Sunday, January 12, 2025

Epiphany 1 (The Baptism of our Lord Jesus Christ), Year C (2025)

Isaiah 43: 1 – 7 / Psalm 29 / Acts 8: 14 – 17 / Luke 3: 15 – 17, 21 – 22

This is the homily given at Flohr’s Evangelical Lutheran Church (ELCA) in McKnightstown, Pennsylvania on Sunday, January 12, 2025 by Fr. Gene Tucker

 

“FAITH: THE KEY TO RELATIONSHIP”

(Homily text: Luke 3: 15 – 17, 21 – 22)

Perhaps without realizing it, we put our faith in things we use every day. We do this, based on our past experience with these objects.

For example, the common chair (just a chair as we might use at a kitchen table will do) can illustrate this reality quite well: When we prepare to sit in a chair, we look at it prior to doing so. For one thing, we’d want to be sure that there isn’t anything in the chair already. (A cat would be a good example, taking a nap.) We’d also want to be sure that the seat of the chair isn’t broken, cracked, or damaged in some way. As we pulled the chair away from the table, or moved it so as to sit in it, our attention would be alerted if the chair seemed to be loose, wobbly or if its structural integrity was impaired in some way. Then, as we prepare to sit in the chair, we would be careful to observe how well it manages to support our weight.

Our past experience with a particular chair, say one that we use daily to eat our meals, will serve to enlighten us about that particular chair’s value as a device upon which to sit. Or, if we’re using a chair we’re not familiar with on a regular basis, we’d rely on what we already know about the design of chairs, the materials used to make chairs, and the ways in which the component of chairs are assembled and fastened together. (We’d do this for a chair with which we are familiar, as well.)

Maybe it’s a safe bet to say that most of us haven’t given much thought to the business of making use of chairs.

Returning to our illustration, our present experience with sitting in a chair, being based on our past experience with chairs, serves as the connecting point between the past and the future. To clarify, as we put our trust in a chair, that it will hold our weight, not wobble and give us concern about its usefulness, and not deposit us on the floor, we are able to step forward into our future use of a chair we are familiar with (or with chairs in general). Essentially, the process is one in which we make use of what we know (our past experience) in order to move into the unknown future.

Now, keep this discussion in mind as we turn our attention to the theme for this Sunday, which is the baptism of our Lord Jesus Christ in the River Jordan by John the Baptist.[1] Each of the first three Gospel accounts (Matthew, Mark and Luke) narrate Jesus’ baptism.[2]

A key consideration of our assessment of this event, and of its importance to us as Christian believers, has to do with the nature of John’s baptism and Jesus’ willingness to undergo it. Recall that John’s baptism was one of repentance for the forgiveness of sins. If our Lord was/is without sin, then why did He consent to being baptized?[3]

Perhaps only a partial answer is possible to this question.

We know from the witness of Holy Scripture that our Lord came and immersed Himself totally and fully in our human condition. Part of that experience meant our Lord was willing to undergo and experience everything that we human beings are likely to face. (One blessing from this understanding of Jesus, being “God with us”,[4] is that it makes holy all of human life and experience.)

Now, we return to the essence of our observations about chairs and their use.

Recall that we said that our current experience with chairs depends on our past use, enabling us to make future use. Faith is a key component of the bridge from the past to the future. Without faith in a chair’s reliability and usefulness, we cannot move into any future with chairs.

If the witness of Holy Scripture is reliable, then its recounting of our Lord’s baptism can serve as a reliable basis for belief that our Lord Jesus Christ, who made holy our human experience, continues to make holy our current and future experience.

The conclusion has to be that we love and serve a God who does not stand outside of our human life and experience. On the contrary, we love and serve a God who entered that experience, even to the point of a horrible death on a cross.[5] Put another way, God sent His Son into the trenches of human life.

Our Lord Jesus Christ came as Emmanuel, and he remains Emmanuel, God with us. We are not alone. By faith we receive this truth. By faith, we are able to enter into relationship with God, and to fold God’s love, faithfulness and presence into our lives.

Thanks be to God.

AMEN.



[1]   This is the theme, each year, of the First Sunday after the Epiphany.

[2]   John does not narrate the baptism. He does, however, mention the descent of the Holy Spirit at the time when Jesus was baptized.. See John 1:32.

[3]   Matthew seems to demonstrate this aspect to the interchange between Jesus and John, for John objects to baptizing Jesus, perhaps sensing Jesus’ holiness. In response, Jesus says that it is right for Him to be baptized. Doing so, He said, would “fulfill all righteousness”.

[4]   The Hebrew word is Emmanuel. See Matthew 1:23.

[5]   See Philippians 2:5 -11 for St. Paul’s reflection on Jesus’ death.