Sunday, January 12, 2025

The Baptism of our Lord

The Baptism of our Lord (obs.) – January 12, 2025
Psalm 89; Isaiah 25:1; 26:11a; 28:5a, 2b, 10a; 41:18a, a; 52:13b; 12:3-5; Ephesians 1:13b-18
St. Matthew 3:13-17

In the Name of the Father, and of the + Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.

In the season following the Epiphany of our Lord, the Church pays special attention to the miracles of our Lord. This is recognizing the connection between Christmas and Epiphany. At Christmas, we celebrate that God has become man. At Epiphany, we celebrate that this man is God. He is one man with two natures – True God and True Man.

It might be a little strange to think of the Baptism of our Lord as one of His miracles, but it is. And I’m not talking just about the revelation of the three Persons of the Holy Trinity, though these are the clearest words of Scripture on that point. The Son rises from the waters. The Holy Spirit descends from heaven as a dove and alights upon the Son, anointing Him, setting Him apart for His work of salvation. The Father opens the heavens and says, “This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased.”[1]

Our Lord’s baptism is a miracle because by it, He is sanctifying all waters to be used for your baptism. His baptism is not for the remission of His own sins, He doesn’t have any. His baptism is a baptism into your sins, that they would be placed on Him. This also has the effect of making your baptism powerful. In your baptism, your sins are taken away. In Jesus’ baptism, your sins are placed upon Him. If you imagine your sins as dirt and muck clinging to a washcloth, all that dirt and muck is washed away in your baptism. Christ, the perfect and clean washcloth, is baptized into that dirty water to soak up all the muck and take it upon Himself. You arise from the waters pure and clean. He arises bearing your sins. The miracle of your baptism is the miracle of our Lord’s Baptism.

So then, what is Holy Baptism? It “is not simple water only, but it is the water comprehended in God’s command and connected with God’s word.”[2] Though the image of a dirty washrag being made clean is helpful, Holy Baptism is not just a bath. It is not the removal of dirt from the body. It is a sacrament, that is, God’s word combined with a physical element (in this case water) and used according to God’s command. That command comes at the end of St. Matthew’s Gospel, “Go ye and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost.”[3] Holy Baptism is therefore the rite of initiation into the Body of Christ. It is the means by which Christ brings sinners into the Church, into His Body.

But what does it do? Or, what benefit is there to Holy Baptism? “It works forgiveness of sins, delivers from death and the devil, and gives eternal salvation to all who believe this, as the words and promises of God declare.”[4] Holy Baptism forgives the sins of the baptized. It takes the sinner, born a citizen of the kingdom of satan, and grants him citizenship in the Kingdom of Heaven. It takes a son of this world and makes him a son of God, marking him as an heir of eternal life, giving him a share in the inheritance of all that Christ has done.

This is a great treasure and should be prized by all who would bear the name of Christ. When satan rears his ugly head and tempts you to despair, it is good to remember the suffering and death of Christ on your behalf. But satan is an expert in temptation. He will tempt you to question if what Christ has done is good enough for you, or if you are good enough for Christ. For that reason, look to your baptism. There can be no question that you are baptized. You have had the waters of forgiveness poured out upon you. You have been baptized into Christ and no amount of suffering can take that away. You have been baptized into the suffering, death, and resurrection of Christ. Of this you can be absolutely certain.

And if you have been baptized into Christ, then He is good enough for you. No matter what wicked things satan might whisper, it can never overcome the voice of the Father, “You are my beloved child, in whom I am well pleased.” If you are baptized into Christ and the Father has said these words of Him, then He has said them of you as well. He says them at every Holy Baptism, even if our mortal ears are too weak to hear the sound.

How can water, plain water drawn from the tap, do such great things, deliver you from death and the devil and forgive your sins? “It is not the water indeed that does them, but the word of God which is in and with the water, and faith, which trusts such word of God in the water.”[5] Holy Baptism is not our work. It is not my work, even if I am the one saying the words and pouring the water. Holy Baptism is the work of God who, through His word, is tying Himself to the water. Through the Word of God, this water becomes “a gracious water of life and a washing of regeneration in the Holy Ghost.”

