What a busy few weeks it has been.
I hope you found some rest
to recuperate
from the Christmas hustle and bustle.
I am always grateful for vacation time,
to relax and restore,
to come back to work with renewed commitment
and the energy to do all the things
I have to do.
But I imagine I am not alone
in discovering that returning to work
after a vacation
is a bit surreal.
It always takes a minute
to remember the routines,
to remember the passwords,
to remember what it is I do on a Monday.
My desk looks like my life did
in December,
cluttered with delayed tasks
abandoned in the triage of looming deadlines,
a stack of old bulletins waiting to be recycled,
hastily written notes
that I’m sure made sense when I wrote them,
a cup of coffee I didn’t get the chance to finish.
And sitting at that desk again
I have a hard time trying to locate the renewed commitment
and restored energy
I thought I had found on vacation.
I imagine that the return to the classroom,
the shop,
the office,
the lab,
feels much the same.
What was that thing I was going to do?
What was that change I was going to make?
What was my resolution?
When is my next vacation?
I wonder too,
if we don’t approach worship
in much the same way.
I hope that your time here
in this place
or the time you spend with us online
is a source of renewal,
of inspiration.
I hope you find in this time together
a sense of connection
to God and to neighbor.
I hope you remember who you are
and whose you are
and take with you the resolve
to live a life of devotion and discipleship.
But I also wonder
if that inspiration,
renewal,
and devotion
is harder to remember
in the harsher reality
of overflowing inboxes,
looming deadlines,
impatient clients,
and traffic jams.
It makes me wonder too
if John the Baptist
ever questioned his work.
I wonder if
he ever found it difficult
to remember what drove him into the wilderness.
I wonder if he questioned his message,
his method,
standing for hours
in the murky waters of the Jordon,
in wet camel hair
with wrinkly toes
and a belly full of locusts,
baptizing repentant strangers.
I can imagine
his hope for the messiah
had as much to do
with finding some rest for himself
as some rescue for his people.
We hear echoes of his hope
in his question,
“I need to be baptized by you,
and do you come to me?”
I need you, Jesus.
I need a messiah
to come and fix all this.
I need a rescuer
to come and save us from Rome,
from ourselves.
I need to be reminded
that this work is not in vain,
that this work is accomplishing something
larger than me.
I need to know that my sacrifice
is seen,
is valued,
is effective.
I need to be baptized by you.
Why do you need to be baptized?
Theologians,
pastors,
preachers,
and parishioners
have been repeating John’s question
since he asked it.
If this Jesus is God
why does he come for a baptism of repentance?
Of what
does Jesus need to repent?
But I think this is the wrong question.
The church has spent some 20 centuries
defining, articulating, and proclaiming
one baptism for the forgiveness of sin.
We speak of a rite of initiation,
of inclusion.
Paul speaks of our old selves being buried with Christ
and raised with him to new life.
We speak so much and so often
of what baptism is and does
that we haven’t seen the forest for the trees.
Baptism is a rite on initiation.
Baptism does forgive our sins.
Baptism does unite us to Christ.
But this day to remember the Baptism of Jesus,
set here in this season
inaugurated by the Feast of the Epiphany,
invites us to see something less familiar to us
in the rite of baptism.
This season after Epiphany
is about encountering the mystery of incarnation,
about contemplating the union of God and matter,
the manifestation of God with us
in the person of Jesus, the Christ.
Baptism is about more than initiation or inclusion,
forgiveness or religious identity.
Our baptism is the beginning
of a new way of showing up in the world,
a new way of seeing
and encountering the world.
Jesus was baptized by John in the Jordon
to give us the gift of baptism,
a sacred mystery
that reveals the sacred mystery
at the heart of the universe—
the whole of creation
is a sacrament.
The whole world is a sacrament,
the union of matter and God’s very self.
And in this sacramental universe
we are each priests,
ministers of word and work.
No matter your vocation,
no matter your occupation,
you are the steward of a sacred mystery
in which God transforms your work
into a means of grace.
Your scrubs, lab coat, uniform;
your nametag, backpack, briefcase;
your sport coat, pants suit, apron
are all sacred vestments.
Your desk, work bench, hospital bed;
your countertop, stovetop, laptop;
your changing table, kitchen table, conference table;
each are a sacred altar
where you pour out yourself as an offering
and receive back nourishment in return.
What do not come to worship,
to the font or the altar,
to find a sacred mystery in the only place that it exists.
We come to worship,
to the font and the altar,
to learn to see this sacred mystery everywhere that it exists.
We should learn from these sacraments
to see that God in Christ,
revealed in the humble majesty of his birth,
proclaimed from heaven in his baptism,
is not a singularity in the story of the cosmos,
but a particularity
which exposes the deeper truth.
The incarnation is not limited to Jesus.
The incarnation is exposed in Jesus.
This is the Epiphany,
the revelation of God in Christ,
after which we begin to see the God in all things.
The whole cosmos is filled with God.
All creation emanates from God’s very being,
and is destined to return to this source.
This is what we mean by salvation.
Baptism is the proclamation that this human,
this sinner,
this mortal,
is also divine, a saint, immortal.
Creation is filled with the life and love of God.
Your life is filled with the life and love of God.
Your work is an extension of this Creation,
and your work too
is filled with the life and love of God.
We, like John the Baptist,
encounter the Christ in every patient,
client, customer;
in every student, parent, volunteer;
in every spouse, child, neighbor.
We, like John,
must approach our work as a sacred honor,
a humble privilege of service
to God’s very self.
This does not mean that Mondays won’t suck,
that customers won’t complain,
that inboxes won’t overwhelm us,
that babies won’t cry,
that we won’t get sick and tired
of standing in our private Jordons
wishing to be rescued.
It will mean that we begin to see the sacrifice
as unto God,
as part of a larger sacred mystery
as a holy privilege of humble service
in a world overflowing
with the life and love of God.
Amen.