Who's the Minister?
Matthew 3:13-17
Kay
Cover of our bulletin states that our ministers are all
baptised members of the congregation... Who ever came up
with a crazy idea like that? Don't we pay the church staff
to be our ministers?...
Looks like it all started w/Jesus' baptism. Until Jesus
showed up thre at the Jordan River, John had been baptising
people as an act of their repentance. it was a kind of
ritual cleansing for folks who were willing to turn back
toward God. But something happened when Jesus was baptised
-- the heavens seemed to break open. The Holy Spirit was so
unmistakenly present that it looked like a dove lighting on
him -- And that voice! A voice spoke from the air, "You are
my much loved son, I am very pleased with you."
Well -- the whole scene looks more like an annointing for
leadership than like a ritual cleansing! You see, for many
years the priests and prophets of Judaism had been annointed
at the beginning of their ministry.... When a leader was
annointed, it was like a commissioning -- an ordination.
Jesus' baptism in the Jordan looks a lot like the
traditional annointing. Especially when you consider what
happens next: Jesus goes straight to the wilderness for a
time of spiritual preparation, then jumps into his ministry
full force. So think of Jesus' baptism as his commissioning
for ministry.
More important, think of YOUR baptism as a commissioning.
Not that the other aspects of your baptism don't count
(brief listing of washing of sin, initiation into church,
etc.). But too many Christians act as if baptism is designed
only for their personal benefit. Today, think of your
baptism in light of Jesus' baptism. Like Jesus, you have
been annointed for the benefit of others. Your baptism is a
commissioning to service - an ordination to ministry. In
other words, if you are a baptised Xn, you have been
drafted. Consider yourself conscripted into the most
high-powered special forces the world will ever know.
Because as a baptised Xn,God has chosen you to carry out the
mission of God's kingdom. Whether or not you choose to show
up for active duty is your business. But ready or not, God
HAS called you by name! Your baptism is your commissioning.
Baptised members of the congregation, YOU are ministers of
the Gospel!
You realize, of course, that we're commissioned to oppose
the ways of the world. The waters of our baptism force us to
go against the flow. Can't be helped -- God's kingdom just
grates against our culture. So ministers of God's kingdom
face tough challenges.
Did you ever come home from the swimming pool wearing a
half-damp swimsuit? You know - just dry enough to feel dry
against your skin, but wet enough to leave a spot on your
mothers' living room sofa? ... Well, the ministry of
baptised Xns is kind of like the wet bathing suit syndrome.
Because the waters of our baptism never quite seem to dry
up. Everywhere we go, we leave behind the marks of our
baptism. We aggravate the world with the mess we make.
No reason to be surprised ... Baptism marks us for life
as followers of the One who so upset the status quo that
both secular and religious leaders sentenced him to death!
As followers of JX, how can we NOT challenge the world?
.... MLK's interpretation of the way the demonstrators
faced the challenge of Bull Connor's fire hoses: "And we
went before the fire hoses; we had known water. If we were a
Baptist or some other denomination, we had been immersed. If
we were Methodist, and some others, we had been sprinkled,
but we knew water." According to King, because the
demonstrators knew the water of baptism, the water of Bull
Connor's fire hoses could not stop them. They fought water
w/ water. What else could they do? They were commissioned
ministers, serving in God's kingdom to transform the world.
They HAD to go against the flow.
But don't we all? Hasn't God also chosen US to fight
water with water? How can we help but let our baptism get us
in trouble?
Truth is, we're scared. Too afraid to let our baptism
leak out into the world.... Besides, we aren't MLKs here,
we're just ordinary people.
Well, God has a word for ordinary people like us. It's an
ancient promise... Long before Jesus, the people of
Israel..: strangers in a strange land. Babylonian Empire had
sent them to a foreign world where they struggled to keep
God's laws in the midst of a hostile culture. To these
people, God spoke the age-old promise: "When you pass
through the waters, I will be with you .. the rivers shall
not overwhelm you. Fear not, for I am with you."
.... We have been drafted to go against the flow, yes --
but drafted by the One who loves us without limit: "You are
precious in my eyes, and honored, and I love you," says the
Lord to Israel, to us. "You are my beloved child," says God
to Jesus, to you.
You dont' have to be an MLK or a Mother Theresa. You dont'
have to be a clergy personor a Sunday School teacher, or
evena member of the Ad. Bd. -- You just have to be yourself:
the minister of the Gospel that God has annointed you to be.
Fear not as you go against the flow --for you are held
afloat by the limitless love of God.