According to
the church calendar, we have come to the end of the season of Christmas. Today
is the first Sunday in the season of Epiphany. The Season of Epiphany follows
the beginning of Jesus’ work of spreading the Good News. In today’s reading, we
focus on Jesus’ baptism – for us, baptism is the beginning of acceptance of
life as a Christian – for Jesus, baptism was the beginning of his work at the
messiah – Jesus’ debut as the Messiah.
Listen to how the Apostle Mark
describes Jesus baptism as we read from Mark chapter 1:
Scripture: Mark 1: 4-11
And so John the
Baptist appeared in the wilderness, preaching a baptism of
repentance for the forgiveness of sins.
The whole Judean
countryside and all the people of Jerusalem went out to him. Confessing their sins,
they were baptized by him in the Jordan River.
John wore clothing
made of camel’s hair, with a leather belt around his waist, and he ate
locusts and wild honey.
And this was his
message: “After me comes the one more powerful than I, the straps of whose
sandals I am not worthy to stoop down and untie.
I baptize you
with water, but he will baptize you with the Holy Spirit.”
At that time Jesus
came from Nazareth in Galilee and was baptized by John in the
Jordan.
Just as Jesus was
coming up out of the water, he saw heaven being torn open and the Spirit
descending on him like a dove.
And a voice came from
heaven: “You are my Son, whom I love; with you I am well pleased.”
Here ends the reading of the word of God for the
people of God. Thanks be to God. Amen.
Let us pray: May the words of my mouth and the
meditations of all of our hearts be acceptable in thy sight, O Lord, Our rock
and our redeemer. Amen.
Message Defining Moments
Monday was the first day of 2024. Many
of us slept in after staying up until at least midnight the night before to
welcome the New Year in and kiss 2023 good-bye.
When we start a New Year, many of us
make lists of our resolutions for the coming year. We list things we want to
change – often we strive to adopt new habits and pledge to take better care of
our bodies – we vow to drink less soda, go to the gym, purge our clutter, eat
healthy. Most of the time, our resolutions are personal – they are about fixing
things in our lives that only we have control over.
In the New Year, we also have the
opportunity to reflect about how things went for us in the past year and make
plans for improvement. This is the season when people are brushing off their
resumes, contacting travel agents, and starting their searches for new homes.
We feel the impetus to get things better in the New Year – to have a fresh
start.
We know very little about Jesus’
younger years. He was born in Bethlehem, was a refugee in Egypt, and returned
to the village of Nazareth after the death of King Herod when he was 5 or 6
years old. His family made a pilgrimage to Jerusalem when he was about 12. And,
then, crickets…crickets….until Jesus was about thirty years old.
John the Baptist is in the same boat.
We hear about his parents and their miraculous pregnancy. While Elizabeth was
still pregnant with John, Mary visited her. And then we don’t hear anything
about John’s childhood or youth. Many years later, he appears in the
wilderness, preaching a baptism of repentance for forgiveness of sins.
Both John and Jesus was led by God.
John was led to go out into the wilderness, wear simple and uncomfortable
clothing, and eat the food that was available in the wild: Locusts and sweet
wild honey.
God
lead John to preach and to call people to repent of their sins and be baptized.
The baptism symbolically washed away their sins so they could be released from
their pasts and move into their futures as forgiven people.
God led Jesus to be baptized. Jesus’
baptism was a restart—he was released from his past and able to move into his
work to preach, teach, and heal. God determined the time was right for John to
do his baptizing and for Jesus to begin his work. We don’t know about their
lives as young adults, we don’t know if they ever behaved in ways that were not
perfect….we can assume that even John, and possibly even Jesus, had things they
needed to repent for and ask God to forgive. And, God led them to come to the wilderness,
repent, and start over free to do the work God was calling them to do.
As we make our plans for the New Year,
and all of the positive changes we want to make, it is important that we also
listen to how God is directing us. We also may have things from our pasts that
we need to repent for -- things we wish we had done differently, mistakes we
made. God may be leading us to ask God to forgive us so that in the midst of
the changes and challenges of the new year, we can turn over a fresh leaf and start
anew.
John and Jesus didn’t wander out into
the wilderness alone – they were led by God. God is also leading and directing
us in our lives. We are not alone. God wants us to remember that there is
nothing we can do that is so horrible that God will not love and forgive us.
So, we can confess all of our sins, all of our blemishes, to God, and ask God
to forgive us. As forgiven believers, the weight of our pasts is lifted from
our shoulders. We can look towards the new year and know that we will do
better, we will be better, as we are directed by God to face the challenges and
opportunities ahead with clean slates.
Every day, we have the opportunity to
ask God to forgive our pasts failings and embrace new opportunities. God wants
us to remember we are loved, freed, and encouraged to become the kind of people
God wants us to be.
Let us do so with love in our hearts
today and all days. Amen.
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