Introduction: The
Baptism of the Lord is the great event celebrated by the
Eastern churches on the feast of Epiphany because it 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. Hence, it is
described by all four Gospels. It marks the beginning of
Jesus' public ministry. The Christmas season, celebrating the Self-revelation
of God through Jesus, comes to an end with the feast of the Baptism of Our
Lord. Christmas is the feast of God’s Self-revelation to the Jews, and Epiphany
celebrates God’s Self-revelation to the Gentiles. At his Baptism in the Jordan,
Christ reveals himself to repentant sinners. The liturgical season of Christmas
comes to a conclusion this Sunday with the celebration of the Baptism of the
Lord.
Homily
starter anecdote: #1: Leaders who
identified with their people: The film Gandhi is
a three-hour epic, depicting the life of Mahatma Gandhi in India. In order to
lead the oppressed people of India to freedom from British rule, Gandhi adopted
non-violent means such as fasting from food, vigils of prayer, peaceful
marches, protests and civil disobedience. One of the reasons why Gandhi put on
a loincloth and fasted from food, almost to the point of death, was to show
solidarity with the Indian people, identifying with them in their physical
sufferings. This finally brought independence to India. Rev. Martin
Luther King, too, identified with his enslaved and maltreated people and
became the voice of the voiceless in the name of God. Consequently, he was
maligned, beaten, jailed, and assassinated while he preached peace, justice and
non-violence on behalf of the downtrodden Afro-Americans in the U. S. His
heroic example definitely demonstrates Christian living for tens of millions of
the poor and alienated Afro- Americans in the U.S. and the oppressed millions
worldwide. To better appreciate his struggles against the sins of our culture,
particularly of our "Christian" clergy, you are invited to read Dr.
King's "Letter from a Birmingham Jail” readily available
on the internet (http://www.africa.upenn.edu/Articles_Gen/Letter_Birmingham.html). Jesus’
baptism, as described in today’s Gospel, was his identification with God’s
chosen people who became aware of their sinful lives and need for God’s
forgiveness. (http://frtonyshomilies.com/).
Exegesis: Origin
of baptism: Neither John nor Jesus invented baptism. It
had been practiced for centuries among the Jews as a ritual equivalent to our
Confession. Until the fall of the Temple in 70 AD, it was common for
Jewish people to use a special pool called a Mikveh --
literally a "collection of water" – as a means of spiritual
cleansing, to remove spiritual impurity and sin. Men took this bath
weekly on the eve of the Sabbath; women, monthly. Converts were also
expected to take this bath before entering Judaism. The Orthodox
Jews still retain the rite. John preached that such a bath was a necessary
preparation for the cataclysm that would be wrought by the coming
Messiah. Jesus transformed this continuing ritual into the one
single, definitive act by which we begin our life of Faith. In
effect, He fused His Divine Essence with the water and the ceremony.
A
couple of questions: 1) Why did Jesus, the sinless Son of
God, receive the "baptism of repentance" meant for
sinners? 2) Why did Jesus wait for thirty years to begin his public
ministry? The strange answer for the first question given
by the apocryphal book, The Gospel according to the Hebrews,
is that Jesus received the baptism of John to please his mother and
relatives. In this humble submission, we see a foreshadowing of
the “baptism” of his bloody death upon the
cross. Jesus’ baptism by John was the acceptance and the
beginning of his mission as God’s suffering Servant. He allowed
himself to be numbered among sinners. Jesus submitted himself
entirely to his Father’s will. Out of love, He consented to His baptism
of death for the remission of our sins. 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. The Jews had
the traditional belief that only the Gentiles who embraced Jewish religion
needed the baptism of repentance, for, as God's chosen people, the Jewish
race was holy. Jesus might have been waiting for this most
opportune moment to begin his public ministry. The Fathers of the
Church point out that the words which the Voice of the Heavenly Father speaks
are similar to Psalm 2:17, revealing Jesus’ identity ("This is My
beloved Son") and to Isaiah 42:1 referring to the "suffering
servant" ("with whom I am well pleased"),
revealing Jesus’ mission of saving mankind by His suffering and
death.
