Showing posts with label Baptism of our Lord. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Baptism of our Lord. Show all posts

Sunday, January 12, 2020

Baptism Calls us to Ministry


Sermon for the First Sunday after EpiphanySt. Paul’s Sacramento The Baptism of our Lord

January 12, 2020


Jesus came from Galilee to John at the Jordan, to be baptized by him. John would have prevented him, saying, “I need to be baptized by you, and do you come to me?” But Jesus answered him, “Let it be so now; for it is proper for us in this way to fulfill all righteousness.” Then he consented. And when Jesus had been baptized, just as he came up from the water, suddenly the heavens were opened to him and he saw the Spirit of God descending like a dove and alighting on him. And a voice from heaven said, “This is my Son, the Beloved, with whom I am well pleased.”

Today we are celebrating the baptism of Jesus by John the Baptist.  We have jumped forward from Jesus as a baby and a small child to Jesus as an adult – scholars say he was likely in his late 20’s.  In our Gospel narrative, during the Christmas season, Jesus birth was announced to the Shepherds, the wise men and women from “the east”, likely Persia, have presented kingly gifts. After that Joseph, Mary and Jesus flee from the wrath of King Herod to Egypt where they live in exile until the death of King Herod.  And now we are at the River Jordon.  This is a turning point in our Gospel.  Jesus will leave the River Jordon and start his earthly ministry.  A ministry that will ultimately get the attention of the ruling elite.  A ministry that is about brining God’s Love to the Loveless.  But I don’t want to get ahead of myself.  We have several months to recall Jesus work in the world before we get to Lent and Easter.

John is a little surprised that Jesus has come to him.  He recognizes that Jesus is the one foretold by the prophets that has come to transform our world into God’s world.  Jesus as God incarnate certainly does not need to be baptized.  John has been preaching about forgiveness of sins and the coming of the one who is greater than he is.  Jesus comes to recognize John and to have John do what he was called to do.  To Baptize.  Jesus said it was “proper for us in this way to fulfill all righteousness.”  Jesus is letting the story of the Prophets, the story of John’s calling to play out.  Jesus, who we say was without sin, is baptized by John, a baptism of repentance.  

This baptism is different than all the others that John has performed at the River Jordon.  As Jesus comes out of the River a strange thing happens.  The heavens open and the Spirit of God – looking like a dove – descends on Jesus.  And then the voice of heavens confirms that Jesus is different.  That Jesus is the one foretold.  “This is my Son, the Beloved, with whom I am well pleased.”  God the father is well pleased with Jesus, who up to this point has not done much – well at least that was recorded in the Gospel. God is pleased.  Jesus has lived with the people and learned what humanity was like.  The good and the bad.  Jesus has seen and experienced it and God is pleased.  Jesus will go from here to do things that are miraculous.  It is important, however, to notice that it did not take a miracle for God to be please.  God is pleased because Jesus showed up.  God is pleased because Jesus is following what the prophets said. 

This is not all for Jesus sake.  He did not need baptism to forgive sins. He did not need the dove.  He did not the voice from heaven.  These things where all done for us.  To show us that Jesus is different.  To show us that God was indeed speaking through the prophets. 

Today is also a day that we can, and should, remember our own baptisms.  Because through our baptisms we have been called to continue the work that Jesus started.  Through our baptisms we are called to ministry.  Through our baptisms we are called into forgiveness so that we can be God’s change agents in our world.

David Lose, a preacher I follow said, “Baptism is about forgiveness. But forgiveness is not a mechanism but rather is a gift. We aren’t forgiven in Baptism in order that God can call us God’s children, but rather we are forgiven because we already are God’s children. So, yes, baptism is about forgiveness. But it’s also about so much more! It’s about love, identify, affirmation, commitment, promise, and still more. In fact, I’d argue that Baptism is first about all these other things and then, as by-product and gift, about forgiveness. That is, in Baptism God proclaims God’s great love for us; calls, names, and claims us as God’s beloved children; gives us the gift of the Holy Spirit;…and then, because of God’s love for us, God also promises to forgive, renew, and restore us at all times.

Which is why I think that what ought to surprise us […] is not that Jesus is baptized like we are, but rather that we get to be baptized – and therefore named as beloved child – just like Jesus is.[1]

We are children of God.  Whether you saw it or not that spirit of God came upon you at your baptism.  Whether you heard it or not the heavens opened up and God said that God was well pleased.  In our baptisms we are called out to continue Jesus ministry.

In our baptism we are called to see the world through the eyes of justice and love.  Through our baptisms we are called to be prophets that call out the iniquities in our world – iniquities that cause people to be seen as less than human.  We are called to welcome all of God’s beloved children into our world – and to change the world into one that brings God’s dream of love into our world. 

