Understanding Baptism
A sermon based on Mark 1:4-11
Rev. Karen A. Goltz
About a hundred years ago, a baby born in
England, Lucille by name, was taken by her maternal grandmother to the
local Wesleyan chapel to be baptized. Lucy’s father, a sturdy Anglican,
was skeptical about the whole proceeding since the Church of England
does not regard Methodist clergy as being in the apostolic succession.
So he took Lucy to the Anglican church where she was baptized again. Now
Lucy’s mother was a convert to the Salvation Army and didn’t think much
of either the Wesleyans or the Anglicans. So she took Lucy to the local
citadel for presentation under the banner of blood and fire—the
Salvationist counterpart to baptism.
In time the family emigrated to the Midwestern United States. The
community they moved into had neither an Episcopal Church nor an Army
Citadel; so the family attended the Methodist Church. As a teenager,
Lucy joined a class of those preparing to take the vows of church
membership. Now it happened that the pastor was one of those mavericks
who looks upon the practices of his own denomination with disapproval,
and regards the baptism of infants as a misguided tradition. He
therefore decreed that all in the class had to be “truly baptized” at
the font on the day of their vows. Lucy’s mother discovered what was
afoot and said, “Absolutely not. Three times is enough for anyone.” But
Lucy was a good psychologist and knew that once her mother was seated in
church, she would not make a scene. When the rest of the group went to
the font, so did Lucy.
Now it came to pass that some years later Lucy fell in love with, and
married, a Southern Baptist—but not without extracting from him a pledge
that she need not be baptized yet again. He agreed that she was quite
sufficiently initiated into the church, and all was well—until they
moved to a community where they attended a Baptist Church that was in
need of a pianist. Lucy loved to play, and seemed to be a providential
gift to the congregation. But, ruled the deacons solemnly and
steadfastly, unimmersed hands may not play the Lord’s songs for us. And
so, for the fifth time, Lucy was initiated into Christ’s church. [From
Baptism: Christ’s Act in the Church by Laurence Hull Stokey; Abingdon
Press, 1982]
I don’t know if Lucy deserves a place in the Guinness Book of World
Records or not, but her story is a helpful one when dealing with some of
the confusion that surrounds the practice of baptism. Who can properly
baptize? Is one denomination’s baptism more authentic than another? Is
the water really necessary, or should it be a more spiritual experience?
Does a person have to be a certain age and consent to it? Does the
manner or amount of water matter? Can or should a person be re-baptized?
And what exactly does baptism do, anyway?
Let’s start with that last question and go from there. What does baptism
do? In today’s gospel, John’s baptism was a baptism of repentance, and
people were coming to confess and be washed clean of their sins. I think
a lot of the misunderstandings we have today stem from John’s baptism.
It would suggest that a person must be able to repent, i.e. recognize
their sins and want to turn away from them. That would mean that infants
shouldn’t be baptized because they’re not capable of making their
confession. It would also suggest that baptism washes away a person’s
sinfulness, and that once you’re baptized you’re forever clean from the
stain of sin, and its consequences.
But we don’t practice John’s baptism. John himself said that he baptized
with water, but the one more powerful than him would come after him and
baptize with the Holy Spirit. And it’s that baptism that we practice
today.
Yes, we use water, too. But the water is secondary. The water’s not what
does all the action in baptism. Neither is the pastor. Nor is the person
being baptized. And that’s the biggest difference between John’s baptism
and the one we practice. John’s baptism was something done by John and
the baptizee, with the water. Our Christian baptism is something God
does, witnessed by us and signified by the water.
Let me say that again. Baptism is not something we do; it’s something
God does. It’s something God has done, is doing, and will continue to
do. Baptism is sort of the culmination of God’s entire saving act in
Jesus Christ. It’s no wonder people get confused by this, because it’s a
visible proclamation of the mystery of God.
Let’s go back to Lucy and see what happened there. When she was still an
infant, her maternal grandmother brought her to the Wesleyan—or
Methodist—Church to be baptized. It would be safe to assume that at that
baptism, her grandmother and maybe some representatives from the
congregation promised to teach her the word of God and how to pray, to
pray with and for her, and to nurture her in the faith, and the
congregation promised to support all involved in those endeavors. Then
everyone present professed their faith in Christ Jesus, rejected sin,
and confessed the faith of the church. After that she was probably held
over a font similar to the one we have here, and the pastor sprinkled or
poured a little water on her head three times saying, Lucille, I baptize
you in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.