The
turning point: Jesus’ baptism by John was a mystical experience that
Jesus felt deep within his soul at the crucial turning point of his life. The
opening of the Heavens with Holy Spirit descending as a dove upon Jesus, and
the Voice declaring of Jesus, "This is My beloved Son with Whom I am well
pleased," are God's revelation to mankind of the Mystery that He is
Triune. The presence of the Triune God at this baptism, reveals
Jesus’ true identity and mission. The Heavens’ opening also indicates
that this was a moment of God’s powerful intervention in human history and in
the life of His Son. His baptism by John was a very important event in the life
of Jesus. First, it was a moment of decision. It
marked the end of Jesus' private life, which had prepared him for his
public ministry. Second, it was a moment of identification with
his people in their God-ward movement initiated by John the Baptist (quality of
a good leader). Third, it was a moment of approval. Jesus
might have been waiting for a signal of approval from his Heavenly Father, and
during his baptism Jesus got this approval of himself as the Father's
"beloved Son." Fourth, it was a moment of conviction. At
this baptism, Jesus received certainties (assurances) from Heaven about
his identity and the nature of his mission: a) He was the "Chosen
One" and the "beloved Son of God"; b) his mission of saving
mankind would be fulfilled, not by conquering the Romans, but by becoming the
"suffering servant" of God, i.e., by the
cross. Fifth, it was a moment of equipment. When
He descended on Jesus in the form of a dove (symbol of gentleness), the Holy
Spirit equipped Jesus with the power of healing, and that of preaching the
"Good News" -- that God is a loving Father, Who wants to save
all human beings from their sins through His Son Jesus, in contrast to the
"axe" and "fire" preaching of John the Baptist about an
angry God's judgment on sinners.
Life
messages: 1) The baptism of Jesus reminds us of our identity and mission. First,
it reminds us of who we are and Whose we are. By
Baptism we become the adoptive sons and daughters of God, brothers and sisters
of Jesus, members of his Church, heirs of Heaven and temples of the Holy
Spirit. We become incorporated into the Church, the Body of Christ, and
made sharers in the priesthood of Christ [CCC #1279]. Hence,
"Baptism is the basis of the whole Christian life, the gateway to life in
the Spirit and the door which gives access to the other Sacraments" (Catechism
of the Catholic Church, #1213). Most of us dipped the
fingers of our right hand into the holy water font and blessed ourselves when
we came into Church today. Why? 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.
2)
Jesus’ baptism reminds us of our mission: a) to experience
the presence of God within us, to acknowledge our own dignity as God’s
children and to appreciate the Divine Presence in others by honoring them,
loving them and serving them in all humility; b) to live
as the children of God in thought, word and action so that our
Heavenly Father may say to each one of us what He said to Jesus: "You are
My beloved son/daughter with whom I am well pleased.” It means that we are
to let His thoughts direct our thoughts, His mind control our mind, His
concerns be our concerns. In the Church we all share the same
intimate connection with Christ; we are all brothers and sisters in
Christ; c) to lead a holy and transparent Christian life and
not to desecrate our bodies (the temples of the Holy Spirit and
members of Jesus' Body) by impurity, injustice, intolerance, jealousy or
hatred; d) to accept both the good and the bad experiences
of life as the gifts of a loving Heavenly Father for our growth in
holiness; e) to grow daily in intimacy with God by
personal and family prayers, by reading the Word of God, by participating in
the Holy Mass, and by frequenting the Sacrament of Reconciliation; and f) to
be co-creators with God in building up the “Kingdom of God” on earth, a
Kingdom of compassion, justice and love, and to be the salt of the
earth and the light of the world. In other words, He has called us
to help others to see, through the love that we show and the help that we give,
that God loves them, that He also invites them to be His sons and daughters and
that He wants to be their helper and strength through all the troubles that
life in this world can bring.
3) This
is the day for us to remember the graces we have received in Baptism
and to renew our Baptismal promises: 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." This is also a day for
us to renew our Baptismal promises, consecrating ourselves to the Holy Trinity
and “rejecting Satan and all his empty promises," which our profane world
is constantly offering us through its mass-media of
communication. Let us ask Our Lord today to make us faithful to our
Baptismal promises. Let us thank Him for the privilege of being
joined to His mission of preaching the "Good News" by our transparent
Christian lives of love, mercy, service and forgiveness.
Exegetical
notes on today’s scripture readings
First
Reading, optional in year C: Isaiah 40:1-5, 9-11
The
people of Israel spent sixty years in exile, as captives of the Babylonians,
from about 600 BC to 540 BC. The second part of the book of Isaiah, chapters
40-55, prophesies the end of this Exile and the return of the captives to their
homeland. Today's first reading begins that section. Isaiah says that God has
told him to tell the exiled citizens of Jerusalem that their
"sentence" is at an end or their exile is over. Isaiah’s prophecy
reminds them plainly that the Exile was a punishment for their sins, but tells
them that the merciful God has forgiven them. The next few sentences of
today’s reading describe how the exiles are to return home. They will return as
a grand religious procession from Babylon to Jerusalem led by their own God. To
pave the way, valleys and mountains are to be leveled, and a highway created in
the wilderness. The exiles in the region are coming back to Judah, and within
Judah, to the city of Jerusalem, and within Jerusalem, to the hill Zion where
their Temple had stood. The last paragraph presents a lonely sentry who never
went to Babylon but waited in Jerusalem, always looking out for the return of
the exiles. He finally sees the approach of the procession described above, and
he can't contain his joy. He shouts it from the highest hill, "Here
comes your God with power!"