I know that this all sounds a bit too simplistic.  Just look at the world around us.  We have ever increasing homelessness in our communities.  We have greater income disparity in this nation than we have ever had.  We have increased international tensions that this past week looked like they could have led to all out war.  What can we do to change that. 

I sometimes despair about being an agent of God.  An agent that is supposed to change the world and usher is a world of peace and love.  It is all too much.  The endless hate that we read about in the news and in social media.  The increased ethnic tension in our world.  Climate change and environmental destruction.  But God continually reaches into my soul and pulls me through the despair into joy. Pulls be from inaction to action. 

I am not delusional that I will be able to make an immediate worldwide change by myself.  But I am able to make changes to my world.  I can be in relationship with those that society treats as outcasts.  I can open up the church during the week for prayer, fellowship, and sanctuary.  I can treat all people as God’s beloved children.  I can support, through my giving, both in money and in my time, organizations that are making a difference.  And I can pray. 

Pray that the holy spirit that moves in my life and calls me will be able to enter into the hearts of those who are perpetuating the policies that tear down.  Enter into their hearts so that we can transform the world into that world of Love that God dreams about.  That dream of God that our world will finally get it and turn around – repent – and welcome all of God’s children into relationship.This is not magical thinking.  Jesus’ baptism by John marked the beginning of Jesus earthly ministry that called society to change.  Our baptism also calls us into the same ministry. 

Several years ago I was at the River Jordon.  It is still a powerful place of ministry.  It is a thin spot where God’s presence is palpable.  It is palpable in the diversity of people who are drawn to that place.  There is an amazing cross section from all over the world that come to be baptized in the River Jordon, or to renew their baptisms.  It is a place where we can witness God calling the diversity that is creation into relationship.


Joy Moore, a professor at Luther Seminary said “Baptism signals a journey that begins at a fork in the road where one path is chosen and another is rejected. It is our surrender to God’s righteousness that is not merely individual moral conduct but a focus on relationships restored.

Treating one another rightly restores relationships. God’s intention remains to draw from every nation, tribe, and tongue a people who demonstrate the righteousness of God’s reign.”[2]

Today, a day set aside to remember Jesus’ baptism in the River Jordon, is also a day to remember our baptisms.  A day to remember that through our baptisms we are called to restore relationships. To restore our relationship with God.  To restore our relationships with all of God’s beloved children. 

We are called to change the world.  To show through our actions that we love God and love all of God’s creation.  It is not easy.  Some of God’s children make it difficult to love them.  It is hard to love those we see as creating a world that is the opposite of what God dreams we could create.  In those cases we need to call out the actions that separate our world from God – and to pray.  Pray for us and those who we see are making choices that do not bring about God’s dream.  Pray that their hearts will be changed.  Changed by the letting the holy spirit into their hearts.

It is not all bad news.  There is good in this world.  Unfortunately, the bad news seems to get the headlines.  But I see the good all the time.  I see it in the relationship that are built in this place.  I see it in the people who come in here during the weak for a little sanctuary and to worship god.  I see it at St. Matthew’s where they are, once again, dismantling their worship space to welcome our brothers and sisters into a warm place of sanctuary for a week.  To provide a hot dinner and a safe place to sleep out of the winter weather.  I see it in the work of Sister Libby and the Mercy Pedalers who ride through town and offer God’s love to the homeless on our streets.

We are called in our baptisms into ministry.  It is not ordination as a deacon or priest that calls us into our primary ministry.  It is our baptism.  A baptism that calls us, as Joy Moore said, to choose that fork in the road.  To choose the path that brings God’s dream into our world.  To choose the path that creates relationship.  To choose the path that sees that Dove descending upon our souls and hear God say to us “You are my beloved child, the beloved, with whom I am well pleased.

Sunday, January 13, 2019

God is Calling us too!


Baptism of our Lord Year C – RCL

January 12, 2019




As the people were filled with expectation, and all were questioning in their hearts concerning John, whether he might be the Messiah, John answered all of them by saying, "I baptize you with water; but one who is more powerful than I is coming; I am not worthy to untie the thong of his sandals. He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and fire. His winnowing fork is in his hand, to clear his threshing floor and to gather the wheat into his granary; but the chaff he will burn with unquenchable fire."
Now when all the people were baptized, and when Jesus also had been baptized and was praying, the heaven was opened, and the Holy Spirit descended upon him in bodily form like a dove. And a voice came from heaven, "You are my Son, the Beloved; with you I am well pleased."
Today we are remember Jesus’ baptism in the River Jordon.  For theologians having Jesus baptized by John the Baptizer is somewhat scandalous.  It is crazy to think that Jesus needed to be baptized for the forgiveness of sins – which is what John said he was doing.  Calling people to repent of their sins and be baptized.  We say that Jesus was without sin so why baptize him?  We could go in circles about why baptize Jesus but it really doesn’t matter for me.  Jesus was baptized by John as an example.  Not for Jesus’ sins to be forgiven but for us to hear something important.

