BAPTISMOF
THE LORD [C] (Is 40:1-5, 9-11; Ti 2:11-14, 3:4-7; Lk 3:15-16, 21-22)
The child Jesus
whom the magi proclaimed last week as the prince of Jews, has grown to manhood
and respectability, and reaches that place in life when He must embark on the
Divine commission entrusted to Him by the Father. The baptism of Jesus is
the occasion of the first public revelation of all the Three Persons in
the Holy Trinity, and the official revelation of Jesus as the Son of God to the
world by God the Father. The liturgical season of Christmas comes to a
conclusion this Sunday with the celebration of the Baptism of the Lord.
Why did
Jesus get baptized? What this means has prompted much debate. It may be that
Jesus was “fulfilling” all the scriptural prophecies about him which focused on
“righteousness.” It may be that he was seen as validating the rite of baptism
for all future generations of Christians.
Many Fathers
of the Church explain that Jesus received John’s baptism to identify himself
with his people, who, as a result of John's preaching, for the first time in
Jewish history became aware of their sins and of their need for repentance. For
those onlookers who had been wondering if John the Baptist were the Messiah,
all doubt is removed, with the heaven’s voice, declaring Jesus as the Chosen of
God.
According to
the Navarre Bible commentary, in Christ's baptism we can find a reflection
of the way the Sacrament of Baptism affects a person. Christ's baptism was the
exemplar of our own. In it the mystery of the Blessed Trinity was revealed, and
the faithful, on receiving Baptism, are consecrated by the invocation of and by
the power of the Blessed Trinity. Similarly, Heaven’s opening signifies that
the power, the effectiveness, of this Sacrament comes from above, from God, and
that the baptized have the road to Heaven opened up for them, a road which
Original Sin had closed. Jesus' prayer after his baptism teaches us that
"after Baptism man needs to pray continually in order to enter Heaven; for
though sins are remitted through Baptism, there still remains the inclination
to sin which assails us from within, and also the flesh and the devil which
assails us from without.”
As we begin
Ordinary Time today, we are called to reflect on our own baptism. Like Jesus, all that we undertake must flow
from who we are—God’s beloved. We are called to follow in the footsteps of
our Savior, Jesus Christ. This means that we, too, must humbly submit
ourselves to God's wise and loving plan for our lives. He, in turn,
anoints us with the Holy Spirit that we may be clothed with His power and
grace.
On the day
of our Baptism, as Pope St. John Paul II explains, "We were anointed with
the Oil of Catechumens, the sign of Christ's gentle strength, to fight against
evil. Blessed water was poured over us, an effective sign of interior
purification through the gift of the Holy Spirit. We were
then anointed with Chrism to show that we were thus consecrated
in the image of Jesus, the Father's Anointed One. The candle lighted from
the Paschal Candle was a symbol of the light of Faith which our
parents and godparents must have continually safeguarded and nourished with the
life-giving grace of the Spirit
Baptism
makes us a new creation, renewing or improving upon our natural life with
supernatural life. We are recreated in a new mould that is Jesus Christ.
A little
girl was sitting on her grandfather’s lap as he read her a bedtime story. From
time to time, she would take her eyes off the book and reach up to touch his
wrinkled cheek. She was alternately stroking her own cheek, then his again.
Finally she spoke up, "Grandpa, did God make you?"
"Yes,
Sweetheart," he answered, "God made me a long time ago."
"Oh,"
she paused, "Grandpa, did God make me too?"
"Yes,
indeed, honey," he said, "God made you just a little while ago."
Feeling
their respective faces again, she observed, "God’s getting better at it,
isn’t he?"
She is
right. God renewed the old creation by giving new life to everything in Christ
his Son.
Baptism also
gives us new orientation. An ancient Chinese proverb advises: “If we do not
change our direction, we are likely to end up where we are headed.” In baptism
we are helped to reorient ourselves to God, as before baptism we are by default
oriented to sin and away from God.
In
baptism we get our identity exchanged with that of Christ. French writer Henri
Barbusse (1874-1935) tells of a conversation overheard in a trench full of
wounded men during the First World War. One of the men, who knew he only had
minutes to live says to one of the other men, "Listen, Dominic, you've led
a very bad life. Everywhere you are wanted by the police. But there are no
convictions against me. My name is clear, so, here, take my wallet, take my
papers, my identity, take my good name, my life and quickly, hand me your
papers that I may carry all your crimes away with me in death."
The
Good News is that through Jesus, God makes a similar offer. When we are
baptized, we identify ourselves with Jesus. We publicly declare our intention
to strive to be like Jesus and follow God's will for our lives. When we are
baptized, our lives are changed. We see things differently than before. We see
other people differently than before. We are able to identify with Jesus
because He was baptized. Such identification is life changing.
The feast of
the Baptism of our Lord serves to remind us of our own Baptisms, compelling us
to renew the promises our parents and godparents made on our behalf, when they
presented us to the Church, to make of us disciples of Jesus. Most of us dipped
the fingers of our right hand into the holy water font and blessed ourselves
when we came into Church today. This blessing is supposed to remind
us of our Baptism. And so when I bless myself with Holy Water, I should be
thinking of the fact that I am a child of God; that I have been
redeemed by the Cross of Christ; that I have been made a member of
God’s family and that I have been washed, forgiven, cleansed
and purified by the Blood of the Lamb. As this feast help us to
remind us of our baptism, may it help us to live the commitments we or our
godparents made for us before the Church and God.
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