Sunday, February 22, 2015

Lent 1, Year B


Genesis 9: 8-17; Psalm 25: 3-9; I Peter 3: 18-22; Mark 1: 9–13

A homily by Fr. Gene Tucker, given at The Cathedral Church of St. Paul the Apostle, in Springfield, Illinois on Sunday, February 22, 2015.

“WATER:  LIFE-SUSTAINING, LIFE-DESTROYING”
(Homily texts:  Genesis 9: 8–17, I Peter 3: 18-22 and Mark 1: 9-13)

Our three Scripture texts this morning all have something to do with water:  The reading from Genesis recounts God’s covenant with Noah and with all of humanity after the waters of the Great Flood had subsided;  our reading from I Peter reflects on this covenant, likening it to baptism; and our Gospel text records Jesus’ baptism in the River Jordan.

If we think about it, water plays a central role in our lives.  It has life-sustaining properties and life-enhancing qualities:  We drink it in order to sustain life and health, we use it to clean things, we play in/on it (swimming boating, etc.), we use it for transportation.

But water also has a destructive quality as well:  The account of the Great Flood in Genesis[1] confirms water’s power to destroy both objects and living things.  We are all aware of water’s ability to cause life to end.

In Holy Scripture, water passages figure prominently.  Each account signals a face-to-face encounter with death, which leads to new life and a new beginning.

Put another way, each time God’s people make a passage through water, they stare death in the face, but emerge safely on the other side.  Being willing to make a passage through water involves risk.

This principle lies at the heart of Noah’s passage:  God tells Noah that the way he and seven others of his family[2] will survive the deluge of water that is coming is by riding over those waters in an ark.  As the waters rise, the ark rises, too.  As the waters recede, the ark comes to rest on dry ground and God establishes a covenant[3] with all humankind that He will never again destroy the earth and all that lives on it by a flood.

This principle lies at the heart of the passage through the waters of the Red Sea as God’s people pass through the waters on dry ground out of Egypt, out of bondage, and into the Promised Land, in order that a new birth and a new promise might be lived out.  (See Exodus, chapter fourteen.)

Our epistle reading from the First Letter of Peter ties together the passage through the waters of the Great Flood and our passage through the waters of baptism remarkably well.  In First Peter, we read that baptism isn’t for the purposes of washing dirt off of the body, but for the saving of God’s people.  The text also brings in the thread of Jesus’ own resurrection, by which He faced death squarely and completely on the Cross, conquering death and rising to new life again.

We celebrate and follow a risen Lord who leads by example. 

That is, perhaps, the best way to describe everything that our Lord Jesus Christ does and everything that He accomplishes for us.  For example, we read this morning that Jesus was baptized by John the Baptizer in the River Jordan.  If Jesus is without sin, as the Letter to the Hebrews (see Hebrews 4: 15) affirms, then why did He consent to be baptized?  The best answer is that our Lord asks us to do only the things He Himself has done.

We would do well to turn to the business of baptism.

It strikes me that we have lost a good bit of the importance of water in baptism.  We are largely unaware, it seems to me, of the destructive power of water in our baptismal rite as we practice it these days.

Our baptismal liturgy is dignified and beautiful.  But it doesn’t seem to convey very well the fact that water can sustain life and it can destroy life, both.  Both elements are important factors for us to keep in mind, if we are going to capture the full import of what happens in baptism.

To revisit this important facet of baptism, we might do well to go back to the early Church’s practices of baptism:  Most often, people were baptized by being fully submerged under the water in a creek, river or pond or lake.  People being baptized were submerged not once, but three times, one time for each person of the Holy Trinity.

Now consider the dangers:  1.  What if the person doing the baptism slipped and lost their footing?  2.  What if the person being baptized didn’t keep their mouth shut and managed to gulp in a large amount of water?  3.  What if the person doing the baptism wasn’t strong enough to lift the baptized person up out of the water?

See the dangers involved?

I suspect that, by doing baptism in this dramatic fashion, those who were going under the water probably thought to themselves, “You know what, there’s a real possibility that I might not come back up out of this water.  I might die.”

So, as we reflect on water, we can see that it has life-sustaining and life-destroying properties.

Allow me to say that the same is true of the Cross:  The Cross has the power to destroy, but it also has the power to provide new life to all who come to faith in Christ Jesus.

A wonderful collect (prayer) in our Prayer Book affirms this reality.  It is found on page 56 in our traditional language rite for Morning Prayer:

“Almighty God, whose most dear Son went not up to joy but first he suffered pain, and entered not into glory before he was crucified:  Mercifully grant that we, walking in the way of the cross, may find it none other than the way of life and peace, through the same Jesus Christ our Lord.  Amen.”




[1]  See Genesis 6: 9 – 8: 19 for the account of the Flood.
[2]  Noah, his wife and his three sons and their wives constitute the eight persons who survived the Great Flood.  The reading from I Peter confirms eight as the number who survived.  Consequently, the number eight in the Bible symbolizes new beginnings.  As an additional example, consider the fact that Jewish male children are circumcised on the eighth day of their lives.  (See Genesis 17: 12.)
[3]  The sign of this covenant is the rainbow.