Although Matthew did not show the same relationship of Jesus and John the Baptist as cousins, as it was in Luke, chapter 1:36, he still has them as familiar to each other. They were at a minimum, friends. In this portrayal, Jesus came to John, not the other way around. John was already an established preacher, baptizing in the Jordan River. Did they have the same message or was it different? In one sense, both John and Jesus wanted people to repent, since the kingdom of heaven was near. However, there are no indications in the biblical texts that Jesus was baptizing people the way that John was doing it. Thus, they might have been semi-co-workers without any formal relationship established, although John the Baptist would appear again in this gospel story of Matthew. Clearly, John the Baptist baptizing Jesus at the Jordan River stands as the beginning of the public life of Jesus, both here and in the other three canonical gospel accounts of Mark, Luke, and John. Jesus became someone special as “the anointed one,” “Χριστος,” “the Christ,” from this moment on. Was there any particular self-realization on the part of Jesus here? How did the disciples of these two men work with each other? What was the reaction of Jesus to the post-baptismal event, when God, the Father, sent his Spirit, the dove, to empower Jesus, before he could begin his public ministry? God clearly announced that Jesus was his beloved son. With his prophetic divine vocation revealed, Jesus was ready to begin his public ministry of healing and exorcising. Jesus had come to proclaim his ethical judgment of righteousness during this messianic time when the fullness of the Holy Spirit would come to all the followers of Jesus.