Thursday, January 16th, 2022 – Baptism of The Lord Sunday
Philip’s Reflection: “Precious in my sight” (Isa 43:4)
“Baptism of the Lord” Sunday is traditionally a Sunday when we remember the promises
we, or our parents made for us at our own baptisms; or that we made as parents for our
own children; or, as a community, as we joyfully welcomed children or adults into the
Church, when we promised to support them as members of the body of Christ.
But for many of us it’s hard to remember those promises and that’s not surprising - I
checked my baptismal certificate this week and I discover that I was baptized nearly 70
years ago at the Garrison Church in Singapore, where my mother and father made
these promises for me, when I was just two months old. I expect that some of you might
have the same difficulty, even those of you who were baptized as an adult. Well, don’t
worry, we’re not going to test you! But we’ll be reminding you of those promises and
you’ll have an opportunity, if you wish, to reaffirm them this morning.
Let’s me say just a few words about the sacrament of baptism – and as we turn to
Scripture for inspiration, we hear first from the great prophet Isaiah about the goodness
of God. Isaiah tells Israel of the Lord who created you and formed you, “Do not fear, for
I have redeemed you; [says the Lord] 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… For I am the Lord your God, the Holy One of Israel, your Saviour.” No
references here, you notice, to “original sin” or the need to wash away your sinfulness
because “I have redeemed you” says the Lord, you are already forgiven. It is the
promise of a God who is always present, who will accompany us whatever the
challenges. And listen to the words, spoken by the Lord that, at times like these, we
need to write down and memorize – why? “Because [says the Lord] you are precious in
my sight, and honored, and I love you.” Precious and honored and I love you.
The important point is that baptism, in the United Church of Canada, does not work like
a vaccine passport – show me the baptismal certificate and Peter will unlock the pearly
gates and let you in. No certificate; no admission! – no, it doesn’t work like that, for God
tells Israel that despite their repeated failures, despite their unfaithfulness, God will
always be with them, do not fear, God says, for I have redeemed you. And so it is for us
for we know that nothing “neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor rulers… nor anything
else in all creation, can separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord” (Rom
8:38-39).
But that’s not all and our reading from the Gospel of Luke gives us further clues on the
meaning of baptism. We start with John the Baptist and we remember from our readings
in Advent that it was John the Baptist whose voice we heard calling from the wilderness
– who “proclaimed a baptism of repentance” (Lk 3:3) – “Repent” he calls - “prepare the
way of the Lord”, “repent”, turn away from sinfulness and turn towards justice, and
fairness, and peace. For John the Baptist, baptism was the public sign of a promise to
turn away from the values of the old world, so that when the judgment day came – and
John believed it was coming very soon – a new world, the realm of God, would be
revealed.
Luke tells us that Jesus was about 30 years old when he was baptized - the important
question, it seems to me, is why Jesus, the Son of God, would be baptized at all – and
it’s of course very significant that the divine Christ child – our Saviour, now submitted
himself as an adult to baptism – it marks the start of his public ministry and it’s surely a
sign of his humanity, his willingness to surrender himself to human hands, his humility –
a very different type of Messiah from what the people expected. And we also note that
there were many people present in the act of baptism – it was public, it was done in
community and it was done with prayer. As he’s praying, Luke tells us, the heavens
opened, the Holy Spirit descended on him and Jesus hears God’s voice – “You are my
Son, the Beloved; with you I am well pleased.” The Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit -
all are present and all are involved. It’s why we make our Baptismal promises in the
name of the Triune God, the blessed Trinity.
For us today, baptism is a central element in the Christian faith, uniting all believers and
joining them to Christ – as Paul says in his letter to the Ephesians – “one Lord, one
faith, one baptism”. Jesus’ public ministry began with his own baptism, undertaken in
community, and in the presence of the Holy Spirit. And so it is for us too – baptism is a
communal action – we receive the gift of baptism from another person, we cannot
baptize ourselves. And to be baptized into Christ means also being baptized into his
body, his community – the church. As you heard earlier in our reading from A Song of
Faith, baptism is “the means by which we are received, at any age, into the covenanted
community of the church.”
Above all, I believe, baptism is a sacrament of love – it serves as a reminder of God’s
goodness, of God’s redemption, of God’s unconditional and unmerited love for us,
through the power of the Holy Spirit. It is also a public expression of repentance, of an
intention to turn away from sinful ways, to turn towards God and to live our lives in love
– love of God and love of each other – lives that are committed to justice and resisting
evil; and, in love, a commitment to share in the life, work and ministry of Jesus Christ.
And so this morning, this Baptism of the Lord Sunday, I invite all of you, those here, and
those joining us from home, to reaffirm your baptismal promises. The words we will be
saying may not be the exact words that you spoke, or your parents spoke on your
behalf, because they are based on the New Creed of the United Church of Canada
(from 1968, and its revisions); but if they reflect your beliefs, and signify your promises
to try to live your life by these commitments, and to support the work of this community
and the wider church, please will you respond with the words that will be shown on the
screen. This is not a service of baptism, we believe in only one baptism: our words
serve only as a reminder, a renewal, of our baptismal promises and we offer them in
humility and in prayer. And as you reaffirm these promises, I ask you to listen quietly for
God’s voice – “Do not fear, for I have redeemed you; I have called you by your name,
you are mine… my beloved son or daughter, you are precious in my sight, and honored,
and I love you” – in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit.
Amen.