Sunday, May 10, 2026

Easter 6, Year A (2026)

Acts 17: 22–31 / Psalm 66: 8–20 / I Peter 3: 13-22 / John 14: 15-21

This is the written version of the homily given at Flohr’s Evangelical Lutheran Church (ELCA) in McKnightstown, Pennsylvania on Sunday, May 10, 2026 by Fr. Gene Tucker, Interim Pastor.

 

“HOLY BAPTISM: A NEW BEGINNING AND A BARRIER”

(Homily text: I Peter 3: 13–22)

Across the country at this time of year, many young people will be attending Commencement exercises, as they graduate from the schools they’ve been attending. In the process, a chapter in their lives ends, and a new one begins. Though we may not think of it, it might be useful for us to reflect on the basic meaning of the word “commencement”, for it literally means “to begin”.

These young graduates, as they leave the lives they’ve known in whatever setting they’ve grown used to in their academic pursuits, experience the creation of a barrier of sorts in their lives. For many graduates, their commencement exercises will mark the last time they set foot on school grounds or buildings. For others, their time in the institution will form an important chapter in their lives, one that many will look back on with fondness, but – nonetheless – they will move away from their lives in academia as they venture forth into new pursuits. For a few, the friendships and the relationships formed during their school years will survive into the future.

Living life entails the ending of some things, and the beginning of new things.

For example, we leave employment in one place, and pick up employment in another.

We meet and marry someone, leaving our former lives behind, to cite another example.

Holy Baptism is much like the examples we’ve cited above. When we enter the waters of baptism, we set aside our former lives, in order to pick up a new identity as God’s own child, one who enters into a deep, abiding and personal love relationship with the Lord.

The early Church marked this change in a dramatic way. (Some of the early Church’s practice survives in our liturgy today.)

Back in the early centuries of the Church’s existence, when people had come for baptism, they entered the waters of a pond, lake, river or creek. They faced west, and were asked questions of the sort of “Do you renounce Satan and all the powers of evil which seek to separate us from God?” The answer is given, “I renounce them”.

Then, after a series of similar questions, the person to be baptized turned around to face east (toward Jerusalem and the place where our Lord Jesus Christ died and rose again). Then, they were asked to affirm their faith in Christ.

Today, our baptismal liturgy involves three questions which renounce those things that form barriers between us and God. And then, there are three affirmations of our faith in the Lord and our determination to follow Him as Savior and Lord.

St. Peter, writing in his first letter, captures the meaning and the importance of baptism. He compares baptism to the passage of Noah, Noah’s wife, their three sons and their wives, eight persons in all, through the waters of the Great Flood. (The number of persons who were saved from the waters of the flood, eight in all, is important, for in Holy Scripture, the number eight often indicates a new beginning. Our baptismal font, for this same reason, has eight sides, to remind us of the new beginning that baptism represents.)

Water passages of the sort that Noah experienced drive home the dual meanings related to baptism, for water has the ability to kill. But water is also necessary for life to exist.

Baptism captures this double meaning: Passing through the waters means that, as we descend into the waters, we are placing our whole trust, our entire lives, in God’s hands, trusting that He will lift us up out of the waters, in order that we may continue in a new way, a new path, a new chapter in life, living out our part of the love relationship that baptism confirms.

From this day forward, those who are baptized, and especially those who are baptized as infants or very young children, will need guidance and reminders of the claim that baptism establishes on their lives, as they are affirmed as children of God, beloved persons of God’s deliberate creating.

Thanks be to God!

AMEN.