Monday, January 14, 2013

Jesus is Eager to Get in Line The Baptism of Jesus Luke 3:15-17, 21-22



Picture a line of people with filled with expectations…think of the lines of people that waited to get into Times Square on New Year’s Eve.   Piper Fowler of our church is so excited about her upcoming trip to New York with the Kansas East Conference of the United Methodist Church.  The UN-DC Tour has blessed and changed the lives of many of us.  Penny and I both went on that trip on different years.  Mary Stamey and I went the same year.    It is a life-changing experience, to experience the centers of political and economic power and to reflect on them from a Christian perspective.  The visit to the Church Center for the United Nations and our United Methodist office just across the street from our nation’s Capitol Building is an enormous trill.  Throw in visits to those who represent us in Washington and a Broadway play…it is great.  She will come back and give us a report.

We all line up for ice cream, our favorite restaurants, sports events, weddings, plays, and concerts.  Penny and I recently lined up to see the movie, Les Miserables.  Along with Lincoln, it was one of the best movies I have seen.  But as we went into the theater, Penny and realized that we must be the only couple left on the planet that use cash.  I feel that sometimes when I go to some places and I hold out cash and see the frown.  But at the movies in Manhattan, cash is an advantage as there is a special line for “cash only.”  There were all of these lines of people and I walked around to the left and there was no one with cash and I got my ticket without waiting. 

People are always in line to buy things.   People in this story were lined up to get baptized by John the Baptist.   John, a relative of Jesus, was part of a movement to get people turned toward God.  With many things not going well, many people wanted to get closer to God.    John was happy to help with that but he pointed out that he was not the Savior; Jesus was that.  He was a helper to point people to Jesus.

One of the most remarkable parts of this is that Jesus was eager to get in line to be baptized by John.  And in that act he shows how eager he was, in all his ministry, to line up with people, all people, especially the downtrodden, the broken people who formed in lines hoping for a new beginning with God.  Jesus lines up with people who need God.  And for me that means me and you.

Leonard Sweet re-tells an ancient story about a gatekeeper at a city gate.  A traveler trying to find a new city in which to live appears out of the darkness.  The traveler approaches the gate asks what the city is like.  The gatekeeper does something strange.  He reverses the question and asks the traveler, “What was the city like where you came from?”  The man said, “I am moving on because the city charged terrible taxes and people were so selfish and mean.  It was awful. “   The gatekeeper said, “That is pretty much what you will find here, too.”  So the traveler went on to another city.  Another traveler appeared and the gatekeeper was asked again, what is this city like?  The gatekeeper again turned the tables.  What was your city like?   The traveler answered:  “It was great.  The neighbors were friendly, ready to help you.  The politicians worked hard to make sure life was good for all the citizens not just the rich business people.  I did not want to leave.  But my job ended.  The gatekeeper said, “That is pretty much what you will find here.”  And in he came. 

A great deal of life is what you see and expect to find. 

I ran across a new story this week that made me sad and shake my head.  It shows about human nature.  On Guernsey Island in the English Channel, a 29-year old Matthew Clark got in line for a fishing contest with a big cash prize.   He had visited the island’s aquarium and saw a 15 yr.-old sea bass, a huge fish, that he saw as his way to win.  He broke in stole the big fish and had plans to return the fish.  He hid the fish until the weigh-in. This monster won the prize.  Until….until….one of the other contestants recognized the fish as being the one in the aquarium.  He had just taken his family there and he recognized the fish with its unique markings.   After the contest was over he headed to the aquarium and sure enough the fish was missing.  The man had planned to return the fish after winning.  And to make it all worse the winner dropped the fish and it died from the injuries.  When the fish died he could not put it back, so he sold it to a fish market.  Police identified the fish from the remaining pieces.  The man charged with breaking and entering and theft and fraud confessed.  He turned in the prize money and is doing 100 hours of community service.  He confessed.  It is kind of silly story, but it shows something of human nature.  And people wrote to him on how stupid he was.  If he had just eaten the fish himself instead of selling it, there would be no evidence.  Two wrongs do not make a right.  You would think the aquarium keeper would have noticed!

