You would think that this Feast Day would be
straightforward. Jesus goes to the Jordan. John baptizes him (with or without a lot of
dialog, depending on which gospel account you are reading), the heavens open, the
Holy Spirit descends in (some sort of) bodily form and a voice speaks. It is the inauguration of Jesus’ public ministry. Celebrate!
Give thanks! End of story.
And yet, almost from the very beginning there were teachers
who were proclaiming Christian baptism in the exact same terms as the baptism offered by John. Their call was to John’s baptism, not that of
Jesus and the church. There are people
within the larger church who do this same thing today. They use John language to talk about what
they call Christian baptism.
But what was John’s proclamation? “Repent!
Renounce your sins! Make way for
the coming of the Lord. Prepare
yourselves for the Messiah, the Christ, the one who will save you from your
sins.” Let’s be clear: “get ready” is
not the same thing as “Have faith.”
There are those who claim that their belief system can trace its lineage
all the way back to John the Baptist. They
say that with pride. I don’t get
it. What has John done for them lately? John’s baptism? You can have it I say. John didn’t save You. You are not John’s disciple. Nowhere in scripture do you hear a call to proclaim,
“John the Baptist is Lord!” Why then
would you want to embrace John’s baptism?
It is true that the larger church has muddled the
significance of this Sacrament through the years. To this day there is no uniformity of opinion
as to what the Rite means. Some
communions see baptism as a literal washing away of the stain of sin. Others see it as an act of professing faith
in making ready to join the church universal or a particular congregation. This is what is meant by “believer’s baptism.” Some congregations won't even recognize the baptism performed by other congregations within their fellowship. The idea is, "If we haven't baptized you, then no one has baptized you!"
The United Methodist Church (and others)
define baptism as an initiation into the Body of Christ and a claiming of the
individual into the family of God.
Again, like many other groups the United Methodist Church practices the
baptism of infants, with parents or sponsors taking the vows on behalf of the
candidate until such time as the individual can affirm those promises for themselves.
I have a book
in my library with the provocative title Baptism: The Water that Divides by Donald Bridge. The work
itself is a bit murky, but what a great title!
That which designs to unite believers is in fact one of the great points
of contention within the church. For
something that Christ commanded, and that the church has normatively required
from its beginnings, there is no consensus among the major faith groups as to
what this means at all.
I won’t enter
the discussion about the amount of water that constitutes baptism. I leave that issue grieving that people will
split families and even congregations over what amounts to a measuring cup.
So, owning
that this action of the church has no foreseeable resolution, I simply commend
the day as an extraordinary one in the life and ministry of The Lord Jesus. It
is worthy of our notice and our commemoration.
There is one body and one Spirit, just as you were called to the one
hope of your calling, one Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God and Father of
all, who is above all and through all and in all. –Ephesians 4:4-6
Lord, haste the
day…
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