Luke 3:15-17, 21-22
Does this man make you want to jump right in? |
I'm going to
say it right at the get go: John the Baptist is scary. Every time John the
Baptist comes into a narrative in the Gospels, he seems to be condemning people
left and right, calling people broods of vipers, and making scary threats. Not to
mention the fact that he's usually described as eating next to nothing and
wearing an odd assortment of clothes. I don't know about you, but he's just not
the reassuring picture of someone who was sent to preach good news.
John's
purpose in this story, and in general, is to prepare the way for the Messiah.
That is John's calling. How does he do this? He tells the people that they must
repent of their sins and be ready for Jesus. As scary as John seems, the verses
right before our passage today are ones of hope. When asked what the people
must do to repent, John's requirement is basic: share with one another and treat
each other with the respect that is due to you. Does this sound familiar, maybe
like something Christ would say? John fulfills his calling by preaching the
good news that Christ would continue. Enter Jesus for his baptism.
The passage says that the Holy Spirit descended
in bodily form as a dove and God spoke directly to Jesus. Now, if that is not a
sign from above, I do not know what is! This is
where we get to see the calling of Jesus, and how appropriate that it happens
right after his baptism. As Jesus prays, God says, "You are my Son. You
are beloved, with you I am well pleased." This is God's way of calling
Jesus. This is God's way of affirming that Jesus is, in fact, the Messiah and
that he will be the salvation of all.
But this was
not just a gentle affirmation. This was a calling. This was going to be the toughest thing CHrist had ever done. Jesus left from this baptism
to be tempted in the wilderness, to be rejected by his community, and,
eventually, to his death on a cross. Being claimed as the Son of God meant that
Jesus was being led to his ministry, and the Holy Spirit was evidence of God’s
presence in the midst of all of this.
A call is as
true for us as it was for Jesus. Our baptism may not have looked the same, but in our baptism we are also claimed by
God. God says to us, "You are my beloved, with you I am well pleased." When we
are claimed as children of God, this in itself is a kind of calling. We are
called to live lives that witness to this gift of grace. I guess the big
question, and the one that it seems like we all ask ourselves is “How do we
figure out what God is calling us to be?”
Jesus
demonstrates one way in this passage. After his baptism, he prays to God. He
takes time to consider his heavenly Father. This is when God speaks to him in
Luke. It is through prayer that Jesus hears God’s call and it is during prayer
that the Holy Spirit becomes a force in his life.
I truly
believe that prayer is a way for us to discern God’s call for our lives. Just
this last week I emailed someone to ask them to participate in an activity
because I believed she was well suited for it. Her response was, “I’m not
really sure that I’m well suited for this. I really need to pray about it.” I
thought that was such an incredible answer. She took the time to turn to God
and ask God, “Is this really something you are calling me to do? Is this how
you want me to share your love?”
She really
struggled with the situation. But she described it as a sense of peace that
settled over her when she decided to follow this call.
Another way
that I think we follow God’s call for our lives is described by theologian and
Presbyterian pastor Frederick Buechner. He describes answering a call as taking
up our vocation. He says that the place that God calls us to is where our deep
gladness and the world’s deep hunger meet. I would describe our deep gladness
as our passions, the things we find important, the things in which we find true
meaning and enjoyment.
This is how
we follow the guidance of the Holy Spirit. The Spirit calls to us and creates
within us deep passions which fuel and motivate us. By following these things
which make us truly happy, we find fulfillment in the things that we do which have
an impact on those around us. This is how we follow God’s call. And it all
starts with baptism.
Scripture
gives us a neat image to think of the Spirit’s guidance in our lives. John the
Baptist talks about the winnowing fork and the wheat and the chaff. All of this
seems somewhat foreign to us, but it is a cool image. A winnowing fork was
basically like a pitch fork. The farmer wanted to separate useful wheat from
the useless husks and straw. So the farmer would toss all of the grain up in
the air, and the wind would blow the lighter chaff separate from the heavier grain. This way, the useful wheat could be separated and stored.
This reminds
me of the movement of the Spirit in our lives. It is the Spirit’s movement in
our lives that separates our calling, or deep passion. It is only through the
blowing of the Spirit that we are able to discern what is most important to us.
And this movement starts with baptism.
As I have
been thinking and reading about baptism, I came across a story. I don’t
remember who told the story, but we will call her Delpha. Delpha tells the
story of her baptism in a pond near their church. Being a Baptist, this
particular baptism involved full immersion when she was a teenager. She and the
others who were being baptized went down to the river with white robes on
symbolizing being washed clean of sin in the waters of baptism, the cleansing
power of God’s grace. Well the pastors were in the pond dipping people as they
came into the water and then sending them back out. And Delpha started to
notice something about the people as they came out. People went in with white
robes on, and came out covered in mud, stinking to high heavens. Turns out the
pond that this church used happened to also be a pond with a pleasant mixture
of mud and manure as it was frequented by livestock. This seems like an
unfortunate location for a baptism.
So the
people would go in all white, the pastor would say, “I baptize you in the name
of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit,” and dip them under the water.
They would emerge sputtering and covered in mud. When it was Delpha’s turn she
wadded into the pond making that squelching sound your feet make when they sink
down in the mud and you have to pull real hard to pry them out. The pastor said
the words and dipped her under the water, she came out sputtering with her
white robe covered in nasty, smelly mud.
I can just
imagine all of these newly baptized people walking out of this little pond
covered in mud thinking, “This does not look the way I thought it was going to!
What did I sign up for?”
But I think
this is such a cool image for baptism. The people baptized in that pond that
day were being (fingers) “washed clean” from sin. Yet when they came out of the
waters, they were anything but clean. When Jesus emerged from his baptism, he
emerged into a world that would condemn and kill him. When we emerge from our
baptism, the call that we hear is not to a world that is bleached and starched
and pearly white. It is not to a world that is perfect. We emerge from baptism
and we are called to service for the Lord in a world that is covered in mud. A
world that is filled with brokenness, mistrust, sadness and sorrow. We are called into a world where the hurts seem
endless and the pain can feel even worse.
But, we are
called.
None of
these things are a surprise to us. We are not surprised that there is so much
wrong with the world, and the hope that we find is that God’s Spirit descends.
God calls us beloved and issues our call. In fact, I think we know that God has
called us, in part, because the world is such a broken place. God has called us
because the broken world needs us.
I have a
confession: I am a Lord of The Rings fan. It is a wonderful fantasy series
written by J.R.R. Tolkien. I remember a quote by Gandalf, a character of wisdom
in the book, in response to the despair of a broken world. Another character
says to him, “I wish that none of this had happened.” Gandalf says, “So do all
who live to see such times. But that is not for them to decide. All we have to
decide is what to do with the time that is given to us.”
This is how
we answer God’s call, by deciding to follow the guidance of the Spirit and by
working for change in the world.
And so I ask
you, what are your deepest passions? Where do they meet the deepest hunger, the
deepest needs of this world? Where are you called to do God’s work?
May we
encounter God in our prayer and in our lives. May God’s Spirit descend upon us
as a dove creating within us a deep passion to live out God’s love. And may we
go from this place, a people hearing and following God’s call in every way.
Amen.
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