Luke
3:15-17, 21-22
The
Baptism of Our Lord/January 11, 2004
Our
Savior’s Lutheran Church, Moorhead, MN
“Remember
who you are!”
“Remember
who you are!”
I
dare say those four words have spoiled many a good time that some of us had
planned on Friday evenings when we were in our teenage years.
You
know what I’m talking about: It’s T.G.I.F.—Friday night—“date” night—the night
young folks go out and paint the town red.
You look forward all week to what’s in store on Friday night. You make arrangements. You keep ma and pa in the dark. You and your chums get all the details worked
out.
Then—just
when it’s time to escape your house—just when you’re finally going to enjoy
some hours of precious freedom and fun—one of your parents takes you by the
arm, looks you square in the eyes and utters those fateful words: “Remember who you are! Remember what your name is, what people know
about and expect of our family. Remember
what our values are—remember what we stand for.”
And
those last-minute words of farewell take all the fun out of the big plans you
had made for the evening. When you hear
those words—“Remember who you are!”—you know you just can’t, with a clear
conscience, go through with the mischief you had lined up for yourself.
“Remember
who you are!”
I’m
not going to ask for a show of hands from you adults here this morning.
But
I betcha those four words spoiled more than one Friday evening out for a few of
you when you were younger.
“Remember
who you are!”
Those
words have spoiled many a good time for some of us¼
¼and
those same words have also, probably, saved our necks, kept us safe and sound,
and--in a sense--given us our “marching orders.” Those words have contributed to whatever
success we have made of ourselves.
Funny
how that works!
Funny—how
the very same words: “Remember
who you are!”—can be simultaneously both so unwelcome to our young
itching ears, and yet so healthy and life-giving in the long run of our
lives.
“Remember
who you are.”
Who
among us hasn’t heard those words—with reluctance?!
And
yet what parent among us hasn’t spoken those words—with
fervent expectation?!
“Remember
who you are.”
In
this morning’s gospel lesson it is Jesus—of all persons!--who
hears those words, or at least a version of those words.
Here’s
the scene: John is baptizing by the
river Jordan. The teeming crowds are in
a frenzy—wondering whether John’s preaching signals that the End of the world
has arrived.
Is
John the One they’ve been waiting for—their Savior, their Messiah?
John
takes pains to say: “Absolutely
not!” John speaks of a more powerful One
coming after him, Someone John isn’t even good enough to serve as his slave¼
And
then, suddenly, that more powerful One shows up, slips into the crowd,
blends in with all the sinners coming to the Jordan to repent and be washed.
All
at once the One John spoke of is there among him—and before anyone knows it,
before anyone even recognizes him, Jesus is already present--praying, being
baptized like the rest of them.
It’s
almost a little anti-climactic, this Baptism of Our Lord.
In
fact, our text says virtually nothing about the baptism itself—it’s almost an
after thought.
But
what is clearly not an after-thought is what follows Jesus’ baptism.
“¼the
heaven was opened, and the Holy Spirit descended upon [Jesus] in bodily form
like a dove. And a voice came from
heaven, ‘You are my Son, the Beloved; with you I am well pleased.’”
Luke’s
account of the Baptism of Our Lord says surprisingly little about the baptismal
washing itself. Luke focuses, rather, on
what immediately follows Jesus’ baptism—the heaven’s opening, the Holy Spirit
coming down, and that divine voice speaking.
And
what the heavenly voice says to Jesus is, in effect: “Remember who you are.”
God
says those words to Jesus: “Remember who
you are.”
God
says those words, not because God’s worried Jesus is going to stay out past
curfew, or that Jesus is going to drink too much or fall in with the wrong
crowd or wind up in trouble¼.
No. God says those words to Jesus—“Remember who
you are”—because even Jesus, in his full humanity, could be tempted to forget
who he was, to lose sight of what he was about, and thus to abandon his
mission.
God
wants it to be crystal clear to Jesus and to anyone else with ears to hear
that Jesus (and not John) is the one
everybody’s been waiting for, and that God is pleased to claim Jesus as God’s
child, and that God has a task, a mission for Jesus.
“Remember
who you are,” God thunders to Jesus, knee-deep in the Jordan River. “You are my Son, the Beloved; with you
I am well pleased.”
On
that score at least, Jesus’ baptism is like the baptism each of
us has received.
In
other respects our baptisms may be different.
Jesus
didn’t have any guilt to be washed away.
Jesus
didn’t need to be rescued from sin, death or the power of the devil.
Jesus
didn’t become something in his Baptism that he was not already.
But
Jesus was reminded of his identity, and in that reminding Jesus
was commissioned for the ministry that was now to be his.
And
it’s that part of baptism I want to shine the spotlight on this
morning.
Indeed,
that’s the part of Baptism, the aspect of Baptism that I fear we as Lutheran
Christians have all too often given short shrift.
We
know that Baptism is God’s initiative, God’s rescuing action, God’s
incorporation of us into the Body of Christ for all time and for eternity¼
We’ve
got all of that down pat—we know it all “in spades.”
But
there’s a facet of Baptism we have too often ignored.
It’s
the fact that in our Baptism we aren’t just saved from all the
awful things that threaten us¼.but we’re also saved for
all the good things God intends to do through us!
Baptism
is more than an insurance policy.
Baptism
also is our marching orders, our commissioning papers.
Baptism
doesn’t shield us from this world. Baptism sends us out into this
world, with our heavenly Father’s words ringing in our ears:
“Remember
who you are.”
“Remember
that you are my beloved Child in the world.”
“Remember
that I am well pleased with you—that I trust you to bear my creative and
redeeming word wherever you go.”
“Remember
that the Holy Spirit has taken up residence within you—and therefore you won’t
be able to keep still about what I have done and am doing to restore all
things, to make the whole creation new, to piece back together everything that
is broken--all for the sake of Jesus Christ.”
Baptism
saves us by incorporating us into the Christ who saves us.
We
Lutherans have that part down pat.
But
Baptism doesn’t just save us.
Baptism
also sends us.
Since
1978 we North American Lutherans have been visualizing, symbolizing that
sending in a wonderfully memorable way.
Since 1978—when our Lutheran Book of Worship first appeared—we’ve
added something to our baptismal service.
Every “baptizee” receives a lit candle, with these words from Matthew
5:16: “Let your light so shine
before others, that they may see your good works and glorify your Father in
heaven.”
I
truly hope that that has been for us more than just a nice little liturgical
appendage to the baptismal service.
I
truly hope that all of us have been able to see and hear in that act the giving
of “marching orders,” the commissioning, the sending that is also integral to
Baptism.
In
Holy Baptism you are saved by God’s grace in Christ, but you are saved so that
you might also be sent.
Saved
and sent!
Sent
with God’s own voice saying to you, again and again: “Remember who you are. As you walk through life, walking wet in
your Baptism, remember that you now bear the light of Christ wherever you
go. Remember that God intends to speak
of Christ through you. God’s going to
enact Christ’s love in you. God’s
mission for you is to make Christ known because of you.”
And
don’t you forget it!
Here
are your baptismal marching orders:
REMEMBER WHO YOU ARE…and “Let your light so shine before others
that they may see your good works and glorify your Father in heaven.”
In
the name of Jesus. Amen.