At Jesus baptism something remarkable happened.  The heavens were torn open and the Holy Spirit – looking like a dove – one of her more serene manifestation – descends on Jesus.  And the voice from heaven declares “ ‘You are my Son, the Beloved; with you I am well pleased.’”  We hear that voice another time in scripture.  When we read about the transfiguration the voice from heaven told the disciples that Jesus is God’s son and that we are to listen to him. 

Each time the voice was not for Jesus it was for us.  It was a reminder that God calls us and names us and we are God’s.  Baptism does that.  At our baptisms we are named as Christ own – as God’s own children.  Its not that we were not God’s children before our baptism.  It is a reminder that we need to turn to God and recognizes that we are indeed God’s beloved children. 

Our reading from Isaiah today we heard the prophet proclaim:

Thus says the Lord,
he who created you, O Jacob,
he who formed you, O Israel:
Do not fear, for I have redeemed you;
I have called you by name, you are mine.

From the beginning of time God has been calling our names.  God calls us not as servants but as beloved children.  And if we will listen we will hear our names called.  God calls us by name and promises to be with us throughout our whole lives – and beyond.  Even to and beyond the grave God calls our names. But we are not too good at listening.  We are the ones who don’t always hear God calling.  We close out ears to God’s voice and figure we can go on our own way.

If we are good we probably thank God for our blessings.  When times are good it is easy to see God in the world.  When we are in love we see God’s beauty in everything.  When we are in our happy places we can see God at work in the world.

It is harder to see God and hear God when things are not going our way.  The prophet Isaiah however promise us that God is with us in the hard times too: 

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….
Because you are precious in my sight,
and honored, and I love you,

It is during the hard times that we sometimes need reminders that God does indeed love us.  We need reminders that our sicknesses are not some test from God to see how well we do in adversity.  When we lose loved ones it is not a vengeful God who takes them away to punish us.  My cancer was not a punishment from God.  It was my genetic material going crazy.  It was my own DNA that, for whatever reason, caused some of the cells in my body to reproduce and morph into cells that can be quite damaging.  Thanks be to God that we have more and more treatments to target cancer and cure it.  We humans haven’t figured out who to cure all kinds of cancer and diseases, but we are learning more and more each day.  Our God given intellect and curiosity is allowing researchers to find new treatments.

I know that God has accompanied me on my journey.  I am sometimes a little hard of hearing when it comes to hearing the Holy Spirit in my life, but she is always calling me and walking with me through the good and the hard times.  After my cancer surgery – almost a year ago now – as I was being wheeled into a room the nurse asked me who I knew to get the only single room in the ward.  My answer was that “I knew God. “  When she asked again I repeated.  No really it is God who I know. 

That may be true that at some level I do know God.  But the better answer would be that God knows me.  At my creation God saw me and, like we hear in the creation story in Genesis, God saw that is was good.  God sees our creation and sees it as good. 

Unfortunately, we sometimes forget that God knows our names – knows our inner being.  Or at least we act like it.  We act like we don’t have God walking with us on this journey.  We can even act like we are God.  We can do hurtful things and turn away from God.  We can separate ourselves from God – which is the definition of sin.   God never separates from us, but we erect barriers to God.

At our baptisms we are reminded that we are beloved children of God and are named as Christ’s own forever.  Every one of us is God’s beloved child.  Loved no matter what.  God is not a vengeful God who punishes us for not listening.  God is a patient God who wants nothing more than for us to see our mistakes and return to God’s love.

As I said Jesus’ baptism was not to remind him who he was.  It was for us to hear who Jesus is and to hear the Holy Spirit call our name too.  David Lose, a preacher I follow said, “Athanasius, my favorite theologian of the early church, put it this way: Jesus became one of us – scandalous! – so that we might become like him – even more scandalous yet!”[1]

In a few moments we will be reminded that we are God’s children as we renew our own baptismal promises.  We need the reminders and it is traditional on the day that we remember Jesus’ baptism in the River Jordon to remember and renew our baptismal promises too. 

When we renew our baptismal promises the heaven will open up – just like they did that day over two thousand years ago.  The heavens will open up and the Holy Spirit will descend upon each of us and if we listen – if we open our hearts and our ears to God, we will hear her call us.  Rik – You are my beloved child with whom I am pleased.  Anne, Katie, Christine, Jim you are all my beloved children with whom I am well pleased.

Now please stand as you are able as we renew our baptismal promises.  I invite you to open your hearts and you ears to hear God reminding you that you are God’s beloved child.