I
wonder how many of us celebrate our baptism as we might our birthday or
anniversary. I’m not sure I can even locate my baptismal certificate
much less know the month or day it took place. This Sunday we will celebrate
the baptism of Jesus according to Matthew 3: 13-17 and despite the fact that this event in our church
calendar was once considered an even more important feast than Christmas, the
baptism of Jesus is acknowledged with just a Gospel reading.
Yet, along with the Epiphany, it is a celebration intrinsic to the incarnation
of God. Maybe we should wait before we put away our Christmas manger scenes.
I
suspect that for many Christians there is a puzzle about baptism. If you
ask people why they want their children baptized many would be hard pressed to
explain. Do we do it for the grandparents? Is it a cultural act? Is
it a “ticket to admission” for a particular church or pre-qualification for
communion? How many of us were raised believing that it was intended to “wash
away” the stain of original sin?
For
many of us, the sacrament instills a sense of God with us and in us that is
essential to our very nature and being. While baptism reminds us of our being
united as part of the Christian community, we were invested in God’s Kingdom
long before any sprinkling of water or liturgical incantation took place.
When
in this Gospel John protests at the notion of baptizing Jesus, Jesus responds
with “for it is proper for us in this way to fulfill all righteousness."
In so doing Jesus makes it clear that it is our birth rite and that he aligns himself with all people and not
just the followers of Moses as “the chosen ones.”
So,
while we are marked as a member of God’s Kingdom, baptism enrolls us in this
most “inclusive” of all clubs. “In a very profound way we are in fact all brothers
and sisters to one another. Each of us has already received the first great
gift of our spiritual inheritance: the gift of the Holy Spirit. The Spirit of
God resides in each of us as the source of the divine life and the source of
all life…The life of God in us means that we are closely bonded to one another.
We are more closely united by the living presence of the Spirit in us than we
would be by family blood lines. The shared life of God of which we are all
temples, make us family in a profoundly personal way. This is the faith vision
of the reality which we call Church.” (John Powell, S.J. The Christian
Vision, p131)
Baptism
is not about the forgiveness of sins although it is about repentance which in
the true sense of the word, inspires us to redirect our lives by “putting on
the mind of Christ” in all that we do. As such, our identity by the power of
the Holy Spirit, is created through worship and practice, so that we might know
and feel the sense of God in one another. This deep experience forms our
identity as those who will be known by our love for one another and not
defined by any denomination. This is being in “the mind of Christ.”
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