Sunday, January 10, 2016

Jesus baptizes us – Luke 3:15-16, 21-22, Isa 40:1-11, Titus 2,3 extracts

Baptism of the Lord, Yr C; Notre Dame (Fisher Hall)

Jesus’ baptism is clearly important.  In Luke, it’s our introduction to the adult Jesus, all four of our gospels narrate it, which means it beats out Jesus’ birth by a factor of 2:1 there), it’s important enough to me that I picked an image of it from my first parish to put on the holy card we gave out at my ordination.  Yes, Jesus’ baptism is clearly important.  But, Jesus getting baptized isn’t what struck me as the most important thing in this gospel.  Studying and praying with it over this week, one sentence stuck with me: “He will baptize you.”




And he has.  The promise has been fulfilled.  Brothers and sisters, Christ has baptized us.  That’s what makes us sisters and brothers!  It was something whose awesomeness I think I only realized after I’d first baptized.  Like Jesus who encountered the gift of the Spirit as he was praying after his baptism, it was when I was praying in my room after the baptism that an awe came over me, awe over the impossibility of neatly dividing up agency: I had genuinely poured real, physical water over a flesh and blood human being, I had said the words, said “I baptize you,” and God had done something.  God had baptized Alyssa.  I hadn’t cleansed her from original sin, adopted her as my daughter, brought her into the fold of my disciples or started her on the pilgrimage of ongoing growth in holiness.  God had done that.  But those were my hands, and my lips, words my breath made mine, though I can never claim them as any other than gift, gift from Christ, who baptizes us.

And it’s not just with water, though that would be enough.  Water, live-giving and cleansing, richly evocative, calling out to us of healing from sin, leveling the path to virtue that sin makes mountainously arduous.  Baptism with water would be beautiful enough.  But he goes further.  Christ baptizes us with the Spirit.  We immersed in God’s own life.  God’s life-giving creative breath, that inspired prophets, that hovered over the waters of creation, covers us, clings to us, inhabits us more deeply than we dare to probe ourselves.  Yes, the Spirit of God is upon us, between us, among us, and the Spirit’s doing wonderful things.


And in that Spirit, we hear God’s voice.  And God says to us something new: “You are my beloved son, my beloved daughter.  In you, I am well pleased.”  And that’s something new, that’s something that’s wrought in us by baptism, by the first embrace of God that tenderly excites us to holiness enough that we walk, we keep walking until we rest forever in His lasting embrace.  And that’s why, in a very real sense, each of our baptisms were more important even than Jesus’.  Because in our baptisms, something new happened.  We who were estranged were brought near, we who were outside the fold were made sons and daughter, claimed, embraced.  Jesus was already God’s Son, Jesus was already King, already prophet.  But it’s in baptism that, as the letter to Titus puts it makes us heirs, and begins a process of training in us, training for virtue, training so that we may live heavenly lives forever with God and with each other.  Because that’s what all this is directed to: being brought into God’s friendship, God’s fathership in a real way now, that we might be strengthened to walk that pilgrimage to virtue, that we might live forever heavenly.

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