If you live with a child, if you know someone who has lived with a child, you know that children, for all their innocence, are not perfect.

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1 Why Was Jesus Baptized? A sermon preached at Keenan Chapel by the Very Reverend Timothy Jones Trinity Episcopal Cathedral January 13, 2018 / Luke 3:15-17, 21-22 If you live with a child, if you know someone who has lived with a child, you know that children, for all their innocence, are not perfect. They have sometimes stubborn wills that do not notice or care about the needs of others. They can be precious, but also exasperating. One of the first words our children must hear from us is NO! They share in the human condition. The Church calls this condition original sin. We are born into a world that is bent away from God. Inherited sin was introduced into the world, according to the story in Genesis,

2 as Adam and Eve ate the forbidden fruit of the tree of knowledge of good and evil. In some ways, there s nothing original about original sin, that s how common, pervasive it seems. We inherit tendencies that corrupt our capacities to do good. Our thought, reason, will, imagination become distorted and we attack others, hurt ourselves. We do bad things we regret later, that at the time we deceived ourselves into thinking were perfectly okay. Augustine said that our free will is weakened by this human state. People who struggle with addiction know this vividly, as the addiction seems to rob the addict of an ability to resist, of the strength to choose.

3 Some have called this condition we share systemic sin, that is, we are born into a world with structures and institutions that perpetuate harm and pain and injustice. We get caught up in them. The church itself and people in churches do terrible things. This tendency toward the bad is in the headlines and in the movies. On the streets with dealers and human traffickers, in our homes when we snap at our dear ones. in our hearts when we ignore God or rebel and turn away from his guidance. There s truth in the prayer book collect, Almighty God, you alone can bring into order the unruly wills and affections of sinners One afternoon Jill was getting exasperated with our then-three-year old daughter. Finally, in frustration she said, Bekah, why did you do that?!

4 She looked at Jill, and without a pause to think, said, Because I have naughties in my badness. We are born into a world of badness and we add our own naughties to it. Jesus, of course, was born into a world of where sin was part of things. His coming did not somehow hold him back from these grubby, hurtful realities. Today s Gospel drives that home. Have you ever wondered why he was baptized? The sinless Son of God baptized by the prophet? That act shows that Jesus understood the full implications of becoming a human person. He came to live in that world, with its temptations and self-centeredness. He came to join us in this world with its pull toward sin, the hurtful gesture, the mean reply, the indifference to God.

5 Jesus joined the people lined up along the sides of the Jordan River waiting to be baptized. He chose to identify with people like us. As one writer put it, Jesus simply got in line with everyone who had been broken by the wear and tear of this selfish world and had all but given up on themselves and their God. At his baptism, he identified with the damaged and broken people who needed God. David L. Bartlett. Feasting on the Word: Year C, Volume 1: Advent through Transfiguration. Presbyterian Publishing Corporation. Kindle Edition. That word Epiphany means literally, a revealing, an appearance. This Sunday of Epiphany not only has to do with Jesus coming and revealing. It also focuses on the baptism of Jesus.

6 And it makes sense to celebrate his baptism because his baptism was one of the ways he launched his ministry. His submitting to baptism is part of his epiphany, his revealing, to the world. And it is here also that we see something miraculous indeed about his coming. I don t mean the miracles that accompanied his birth. I mean, given his divine identity, the miracle of his coming at all. In Jesus God was willing to become vulnerable, to share the mess humans have made of the world. God comes to wade into the muddy waters of our existence. I ve seen the Jordan River, where Jesus was baptized. It s not like the teal blue transparent water of the Caribbean. No, it s greenish brown.

7 When Jesus comes to John the Baptist expecting to be baptized, John, not surprisingly, protested, I need to be baptized by you, and do you come to me? But Jesus insisted. John agreed finally and thrust Jesus into the brown water just like everyone else there. Jesus, Son of God, humbled himself. And did something for us. All that is captured in our own baptisms, which we do well to reflect on regularly. Baptism represents our commitment to live for God, to live in his ways and will. But more importantly, given our natures, given the inevitability of our failing sometimes, it marks God s commitment to us. A commitment lived out in Jesus baptism.

8 A commitment given vivid expression as we too submit to the waters of baptism. The oil is placed on our foreheads and we are, as the service says, marked as Christ s own forever. As we are baptized, God tells us that our lives sin and all are saturated with his mercy and goodness. The poet Mary Oliver captures this in a prayer: Lord God, mercy is in your hands, pour me a little. And tenderness, too. Pour me a little! This week as I worked on this message I was struck immediately by what the word baptize means in the original language of the New Testament. Baptize means literally to immerse. This is not a soft word, a tame word, a word for a mere ritual.

9 To immerse something, to yourself be plunged into something, that s too dramatic to be some sleepy custom. So that meaning, plunge, immerse, helps us answer not only the question of why Jesus was baptized, as we see him thrust into the waters of earthly life, but also why baptism matters to us. For God immerses us in the life Jesus brought for us. Our baptisms meant something dramatic and lifechanging and life-giving. And not just for back then, but also for now. For baptism reminds us that Jesus came not only to live among us, but to live for us. To die for us, showering upon us in his selfsacrificial love, a new reality of mercy. We need that gift.

10 We need what baptism bestows. Because whatever we do, he calls us beloved. However we stray, he calls us back to live again and again with God s sustaining life and grace. As you become more aware of your own sin, you need not despair, no, instead, you realize how great and deep and broad are the waters of God s forgiving grace. When we feel guilty, we know where to turn. We rely on God s forgiveness. Given the reality of sin in the world, and in our hearts, we will sometimes falter, and even fail. There s assurance, though, because today--always, always in Christ, there is mercy.

11 In the Episcopal Church, we baptize infants more often than we baptize adults. When we baptize children, when we welcome children into the church. we lay the groundwork for them to one day choose life. That s what their parents intend for them. That s what their church intends for them. By choosing baptism, Jesus chose to hold fast to God. And God was pleased.