1 Epiphany B
January 8, 2012
Genesis 1:1-5 Ps. 29
Acts 9:1-7 Mark
1:4-11
Did you ever
really wonder about the meaning of Baptism?
Historically, the church has argued about baptism a lot. Should a person be immersed? Sprinkled?
Stand in water to the waist and have water poured down one’s head? Should authentic baptism only be done in the Jordan River ?
Should it be done in any river or natural body of water? Should baptism be preceded by forty days of
fasting with some salt sprinkled on the candidates and some exorcisms
performed? Should only adults who can
fully and rationally choose baptism be the legitimate candidates for
baptism? Is baptism only a public testimony
of a personal profession of faith? Is
baptism a supernatural infusion of God’s grace whereby one is made a Christian
once and for all? Can one lose baptismal
grace? We are told that the Emperor
Constantine did not become baptized until his death bed because he was sure
that he was going to have some post-baptismal sins, and some in the early
church were very concerned about post-baptismal sins.
What is
baptism for us today? A cute little rite
of passage for baby and family with an opportunity to make little baby boys don
white dresses so that the pictures can be brought out later to make their faces
red?
There is some
meaning of baptism found in all of the baptismal practices of Christians. I guess today, I am more interested in what
baptism means to me and to you and to our lives as a community who call
ourselves the body of Christ.
Might I
suggest that baptism is very much a belief about our creation by God and the
type of good stuff of which our human lives and the life of the world are
made? In the creation, we are told that
God looked at all that had been created and God said, “It is good.”
I believe
that baptism is a public rite of celebration that affirms that the creation of
the life of the baptized, is good, very good.
And it is good and filled with dignity. . Even
while we don’t attain full goodness at any moment of our lives, baptism is the invitation to actualize our full human potential.
And what
might that potential be? I would liken
the human life to be lived on a continuum between particular experience and
cosmic experience. We are very much made
of dust in that we have a body and each body has a location in time and
space. And there are detailed
descriptions of the particulars of our existence; our families, languages,
cultures, societies and countries. Yet
we are made of mysterious stuff that we call spirit and so we have
godly-potential. We have cosmic
potential. So we live our lives in the
dynamic between the particulars of our physical location and our cosmic
spiritual locations. And we need both to
live up to our human potential. In our
baptism, we celebrate our cosmic potential because if we are only determined by
our material, physical and historical circumstances, then we may find ourselves
trapped; trapped by the imperfections that we find in us and around us. We can get so burdened by the imperfections
in us and around us that we can believe that we are negatively determined
toward death, entropy and despair.
But the
experience of hope and joy and the sublime cannot allow such imperfection to define
our destiny in an absolute sense. So, we
have our cosmic side, our cosmic identity, our birthright, not just into flesh
and blood families, but our birthright as children of God. And
that is what is celebrated in our baptism. We celebrate our cosmic birthright so that we
might rise above mere material determination. And how often do we need to rise above mere
material determination. The experience
of pain and losses of all kinds shout out to us to be what is powerful to
determine our lives and our fate and that is where we need to turn to our
cosmic destiny so that we do not get buried in the despair of any particular
state of imperfection.
At the
baptism of Jesus, the heavenly dove descended and the heavenly voice declared,
“You are my Son, the beloved. With you I
am well pleased.” Isn’t that what God
said after creation. “With you I am well
pleased.”
Mozart got
more than the average or above average share of cosmic musical ability at an
age that baffles our ability to understand, so we declare him a musical genius.
Jesus of Nazareth was so much overwhelmed
with the realization and actualization of the cosmic dimension in his life, we
have had no other human language to use except to say that Jesus was
extra-human, supra-human, even divinized.
He was divinized more than any other human
being, yet we undertake baptism too, because Jesus did not keep likeness to God
or divinization to himself; he shared it fully.
He told his friends and disciples to go and baptize. And as God abided in Jesus, Jesus promised to
abide with his friends until we could not longer speak of time in the way that
we do.
We baptize,
not because we will ever be as cosmic as Jesus was, but because the risen and
cosmic Christ is shared with us to awaken the cosmic dimensions of our own
souls.
And we need
to experience our cosmic dimension to help us to rise above our mere material
existence and to have our vale of tears touched with the sublime of love,
friendship, joy, beauty and insights that move and inspire us to keep on
keeping on, because in the end our lives will be determined by love, faith,
hope and resurrection and not by demise, loss, despair and death.
And so we
baptize and have been baptized into our cosmic identities as son and daughters
of God and our lives are changed if we can but hear the whisper of God behind
the scenes of our lives say, “You are my beloved child; you are good, you are
no mistake, you are wonderfully put together, and I am pleased with you.”
We baptize in
order to be a baptismal community to baptize others. Why?
Because the people of this world need to discover their cosmic
identities as sons and daughters of God.
This is the way to world peace; to rise to our cosmic identity beyond
our oft pitiful worlds of material determination.
Today you
and I are invited to live in this dynamic between our particular identity and
our cosmic identity. We need a balance
of both; we cannot be purely spiritual or cosmic beings; if we try, we become
world denying, dreamy, cosmic space cadets.
And take the “s” out of cosmic and we become “comic space cadets” living
in escapism.
But if we
deny the cosmic and live only a reductionist material existence then we will
live solely at the whim of happenstance.
If we’re lucky, all is well. If
were unlucky, all is ill. We need our
experience of the cosmic to help us rise above the particulars of our
happenstance so that we can tap into a source of wisdom that helps us have the
creative freedom to choose our particular futures with wisdom.
Baptism
invites us to our cosmic identity as sons and daughters of God, so that we can
not just survive our particular circumstance but live with some inspired
actions. Jesus was baptized and his true
cosmic identity was known. You and I
have been baptized and we are part of a baptismal community to share the
knowledge of the cosmic family of God with this world. In the name of the Father, the Son and the
Holy Spirit. Amen.