Baptism of our Lord (C)
January 12, 2025
Luke 3:15-17, 21-22
INTRODUCTION
Today is the festival of the Baptism of our Lord. Each year on this first Sunday after Epiphany (January 6), we hear the story of how Jesus was baptized. Each of the Gospels has a slightly different take on how that happened – so I’ll mention a couple things that are unique to Luke’s telling. One is that the voice from heaven speaks directly to Jesus – “you are my son” – where in the others that heavenly voice speaks to those gathered – “this is my son.” In Matthew, Mark and Luke, the Holy Spirit comes upon Jesus “like a dove,” but where the other Gospels say this happens as Jesus comes out of the water, in Luke it doesn’t happen until later, when he is praying. Speaking of prayer, no other Gospels tell us that Jesus prays after; in fact, the others send Jesus immediately into the wilderness after his baptism to be tempted, where Luke takes his time with that, offering us Jesus’ genealogy before Jesus is led by the Spirit out into the wilderness.
However it all came about, hearing about Jesus’ baptism invites us to reflect upon our own, and our other readings will help us to do that. Acts shows again the importance of prayer after baptism, and how the Holy Spirit comes to us in prayer. The Psalm describes the power of God and of how God works through water. Isaiah 43 is a beautiful text written for the Israelites who have grievously sinned against God, and yet still, God loves them and claims them and promises to restore and redeem them. Just like God does for us in baptism! As you listen today, hear and give thanks for all these marvelous promises of God that we receive in our baptism. Let’s listen.
[READ]
Grace to you and peace from the Light of the World, our Savior Jesus Christ. Amen.
“What happens in baptism?”
This is the question I usually ask parents preparing to have their child baptized. Before we go through with this major event – and I do understand baptism as a major, life-changing event – I always take the opportunity to talk about it with parents, and make sure they understand what, exactly, they and their child are getting themselves into. The answers I get vary, usually including something about washing away of sins, or becoming a child of God – both true. But I have to wonder… does any of that mean anything to them once they walk out the door of the church?
So with that in mind, what I really want to ask you today is: why does baptism matter to us, and to you? My guess is that day-to-day, you probably don’t think much about your baptism, right? So, why does it matter… or does it? What role does being baptized play in your daily life?
We can find some clues to how to answer this question by looking at today’s Gospel lesson. The first thing to notice is who the actor is here. In Luke’s version of Jesus’ baptism, who baptizes him? … [assume people will say John the Baptist…] Ah, but Luke never says John the Baptist did it. Luke doesn’t mention any human actor here, perhaps to highlight that in fact, humans are never the actor in baptism. Rather, it is God who is the actor. It is the Holy Spirit, who “descended upon him in bodily form like a dove.” The very same Spirit that baptizes us! And then, who does the talking? … Presumably, the Father! A voice came from heaven, “You are my Son, the beloved. With you I am well pleased.”
And so it is, in our own baptism. God does the work. Not the pastor. Not the water. God does the work. This is the response to why we in the Lutheran church typically, though not always, baptize babies. While Christians who are of the Baptist, fundamentalist, or evangelical persuasion insist upon an adult baptism, a so-called “believer’s baptism,” in which the one being baptized has the opportunity to state his or her own faith, we baptize these helpless, vulnerable beings who have not done much of anything for or against God. They are mostly passive participants in the reception of God’s grace in the sacrament.
But isn’t that a wonderful image for us for how we come before God? Passive as they are in the face of God’s grace, infants remind us of how we are to receive God’s love: with humble gratitude, knowing that we don’t do anything to deserve this, but God gives it to us anyway. God acts on us and in us. God forgives us. God claims us as sons and daughters. And there’s nothing we can do to mess up that relationship that God establishes with us. Nothing!
