St. John the Baptist: Baptism of Christ
Hours of Henry VIII
Illuminated by Jean Poyer
Gift of the Heineman Foundation, 1977
St. John the Baptist: Baptism of Christ
Border: John the Baptist Preaching (fol. 173)
Around A.D. 27, St. John the Baptist moved to the desert of Judea near the river Jordan, where he preached penance, the coming kingdom of God, and baptism for the remission of sins; he lived on locusts and wild honey and wore a camel's hair garment.
While St. John is normally depicted wearing a leather girdle and a garment made from camel's hair, Poyer clothed him in a camel skin instead, with the camel's head and even a paw bumping about the saint's knees. John's long hair and scruffy beard identify him as a hermit.
St. John baptized Jesus in the river, recognizing him as the Redeemer when the Holy Spirit descended above him in the form of a dove. In the miniature, an angel waits on the opposite bank with Christ's robe.
In the margin, John preaches to the multitude in a forest, his pulpit formed by a branch hori- zontally attached to two tree trunks. (Feast day: June 24)
St. John the Baptist
The Archangel Gabriel told John's elderly parents, Zacharias, a Jewish priest, and Elizabeth, the Virgin Mary's cousin, that they would have a son named John. After Gabriel informed Mary that she, too, would have a son, the two women visited each other (the Visitation); on that occasion John leaped in his mother's womb at the presence of the yet unborn Jesus. Although the Golden Legend says they were childhood playmates, John and Jesus did not meet again until manhood.
St. John's outspoken preaching led to his martyrdom. He publicly censured Governor Herod Antipas for his incestuous marriage with his brother's wife and was subsequently imprisoned in the fortress of Machaerus. The dancer Salome, who had attracted Herod's notice through her dancing at his birthday feast, demanded and received the Baptist's head on a platter.