By Rachael Mumo
So..I’m studying Mathew and everytime I go forward I find myself coming back to chapter 4..
Matthew 4:12–14
“When Jesus heard that John had been put in prison, He withdrew to Galilee… to fulfill what was spoken by the prophet Isaiah.”
Here, Jesus hears that John the Baptist the prophet who prepared His way has been arrested. Yet instead of going to rescue him, Jesus withdraws and continues His ministry.
John remains in prison.
And later, John dies there.
This forced me to ask this very uncomfortable question….Why didn’t Jesus go and get him out?
Found few reasons why..
- Obedience does not always lead to rescue
We subconsciously believe that if someone is faithful, God must intervene to preserve them. But Scripture repeatedly challenges this assumption.
John was not in prison because of disobedience.
He was in prison because he told the truth.
There are prisons that come from rebellion, and there are prisons that come from righteousness. John’s prison was the second kind.
Jesus did not rush to undo what obedience produced. Because sometimes obedience does not lead to deliverance it leads to completion.
- John’s assignment was finished, not abandoned
John’s calling was never to walk long with Jesus. It was to introduce Him and then step aside.
John himself said,
“He must increase, but I must decrease.”
John did not decrease because he lost favor.
He decreased because his assignment was fulfilled.
God does not always prolong a season just because it is good. When a calling is complete, heaven does not negotiate extensions.
- Jesus was submitted to the Father’s will, not human attachment..
Jesus loved John. This was not coldness or neglect.
But Jesus never moved out of emotional loyalty. He only moved in obedience to the Father.
If Jesus had broken John out of prison:
•His ministry would have been politicized too early
•The prophetic timeline would have been disrupted
•The cost of truth would have been softened
Not every prison is meant to be opened. Some prisons become altars where obedience is sealed.
- Even John struggled with this reality, and I asked myself why ..
So from prison, John sends messengers asking Jesus,
“Are You the One, or should we expect another?”
This is not unbelief.
This is the cry of a faithful servant trying to understand suffering. A servant who was obedience but suffering. This can really challenge our faith.
But Jesus does not rebuke John. Instead, He reassures him and then publicly honors him:
“Among those born of women there has not risen one greater than John the Baptist.”
John dies in prison, but his honor lives forever.
- God’s definition of victory is different from ours
We call rescue victory.
God sometimes calls faithfulness unto death victory.
John did not miss God.
Jesus did not fail John.
The Father’s plan was not broken.
John’s blood prepared the ground for the cross. His silence in prison echoed the silence Jesus would later carry before Pilate.
John went before Jesus in birth, in ministry, and even in death.
So what does this teach us today?
🥹There are moments when Jesus will not intervene in the way we expect not because He doesn’t care, but because purpose is being completed.
Some prayers are not unanswered.
They are answered with strength to finish instead of escape.
This teaching confronts our belief that God’s love is proven by preservation. Sometimes His love is proven by trusting us to finish our race.
If you are in a season where you did everything right, yet the prison door did not open, this passage reminds you..
You are not forgotten.
You are not abandoned.
You may be standing at the edge of completion.
God does not always deliver us out of the fire.
Sometimes He is glorified by walking us through it.
Be encouraged.