What God Has Done in Baptism
Luke 3:15-17, 21-22; Isaiah 43:1-7
Rev. Karen A. Goltz
During Jesus’
post-baptismal prayer, the Holy Spirit descended on him in bodily form
like a dove, and a voice from heaven (presumably God the Father’s) said
to him, “You are my Son, the Beloved; with you I am well pleased.” I
don’t know about you, but I’m pretty sure nothing that dramatic happened
at my baptism. At least my parents never mentioned anything
about it, and I think they probably would have. And I know
nothing like that has ever happened at any of the baptisms I’ve presided
at as pastor. Things like that just don’t seem to happen anymore. At
Jesus’ baptism, there was no question whether it ‘took’ or not. He got
almost immediate assurance that it did. Not so for the rest of us.
We’re left to wonder, especially those of us who were baptized as
infants with no say in the matter and no memory of the event, did I
really receive the Holy Spirit? Was my baptism enough? Did it take?
Part of the problem is the fact that
many of us aren’t really sure what baptism is. Some are taught that
it’s what gets you into heaven, and you can’t get into heaven at all
without it, no matter what. I’ve heard of one woman, about ninety years
old, who’d had an older sister born terribly ill and who died at only
three months of age. The child’s grandmother had baptized her at home,
but the pastor refused to hold the funeral in the sanctuary of the
church because she had not been ‘properly’ baptized. Ninety years later
this woman still feared for the eternal soul of this sister she’d never
met, because of what she’d been taught about baptism.
Others are so comfortable in the fact
of their own (properly conducted) baptisms that they honestly believe
that that one-time event serves as a kind of ‘get out of hell free’
card, and they don’t need to go to church or pray or even think about
God, because they’ve been baptized and are automatically going to
heaven.
Other arguments about baptism abound.
It has to be done by ordained clergy verses it can be done by anyone.
It has to be done in a certain denomination verses baptism is baptism,
regardless of the flavor of Christianity that administers it. It can
only be done once verses it can be done over and over, as many times as
you want to renew your relationship with God. It only works if the
water is sprinkled on the person, or poured on the person, or if the
person is fully immersed. It doesn’t count if the person doesn’t make a
decision to commit their life to Christ, so it can only be effective
after a certain age. And on and on and on.
And all of that misses the point.
Baptism is not about what we do. It’s
about what God does.
“You are my Son, the Beloved; with you
I am well pleased.” These are the words God the Father says to Jesus
when he is praying after his baptism. God names him his Son, and
expresses his delight in him. But the thing is, we’re only in the third
chapter in Luke. Up to this point, Jesus hasn’t really done anything
for God to be delighted with. He’s been born to Mary at a really
inconvenient time, forcing her to go into labor while spending the night
in a smelly stable. He’s caused his parents to worry when he was twelve
years old by going off on his own during a trip to Jerusalem and staying
lost for three days while they looked for him. And he’s partaken with
everyone else in John’s baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of
sins. The only thing on that list that might have been particularly
pleasing to God was the baptism, and Jesus did that along with hundreds,
maybe thousands of other people. So why was he singled out for special
treatment?
Partly because even though Jesus of
Nazareth hadn’t done very much yet in his life, Jesus of Nazareth was no
ordinary man. Jesus of Nazareth was indeed, as God so named him, God’s
own Son. In our reading from Isaiah today, God tells his people, “I
have called you by name, you are mine. When you pass through the
waters, I will be with you; and through the rivers, they shall not
overwhelm you; when you walk through fire you shall not be burned, and
the flame shall not consume you.” Jesus himself had no need for a
baptism of repentance, because he had nothing to repent for. He didn’t
need his sins forgiven, because he had no sin. (Sorry, parents, but
even that incident in Jerusalem when he was twelve didn’t count as a
sin, because he was being obedient to his Father’s will. Your kids,
however, don’t have that excuse, so no, I’m not giving permission for
kids to disobey their parents!) Anyway, moving on.
As I said, Jesus of Nazareth, Son of
God, Word made flesh, didn’t need a baptism of repentance for the
forgiveness of sins, but he joined with all those who did need it, and
by doing so God himself was indeed with his people when they passed
through the waters. Jesus wasn’t baptized for his sake, but for ours,
and as was said earlier in the Thanksgiving for Baptism, we are joined
to Christ in the waters of baptism, and are therefore clothed with God’s
mercy and forgiveness.
And that’s another thing about
baptism. Not only is it about what God does rather than what we do, but
it’s a statement about who we are now, not about where we’re going when
we die. As part of the baptismal liturgy, the newly baptized is called
by the name given them by their parents, then renamed “Child of God,”
and told, “You have been sealed by the Holy Spirit and marked with the
cross of Christ forever.” Those words are not about geography after
death, but about identity during life. Last week I mentioned that
you’re looking at me and I’m looking at you and we’re all wondering,
who is this person? Well, here’s the answer. We are all children
of God. Individually created, sealed, and marked, but united together
in Christ, through the waters of baptism. Whoever else we are, we are
that first, and that part of our identity can never be taken away from
us. It is the first word in our lives, the last word in our lives, and
the most important word in our lives. Child of God, you are my beloved;
in you I am well pleased.
I’m reminded of the movie Funny Girl,
in which Fanny Brice, played by Barbara Streisand, is supposed to play a
bride-to-be singing about how her engagement has changed her perception
of herself. The song was supposed to be about how a woman was
beautiful simply because her betrothed loved her, and that love somehow
transformed her into an exquisitely beautiful creature. Fanny thought
the song a bit silly, so at the last minute she stuck a pillow up her
dress and performed the song as an extremely pregnant bride-to-be,
giving a whole new meaning to the lyrics, “I am the beautiful reflection
of my love’s affection, a walking illustration of his adoration.”
Why am I reminded of this of all things
while preaching a sermon about baptism? The song without Fanny’s unique
twist had the bride-to-be focusing entirely on how she saw herself, the
effect of her betrothed’s love being kind of feathery and nebulous,
possibly even fleeting. But Fanny’s stunt brought an element of
concreteness to the words; her betrothed loved her, had apparently, uh,
demonstrated that love, and now there were consequences. That young
woman’s life was unalterably changed, and would never be the same
again. Because she was the beautiful reflection of her love’s
affection, a walking illustration of his adoration. And all comedy and
double-entendre aside, that is what happens to us in baptism. We
are baptized once, but we are baptized into a relationship and an
identity that remain with us for the rest of our lives, calling us to
die to sin daily, and constantly renewing us. That’s why God chose
ordinary water to join his word to: it’s something we encounter every
day in one form or another, and is absolutely necessary for maintaining
and sustaining our lives. And every time we encounter it, whether we’re
brushing our teeth or making our coffee or washing our hands or even
shoveling some of this blasted snow, we can remember that we are
children of God, sealed by the Holy Spirit and marked with the cross of
Christ forever. And it’s all because God in Christ became human, took
on our lives and our sinfulness, joined with us in a baptism of
repentance for the forgiveness of sins, paid the price for those sins on
the cross, and then defeated death and rose again. That’s the kind of
love God has for you.
Let your life be a
reflection of your Lord’s affection. Live your life as a walking
illustration of his adoration. And be assured that his affection, his
adoration, and his commitment to you will last forever and ever. Amen.