Finally she was probably told, “Lucille, child of God, you have been
sealed by the Holy Spirit and marked with the cross of Christ forever,”
at which point she was welcomed into the body of Christ and the mission
we share. There may have been some slight variations, but the core
elements of liturgical baptism haven’t changed much in two thousand
years, so it’s safe to assume that what happened to Lucy a hundred years
ago would have been pretty familiar to us.
Anyway, in that Methodist church, Lucy was initiated into the body of
Christ. It began her journey of Christian discipleship. It did not
signal God’s ability to start working in Lucy’s life; God was working in
her life long before that moment. See, God’s not floating above the
heads of the unbaptized saying, “Come on, come on, I want to help you
but I can’t because you haven’t had the right water dripped on you in
the right building by the right person. Oh, if only you would do that so
I wouldn’t be so restricted!” We don’t have the power to restrain God.
We can turn from his love; but we can’t stop him from loving us. He
loves us before he creates us, and that love inspires his creation of
us. He loves us before we’re baptized, and that love inspires his
promise of grace and love throughout our entire existence, in this world
and in the world to come. We are baptized in his Spirit and thus
incorporated into the whole body of Christ. It can only happen once. It
only needs to happen once.
When Lucy’s father took her to be baptized in the Anglican church, he
was stating that he didn’t believe the Wesleyans were authorized to
baptize her. What he failed to realize was that the Wesleyans weren’t
the ones responsible for his daughter’s initiation into God’s family.
God was. And God had the proper authority.
When Lucy’s mother took her to the Salvation Army Citadel for what is
essentially a spiritual baptism, what she failed to realize was that
Lucy had already received the Spirit. Lucy’s mother was focusing on the
water, believing it to be usurping the role of the Holy Spirit, when in
fact the water is merely a visible sign of the Spirit, a common element
that, every time we encounter it, we can remember that we have received
God’s Spirit in our baptisms.
When Lucy’s Midwestern Methodist pastor refused to recognize her
baptisms as an infant, he failed to realize that baptism is an
initiation, not an affirmation. Unless you were adopted at an older age,
none of us remembers entering into our family of origin. For most of us,
it happened the moment we were born, if not earlier. The fact that we
don’t remember it doesn’t invalidate that moment. We became members at
an event we don’t remember, and have lived into that identity ever
since. Baptism is the same. At our baptisms, whether as infants or
older, we were brought into God’s family, and we have lived into that
identity ever since.
When the Southern Baptist deacons called Lucy’s piano-playing hands “unimmersed,”
they failed to realize, like so many before them, that the water is not
the primary actor in the baptism. It’s not like God is so limited in his
power that only the parts of the skin that are touched by water are
initiated; God doesn’t need to dunk the whole person. It works just fine
if you do, but just a few drops of water will work just as well. A
rather extreme case is that of a classmate of mine from seminary named
Nicole. She was baptized as an infant, so her parents (and everyone else
who was there) have told her the story. She was the only one being
baptized that day, and the baptism took place in the middle of the
service. But when they got to the font, they realized it was empty. I
guess the pastor didn’t want to wait or slow down the service, so he
spit on Nicole’s forehead three times, baptizing her in his own saliva
in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.
Saliva is water—more or less—and I have no doubt that Nicole’s baptism
is just as valid as someone baptized with a more traditional form of
water, because God’s power or ability to act in our lives is not limited
by how we perform certain rituals.
Lucy wasn’t harmed by being baptized five times, except for what it may
have done to her understanding of the event. Like being born, baptism is
a one-time thing that serves as the foundation for everything that comes
after it. You are born of woman, and every day of your life is a result
of that birth. You are born of water and the Spirit, and every day of
your life after that is in communion with the whole body of Christ.
You’ll have some good days, and you’ll have some bad days. You’ll have
days when you’re so despondent that you can’t feel God’s presence, and
you’ll doubt he was ever there. But the objective presence of water will
remind you that he was, and still is. You’ll have days that you’re on
such a spiritual high that you want to be baptized again, just to show
your devotion. But there are other ways to show your devotion to God,
and repeating an initiation rite only serves to show doubt that God
really meant what he promised the first time around. Baptism is a
covenant, and while we might be squirrelly about keeping up our end, God
is steadfast in his Word and in his love. God means what he says, and
what he said, to Jesus and to us, was, “You are my Son, the Beloved;
with you I am well pleased.”
What more do we need to know? Amen.