The second thing we can learn from our text today about what happens in baptism is from that voice that comes from heaven. “You are my Son, the Beloved. With you I am well pleased.” In baptism, you see, we are given an identity: we become God’s child. Identity is something we all desire to find and know about ourselves, but it can be difficult. We spend a lot of energy masking, trying to be what other people need or expect us to be, hiding things that we’re ashamed of. Our circumstances change, and we are asked to be someone or something different. We lose track of the essence of who we are, of our identity. But in the midst of all of that, there is one part of our identity that never changes: we are God’s beloved children, through good and bad, and we always will be.
There are many things to know about baptism, but these points are good ones to hold close: first, that God has given us this amazing gift of love, forgiveness, belonging, identity, and grace, all of this completely, as Luther says, “out of fatherly and divine goodness, though we do not deserve it.” And second, there is nothing we can do to mess it up. I find this gift to be both humbling and liberating. I am amazed that God would bestow such goodness on insignificant me, bestowing it not because I am something extraordinary, but because God is. And to think, that God will never take this gift away from me – not when I feel ashamed, or when I do something that hurts or upsets someone else, or when I doubt my abilities, or when I make a huge mistake, or when I don’t live up to someone’s expectations… All of these things, which have happened and will continue to happen in my life because I, like all of you, am human – they all make me want to doubt that God made the right call in bestowing on me all the wondrous gifts of baptism. If I were God, I might take it back. “Never mind, Johanna, you weren’t worthy of these gifts after all.” But God doesn’t. God does not renege on this offer. God offers anyway.
And that is liberating. What I mean is that suddenly, I start to believe that if God views me as worthy to receive God’s gifts… maybe I shouldn’t doubt myself. And if I don’t doubt myself, then just think what I could do in and for this world! And this is where we start to answer my earlier question to you: what does baptism have to do with your daily life, and why does it matter? It matters because it is a profound statement of God’s unconditional love for you. It matters because it promises us every day that we are forgiven, and in showing us that, it also urges us to “forgive those who trespass against us.” And with forgiveness comes healing, and with healing comes transformation. It matters because it assures us that even when we fall short, we still carry with us, everywhere we go, the gift of the Holy Spirit – the spirit of wisdom and understanding, the spirit of counsel and might, the spirit of knowledge and the fear of Lord.
What does that Spirit, the Spirit we receive in our baptism, move you to do in this world? What does the assurance of God’s love, grace, and belonging, give you courage to pursue? For me, that promise emboldens and enables me to love people that I find difficult to love. That includes people I encounter in my daily life, and family members who are more difficult to get along with than others, and even people whom I don’t know except that I know they look and believe and act differently from me. Loving these different people doesn’t look the same for each person, so the Spirit pushes me to figure out how to love all these different people, what it looks like with each. The Spirit urges me not to sit still and be quiet in the face of injustice, but rather to use what gifts I have to make sure all of God’s children have what they need – as the late President Jimmy Carter, whom we mourned and celebrated this week said of his own faith, “My faith demands that I do whatever I can, wherever I can, whenever I can, for as long as I can with whatever I have to try to make a difference.”
In short, the Spirit encourages me to do things I’m scared of, to get out of my comfort zone, to go out on a limb for the sake of the gospel, because I can trust that if and when I fail in my efforts to live a life guided by Christ, God will still not renege on the gifts of my baptism. And to me, all of that matters quite a lot.
How about you? Why does baptism matter to you? What does it have to do with your daily life? I gave you my answer. I’d love to hear yours.
Let us pray… Spirit of God, in our baptism, you have promised us forgiveness, belonging, identity, and unconditional love, and we can trust that you will not renege on these gifts. As we celebrate the baptism of our Lord, help us to remember our own baptism, and help us also to discern what you would have us do with this abundant gift to love and serve your world. In the name of the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit. Amen.
Photo attribution:
Zelenka, Dave. Baptism of Christ, from Art in the Christian Tradition, a project of the Vanderbilt Divinity Library, Nashville, TN. https://diglib.library.vanderbilt.edu/act-imagelink.pl?RC=56385 [retrieved January 13, 2025]. Original source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Baptism-of-Christ.jpg. |