Hi Dicky
Can you clarify what you see as a problem, or contradiction?
Well, if John was truly baptizing for the
forgiveness of sins, then it is astonishing that the Jesus of traditional faith would go to be baptized by him. Jesus, according to developed Christology, is the
man without sin, and furthermore, considered by mainstream Christians as God Incarnate. I don't have to explain to you that if you consider Jesus was God in the flesh, then the idea of his being baptized to annul his sins is rather ludicrous* ("For all have sinned, and all have fallen short of the glory of God" - all except the incarnate Son).
The gospel writers show signs of being rather embarrassed by the implications of this, and treat the matter of Jesus' baptism in various ways, such as John the B showing abject deference to Jesus, and his saying that the situation should really be reversed. Or as in John's gospel, hardly referring to the subject at all.
All this presents no problems for me, though. I'm not a believer, though I accept that Jesus definitely did exist as an exceptional human being, and most probably was baptized by John and probably studied with him for a while. Josephus gives much more detail about J the B than Jesus, and the historicity of John is pretty certain.
Another detail about the nature of John's form of baptism seems to suggest that he himself must have been considered as some kind of divine personage, since forgiveness of sins was the prerogative of the deity.
*Floo would probably say that the 'God of the Bible' has quite a lot of sins which he needs to be held to account for. I have to agree with that judgment about some of the portraits of God in the Bible, but think her view is a sweeping generalisation.