Second
reading: Titus 2:11-14; 3:4-7: The
author of this letter wants his Christian followers to behave properly, not to
earn God's love, but in response to that love freely given. The birth of
Jesus, the wise men’s discovery of him, Jesus’ baptism and his coming again in
glory are all treated in Scripture and in our liturgy as unexpected appearances
(Epiphanies) of God among us. So, the Letter to Titus applies to our Baptism
the themes of Divine appearance and the outpouring of the Holy Spirit, which is
borrowed from Jesus' own baptism. Today’s selection combines two sections, both
of which we recently read at Christmas, one at midnight and one at dawn. In
this passage, St. Paul teaches how God saves us by incorporating us into
Christ. Among the congregation served by the early bishop Titus were Christians
who believed they had to practice the laws of Judaism and tried to impose those
laws on pagan converts to Christ. Paul reminds them that God saved us "not
because of any righteous deeds we had done, but because of His mercy." In
other words, those law-driven righteous deeds don't win our salvation, but God
gives it freely. We accept that gift by taking the bath of rebirth, when the
Spirit is richly poured out on us. It is this, not our observance of laws, that
makes us justified (right with God) and that give us the hope of eternal life.
Gospel
exegesis: Who baptized Jesus and why? While
there is no doubt that John baptized Jesus in Mark’s Gospel, he does it
reluctantly in Matthew’s Gospel (3:13-17), and he’s already locked up in prison
in Luke’s Gospel (3:20). There is no portrayal of John baptizing Jesus in
John’s Gospel; all we have is the testimony of the Baptizer (1:29-34). Because
each evangelist after Mark, commonly accepted as the oldest Gospel, tries to
tone down or erase Jesus’ baptism by John, we must conclude that the event
caused a problem near the end of the first century because many were saying
that John must be the greater, since he did the baptizing. By gradually
removing John from the scene, Matthew and Luke elevate Jesus. But there is
little doubt that John the Baptist baptized Jesus; if he hadn’t, Matthew and
Luke wouldn’t have rewritten Mark’s story. Jesus presents himself for John’s
baptism in today’s Gospel, not because he is a sinner, but to fulfill the word
of God proclaimed by His prophets. He must be baptized to reveal that he is the
Christ (“anointed one”) - the Spirit-endowed Servant. “In Baptism, all are
anointed with that same Spirit, made beloved sons and daughters of God. Indeed,
we are Christians - literally “anointed ones.” (Scott Hann).
“Let
it be so now; for it is proper for us in this way to fulfil all righteousness” 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. Or it may be that even the Messiah could undergo a
re-orientation towards perfect righteousness, and so could repent and be
baptized.
“This
is my Son, the Beloved, with whom I am well pleased” Mark
and Luke have the words addressed to Jesus, “You are my Son….” But
Matthew’s “This is my Son” makes the words relevant to the
bystanders because they are an open testimony to the Father’s approval of his
Son … and we should view “Son” as a Messianic title. The Heavenly Voice points
to a relationship shared by no other. It is significant, it is “good news,”
that Jesus hears he is the “beloved Son, with whom [God] is well pleased”
before his public ministry begins. The Heavenly Father is much pleased
with his Son's humble submission and speaks audibly and directly to him for all
to hear: “You are my beloved Son, with you I am well pleased.” The
Holy Spirit, too, is present as Jesus submits to John's baptism. The Holy
Spirit anoints Jesus for his ministry which begins that day as Jesus rises from
the waters of the Jordan River.
Significance
of Christ’s baptism: This exalted identity
of the “Son of God” revealed at his baptism is the starting point for all that
Jesus will undertake—his self-giving ministry, death and Resurrection. It is
because Jesus knows Who he is that he does as he does. As we begin Ordinary
Time, we do so knowing that, in our own Baptism, God has named us beloved sons
and daughters. 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. 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's 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.” Each time we dip our hand into the
Holy Water font in a church to bless ourselves, we need to remember, that act
is a renewal of our Baptism. Just like Jesus at the Jordan, every baptized believer
is formed and called by God, empowered with the presence of the Spirit and
elevated as a beloved child of God on whom God’s favor rests.
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