The people ask John the Baptist in earnest what they should do in response to his message. In the verses before today’s Gospel, John is preaching a message of repentance and if I’m honest, a bit of fear thrown in. He is challenging the status quo with strong language, calling the Pharisees “vipers” and asserting that God is ready and waiting to cut down whoever isn’t producing good fruit in their lives. 

“What should we do?” The crowds, tax collectors, and even soldiers ask John. To each group, John gives a different answer. However, every answer is rooted in the same basic principle – be a community.

John tells the crowds to share their food and clothing with whomever among them is lacking. A community takes care of each person’s basic needs. It requires that everyone consider the needs of others before their own wants and needs. 

John tells the tax collectors to stop overcharging people. He is insisting on selflessness, rather than selfishness. Notice that John doesn’t tell them to stop in their profession, but to practice it with integrity and honesty. There is no need to be greedy, especially if the community is practicing John’s first assertion to take care of the basic needs of every individual.

Finally, John tells the soldiers to be content in their station and position. Do not flaunt your authority or use it to abuse others. Again, John doesn’t tell them to desert their positions, but to fulfill their tasks well and with proper purpose. In a community, each person has something to contribute and the capacity to do it well. Some will be in authority over others, but this does not give them the right to abuse the privilege of leadership.

Today, John the Baptist gives us three foundational elements of a community built upon God’s principles. We must be generous, considering the needs of others. We must be honest, contributing our part and not seeking to grasp what is not ours. We must be content, recognizing that what we have is from God and that we are stewards of His goodness and love.

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