Jesus knew people, and he got in line, to show his love for all of us, not just some.  Jesus is eager to get into line with the best and the worst.  I need that salvation as much as any.   A church is not filled with perfect people, nor necessarily the most respectable.   We sometimes think that way.  I know of one woman who has not attended church for years because of something her son did.  She feels like she is not worthy to come here.

We are hungry people who have found in this community spiritual food.  It is the Holy Spirit who nourishes us through community, spiritual growth, and compassion.

There has been, since the scriptures were written a controversy regarding why in the world Jesus was   I think he did so:
1.  Jesus was eager to teach us that baptism is a means of grace. 
He certainly was acknowledging that he was part of world that needed much change.  We as a global community have much to repent of. 

2.  He must have felt a great deal of connection with John.  Jesus agreed with John in wanting to put spiritual growth at the center of life.  Many people were crying out for the light of God and John wanted people to look in the right places.    John was a forerunner.  Jesus was thanking John for the hope he put into people and the preparation his made so that Jesus then be seen as the new life and new age of God’s spirit. 

3.  Jesus was showing us all God’s willingness to meet us where we are.   When you see Christ going to get in line, you see a great love going into a great redeeming act of claiming us, all humans.   The Lord of Glory goes wherever people have need.  He did not care what that did to his reputation.  He was doing God’s work.   He often sat with outcasts.  He stood beside them.    He made our trouble, his trouble, our burdens, his.  The only love which can ever have redeeming power is a love that goes out and connects with others.

George Fox said that for Jesus to be baptized, we see a sign of solidarity with people in every condition, every needs, every joy, and every sorrows of humankind. 

4.  Jesus received the blessing of God and then passes it on to us.  In the moment of the baptism, two things came….a voice and a vision.  The voice spoke to him out of heave and in the vision of the dive the Holy Spirit descended.  The voices was the call for which through many years Jesus had felt but not heard.  The call was for the work of his life….the Spirit empowered him for that work. …the answering of the call and the carrying it out. 

“Thou art my beloved…..in whom I am well pleased.”    That swept the last hesitation from Jesus’ soul and the messianic vocation was accepted.  And with this event came the vision, the power.  Visions give power. 

The Holy Spirit which first formed the earth was active here.  The Holy Spirit which fired up the prophets, blessed Jesus in a special way that day.  It focused his life and concentrated it into a power that carried him all the way through the cross to heaven.

5.  This event asks us to remember that we are able to bless one another.  We are able to live as a faith community in ways that communicate clearly:  GOD IS WELL PLEASED WITH YOU!  And often that comes at times when we cannot see that ourselves. 

I ran across a story this week about an older Jesuit priest who was asked to visit a Catholic Elementary School.   After a first grade classroom discussion, a girl came up for a closer greeting and handshake.   She was excited to greet him and to tell him she liked what he said and how he said.   He reminded each child how important they were to God.  She was in line and finally got her turn.  (It was kind of like being in line to see Santa.)  In their brief conversation, she suddenly realized that he was blind.  In a second she went from joy to sorrow.  She blurted out….you can’t see.  The priest confessed it.  And then she added, “You can’t see yourself.” He hardly knew what to say.  He could feel how perceptive she was.  He said, “I guess you are right.  I cannot see what I look like.”  She said, tentatively to the old priest in a whispered voice, “You are beautiful.”  The priest thanked her and left with a blessing.

None of us are able alone to see our beauty.  We need each other to remind us.

The Christian Faith is at the center joy and gratitude.   In our days of worry about safety from gun violence, more taxes, budget cuts, it is time to claim and celebrate God’s pleasure.   Grumping together will bind us together, but it will not lift up us up.  Jesus does that.

Les Miserables is a great movie and I hope you take time to see it.   As I have ready John Wesley’s writings and the great good he did in England, it can be argued that the Methodist created a system that prevented the violence of armed revolution.  John Wesley preached that all are equal; factory workers and royalty are the same in the eyes of God.  His societies instituted methods of care for those in prison and among the working people which civilized and cared for people.
John Wesley got it right John Wesley’s Rule

Do all the good you can,
By all the means you can,
In all the ways you can,
In all the places you can,
At all the times you can,
To all the people you can,
As long as ever you can.

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