To read the texts click on the texts: Isa 42:1-4,6-7; Acts 10:34-38; Mt 3:13-17
The feast of the Baptism
of the Lord brings to an end the Christmas season. That the Baptism of Jesus
was historical is doubted by almost no one today. The reasons for this are not
merely because it is an event that is narrated by all the Synoptic Gospels, but
mainly because despite the fact that Matthew and Luke are struggling to narrate
the event of the baptism of Jesus by John the Baptist, they do narrate it in
their Gospels. While Mark states quite unambiguously that Jesus was baptized by
John in the Jordan (Mk. 1:9); Luke will have John the Baptist in prison
(Lk.3:19) before the baptism of Jesus (Lk.3:21) and does not state explicitly
who baptized Jesus. Matthew is careful not to have John the Baptist preach a
baptism for the “forgiveness of sins” and alone adds a dialogue between Jesus
and John to stress both Jesus’ superiority and that John baptized Jesus only
after Jesus allowed him to do so and in order “to fulfill all righteousness”.
The three events that
occurred at the baptism of Jesus are mentioned by all three Synoptic Gospels
but with some differences. In Matthew “the heavens were opened”, which could be
an indication that communication between God and humans is being reestablished
in a new way. Others see it as referring to the prayer of Isaiah for God to
“rend the heavens and come down” (Is 64:1). The splitting of the heavens
enables the Spirit of God to come down, and descend on Jesus like a dove.
This could mean either an approval of
the event by God through his Spirit or even that in Jesus the whole people of
God as represented by the Spirit are being anointed. The third event is the
climax and gives the meaning to the other two and to the baptism itself. Unlike
in Mark and Luke where the voice addresses Jesus, in Matthew, the voice speaks in
the third person and so reveals to the listeners that Jesus is both beloved Son
and servant. This revelation brings out the paradox of the event. On the one
hand Jesus is manifested as the beloved Son and king through the quotation of
Ps 2:7 (This is my beloved Son)while on the other hand he is also manifested as
servant and slave in the same event through the quotation from Is. 42:1 (with
whom I am well pleased). As a matter of fact, it is through his being slave and
servant, through his passion and death on the cross and through his coming up
out of the waters of death that he becomes king and beloved son.
This paradoxical
manifestation then is the focus of the readings and of the Baptism. The
mysterious prophetic figure that Isaiah speaks about in the first reading of
today in the first of the four servant songs is clearly in Matthew, Jesus
himself. He will fulfill the prophecy of Isaiah in every single aspect. He will
bring forth God’s justice to all and in an unobtrusive quiet way. He will make
the broken whole. His manner will be gentle, and he will be respectful of
others especially the weak and will not give in to discouragement or despair. He
will accomplish his mission.
This manner of Jesus is
what Peter highlights in his speech to Cornelius and his household in which he
summarizes Jesus’ life and mission. Jesus, God’s anointed, “went about doing
good and healing all that were oppressed”.
This is also the paradox
that we who are baptized are faced with. On the one hand we are privileged
through baptism to be called God’s chosen people, a people set apart and sealed
with his Holy Spirit, but on the one hand we are also called to show forth this
fact in our lives through our imitation of Christ. We are given through our
baptism a mission by God himself, just as Jesus received. Seen in this manner,
our baptism is not merely an event that occurred years ago and once for all but
is a daily dying and rising to new life. It is a call to respond daily with
life to the numerous deaths that take place around us. It is a call to respond
with courage and hope to the fear and despair that is around us. It is a doing
something every day as a sign of what we have already received.
Yet it is also true that
for many of us the sacrament of baptism that we received is just another
theoretical expression of our faith. We do not live this out in our lives. This
is possibly why after the Baptism of his baby brother in church, little Johnny
sobbed all the way home in the back seat of the car. His father asked him three
times what was wrong. Finally, the boy replied, "That priest said he
wanted us brought up in a Christian home, but I want to stay with you.”
John F Kennedy’s famous
saying can be amended to read, “Ask not what your Church can do for you;
rather, ask what you must do for your Church.”
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