Having gone on almost non-stop since Halloween, Christmas has finally fizzled out, making the Church’s insistence on still celebrating the Lord’s
Epiphany seem at best like some post-Christmas afterthought. But, if
we shift gears and allow ourselves to think the way the Church thinks about
these things, then we see that today’s remembrance of Jesus’ baptism is
actually meant as the culmination of the whole Advent-Christmas season, the
event Advent and Christmas have been leading up to.
Today
the Church fast-forwards from Bethlehem to an adult Jesus, about to begin his
public life, the work he came into the world to do, the long-term point of the
Christmas story.
Jesus’
baptism by John is mentioned in three of the four gospels and alluded to in the
fourth. It was also mentioned by Peter in the Acts of the Apostles on the
occasion of the baptism of the first pagan converts, Cornelius, the Roman
soldier, and his household. So it was obviously well remembered and had
obviously left an impression. Peter treats Jesus’ baptism as the starting-point
of the Jesus story – how God anointed
Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Spirit and power, after which Jesus went about doing good and healing all those
oppressed by the devil, for God was with him [Acts 10:38].
John’s
baptism had been a ritual of repentance, dramatizing one’s need for conversion
and one’s willingness to start anew, as their ancestors had when they had first
passed through the Jordan River to enter the Promised Land. Baptized by John,
Jesus blended into the mass of anonymous sinners that we are. Baptized as one
of us, Jesus joined us - which was, of course, the point of his becoming human
and being born in the first place.
Jesus
joined us in the water, but when he came
up from the water, we are told, behold,
the heavens were opened for him, and he saw the Spirit of God descending like a
dove and coming upon him. And a voice came from the heavens saying, “This is my
beloved Son, with whom I am well pleased” [Matthew 3:16-17].
Not
just Jesus alone but the whole Trinity joined in to reveal who Jesus is. Jesus
began his work in the world by being officially identified by his Father as his
Son, anointed, as Saint Peter put it,
with the Holy Spirit and power, thus
setting the stage for the rest of the story of Jesus life and mission in our
world.
And
not just Jesus’ story, but ours too! Not Jesus’s life and mission, but ours
too! Thanks to Jesus, we too – like Cornelius – have become acceptable to God, for Jesus has shared
the Holy Spirit with us. Through his gift of the Holy Spirit, we have been
empowered to profess our faith in Jesus as God’s Son and to join ourselves with
him so as to share in his relationship with his Father. Jesus’ baptism
anticipates the baptism that elevates each of us to a new relationship with the
Father and the Holy Spirit and empowers us to continue Christ’s life and
mission in our world through our membership in his Church.
(Photo: The Baptism of Christ, c. 1500, by Giovanni Bellini, Santa Corona, Vicenza, Italy)
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