January 13, 2019
Luke
3.15-17, 21-22
+ I know it’s not something we want to hear about today, on this
bitterly, bitterly cold morning. In fact, just thinking about it makes us even
colder. But there’s no getting around it.
If there’s a theme for this Sunday it’s…
Water.
And it’s a very good thing to be considering. It is probably the
natural element we most take for granted. And yet it is one of our most vital.
We depend upon water.
It nourishes us.
It cleans us.
It delights us.
In our Western society, we take for granted the fact that our
water is clean. In other parts of the
world, water isn’t so clean. In other parts of the world, water sometimes is a
source of illness. In some parts of the world they have little idea of the
luxury of something like cold water—or even ice for that matter.
As we’ve known here in this part of the country over the years,
water can also be a destructive force when it comes to the matter of floods. Water,
as vital as it is, can also destroy. It can destroy property, hopes, dreams and
even lives.
For us, as Christians, water truly is the source of our spiritual
lives. Throughout Scripture, we find
ourselves nourished by and reminded of the importance of water. The authors of our scriptures, coming as they
did from such an arid place as the Middle East, no doubt appreciated water in
ways we don’t. And that appreciation certainly affected their spirituality.
Certainly, we find the image of water returning again and again in
scripture. Each time Scripture references water, it does so as a source of
life, as a source of renewal, as a source of God’s saving grace—even in the
instance of Noah’s flood. Water is
important to us as humans. And it is important to us as Christians.
In today’s Gospel reading, we find probably the most profound
expression of how important water is to us as Christians. We find that first
great example being set. As Jesus comes out of those waters, as the Spirit,
like a dove, descends upon him, he hears the words from God:
“You are my
Son, my Beloved; with you I am well pleased.”
Here the standard is set. Here the breakthrough has happened. From
now on, this is essentially what has been spoken to each of us at our own baptisms:
“You are my
child, my Beloved; with you I am well pleased.”
For most of us, we have no doubt taken for granted our baptisms,
much as we have taken for granted water itself. We have viewed baptism as no
more than a christening service for babies—a kind of dedication ceremony. Baptism is, obviously, much, much more than
that.
As you hear me say again and again, baptism is THE defining moment
in our lives as Christians. Whether we
remember the event or not, it was the moment when our lives changed. It was the
moment we became new. It was, truly, our second birth.
When some Christians ask you, “Have you been born again?” you can
tell them in no uncertain terms: “Oh, yes I have actually!” You can, “I was
reborn in the waters of life and marked as Christ’s own forever on the day of
my baptism.”
But even that doesn’t truly convey what baptism is for us. What
happened to Jesus in those waters, happened to us as well. In the waters of our
baptism, we were reborn as children of our loving and caring God. We became what was Jesus is. We became
children of God. We can, from the very
moment of our baptism, trace our relation with God our Parent—the God who
recognizes us and loves us and accepts us and embraces us. I have preached this
so much over the years about this, but because of this relationship formed in
our baptism, our own baptisms are important to us.
Yesterday, we baptized Briar and Harlen Stears, grandchildren of
Kris and Kip Vossler. It was a beautiful baptism. It was a morning of happiness of and joy. But
it was also an immensely important day in the life of those children.
So, why the importance of this one single event? Well, the bond that is made at baptism is one
that truly can never be broken. That relationship that was formed with God in
those waters is eternal. In baptism, we
truly do become God’s child.
For ever.
We becomes God’s own Beloved. It is a bond that can never be broken. We can
try to break it as we please. We can struggle under that bond. We can squirm
and resist it. We can try to escape it. But the simple fact is this: we can’t. For
ever is for ever.
Now, we might not want to have this bond anymore. Some of those babies we have baptized in the
font in the narthex who grow up will make clear later on that they don’t want
this bond anymore.
But, no matter how much we may turn our backs on God, God never
turns away from us. No matter how much we try to turn away from God, to deny God,
to pick God apart and make God something other than who God is, God never turns
away from us. God never denies us.
Why?
Because that bond, formed in those waters, is eternal and binding.
And God will never turn away one of God’s children.
What Baptism shows us, more than anything else, is that we always
belong to God. It is shows us that God
will never deny us or turn away from us. It shows us that, no matter what we
might do, we will always belong to God.
Always. For ever.
In this way, Baptism is truly the great equalizer. In those waters, we are all bathed—no matter
who we are and what we are. We all emerge from those waters on the same
ground—as equals. A bishop or a king or
a president is no greater than you or me in those waters. And, as equals, we are not expected to just
sit around, hugging ourselves and basking in the glow of the confidence that we are God’s own child. As equals, made equal in the waters of
baptism, we are then compelled to go out into the world and treat each other as
equals. We are called to go out into the world and make a difference in it. And
we are called to act like Children of a loving God. That means we have to fight
ourselves sometimes. We have to fight to not become negative people.
We, as loved children of a loving God, must work hard to not be
manipulative, controlling, gossipy, backbiting, unloving people. We must not be
what our critics accuse of us being. We must love and respect each other
equally.
Our baptism doesn’t set us apart as special people. It forces us
out into the world to be a part of the world and, by doing so, to transform the
world.
So, in those waters of baptism, something truly incredible
happened for us. We went into those waters one person, and emerged from those waters
as someone else completely.
It was an incredible moment in our lives, just as it was in the
life of Jesus, who led the way and showed us that Baptism was an incredible
outpouring of God’s love and light into our lives.
So, with this knowledge of how important it is, let us take the
time to meditate and think about your own baptism and the implications it has
in your life. And when we do, let us remember
and celebrate the bond that was formed with our loving God in those waters on
that marvelous day we were baptized.
In a few moments, I will come through the nave and will sprinkle
you with water. As that water touches, remember how God loves you and cherishes
you. And when you enter this church, and when you leave it, pay attention to
the baptismal font in the narthex and the blessed water in it. Touch that water,
bless yourselves with it, and when you do, remember it as a reminder of that
wonderful event in your life which marked you forever as God’s very own. Those words spoken to Jesus on the day of his
baptism are being spoked to us again and again.
Let us listen to those words.
Let us believe those words.
And let us celebrate those words that God speaks to each of us—
“You are my
Beloved; with you I am well pleased.”
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