turn to Christ, calling Him the "Lamb of God" and these people were among the first Christians.
Following his baptism of Christ, John's popularity grew so much that he alarmed King Herod. Herod ordered him arrested and imprisoned.
John spoke with Herod on several occasions and condemned his marriage to his half-brother's wife.
This condemnation would be his downfall as King Herod promised to grant a wish to his daughter. In revenge for John the Baptist's condemnation of her mother's scandalous marriage to Herod, she asked for John's head. King Herod reluctantly obliged. John the Baptist died sometime between 33 and 36 AD.
John the Baptist's feast day is June 24, and the anniversary of his death is August 29 and is sometimes celebrated with a second feast. John the Baptist is the patron saint of Jordan, Puerto Rico, French Canada and many other places.
-Catholic.org
The birth of a child always represents both an end and a beginning. For the child, it is the end of the narrow world of the mother’s womb and the beginning of all the possibilities that will lead from infancy to childhood, and then finally to adulthood. For parents, the new life of the child means new possiblilties, but it also means and end to the former status quo; old patterns and behaviors will have to be re-negotiated, even abandoned. The story of the birth of John the Baptist has this dynamism, but the richness of the tale is much more than that of a domestic story of a child being born. It is the story of the birth of not only a child, but a birth of a whole new world and the end of an old one.
With the birth of John the Baptist, the first rays of the dawn of redemption break upon the world. For in his light we see the One who will be all Light: Jesus the Lord. The coming of Christ into the world will mean that the old world of sin and death has come to an end and the new world of grace and mercy has begun. So you see, as John is born, more is born into the world than just a baby, as today’s Gospel makes clear. John will be the one who lets us know that God has come into our world in Christ and the promises of salvation to Israel are now fulfilled. May we recognize this great revelation and stop living as if the old world of sin and death is our greatest truth; it is not!
Instead, Jesus has given us new possibilities—beyond the fear, anxiety, and regret; beyond the anger, hate, and scapegoating. Let us seek in the here and now of our lives the grace and mercy of the new world that Jesus has given to us—and in imitation of St. John the Baptist, invite others to share in this promise.
-Father Steve Grunow, CEO of Word on Fire Catholic Ministries.