Now, even this miraculous work of God must be received. It is received by faith. At the same time that Holy Baptism bestows this faith, it is faith which receives the benefit of this glorious sacrament. This means that the baptized must continually be nurtured by the Word of God. The forgiveness of sins and deliverance from death and the devil cannot be taken away from faith but faith itself can be abandoned. The mighty ship of Holy Baptism is unsinkable, but we have the ability to jump ship if we prefer the things of this world to the Word of God. While Holy Baptism is a miraculous working of God, it is not a once-and-done, get out of hell free card. Using baptism according to the command of God necessarily includes a lifetime of learning. “Go ye and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost.”

The gift of Holy Baptism is for you, your children, and your grandchildren but it also necessary that you, your children, and your grandchildren continue to hear the Word of God, receive the forgiveness of sins, learn and grow in and into the things of God. Holy Baptism grants the baptized of any age everything necessary for salvation, but the slothful ignoring of your baptism is to despise your baptism. Satan is a crafty deceiver and will spend every day of your life tempting you away from the Word of God which has been joined to you in Holy Baptism. Don’t give him the upper hand by refusing to hear and receive that Word.

And when I say hear, I don’t mean sitting in the pew and letting the sound reverberate against your eardrums without entering your heart. The teaching connected to Holy Baptism is something that must continually work on your heart, mind, and soul. If at the end of the year, you are unchanged by the Word of God, from the youngest of you to the oldest, then you have prevented the Word of God from working on you. You have prevented the very faith into which you were baptized from acting upon your soul. Now is the time to return to your baptism. Now is the time to repent of your sloth and indifference to the Word of God and return to your baptism as a little child, hearing the things of God and receiving from Him the forgiveness of your sins.

And as the Baptized, such repentance will always result in the forgiveness of sins. That is why we are here. No one within these walls is without sin. We do not come here to receive forgiveness as a license to do whatever we want. We do not come to receive forgiveness as though it was something we are owed. We come to receive forgiveness as repentant sinners who know the cost of our sin. We see our sin and want to be free from it. We see that our sin has again stained the waters of Holy Baptism and that the Son of God, motivated by His great love for us, has taken that sin upon Himself and died for it. Hating sin and seeing the sacrifice of Christ, we gather in remembrance of His great mercy, humbly begging for that which is not our own – eternal life and salvation.

In this humility, we find confidence that what we ask for has been given to us. Though none of us deserves it, Christ our Lord sanctified the waters of the Jordan and all water to be a life- giving flood. He descended into the waters of Holy Baptism that we might rise to a new life. Holy Baptism “signifies that the Old Adam in us should, by daily contrition and repentance, be drowned and die with all sins and evil lusts and, again, a new man daily come forth and arise, who shall live before God in righteousness and purity forever.”[6]

The life of the Baptized is a combination of humility and confidence. We humbly recognize that we do not deserve a moment of God’s time, let alone His grace and mercy. We also are confident that He has had mercy on us and graciously poured out His blood on the cross that we might die to sin and rise to new life. In Holy Baptism, you have received the Holy Body and Precious Blood of Jesus, wrapped around you in a glorious robe of white. Humbly approach His throne of grace, confident that you are counted among the righteous—not by your own virtues, but by the Blood of Jesus, as a baptized child of God.

In + Jesus’ name. Amen.



[1] St. Matthew 3:17.

[2] Martin Luther, Small Catechism, IV:1.

[3] St. Matthew 28:19.

[4] Small Catechism, IV:2.

[5] Small Catechism, IV:3a.

[6] Small Catechism, IV:4.

No comments:

Post a Comment

The Second Sunday after the Epiphany

 The Second Sunday after the Epiphany – January 19, 2025 Psalm 66; Amos 9:11-15; Romans 12:6-16a St. John 2:1-11 In the Name of the Fa...