Sunday, January 10, 2016

Holy Spirit Baptism by Cheri Holdridge (with an assist by Kurt Young)



There is a new film out called Brooklyn, based on a book by the same name. Brooklyn is the story of a young Irish girl, Ellis Lacey, who leaves her family and her village in Ireland and immigrates all alone to the United States. She has never traveled, never done anything risky, never been away from her family, and she goes off on this adventure to find a better life in Brooklyn. She does this because she has more opportunities in Brooklyn, economically, socially and spiritually. 

Nancy Rockwell writes that Brooklyn offers Ellis the promises of Advent: love, joy, hope and peace (source: http://www.patheos.com/blogs/biteintheapple/learning-to-swim-in-holiness/). But Ellis must die to her old self in order to live into those promises. She has to take on a new look in order to get a job. She has to be more assertive in order to keep that job. She has to be out-going and talk to strangers as a shop girl. This puts her way out of her element. She has a chance at love with a young Italian man but this means she must adjust to the ways of a boisterous Italian family with strange foods and customs. 

Then she has to make peace with her mother and with leaving Ireland behind. Rockwell writes: “Brooklyn is a baptism for Ellis Lacey, and it is not a splash, it is a long learning to swim in strange waters” (ibid). It is a baptism because she is totally immersed in a new life. She is never the same after she goes to Brooklyn. She is blessed by the experience. She is transformed by Brooklyn. 

We know with blessings come some level of risk. We know this from our own lives. In order to experience something new that is a blessing, we have to step into a new future, and leave the old behind. Ellis’ character, in order to be blessed, must leave everything behind, her home, her family, and her people. She has to die to her old life in order to be resurrected into a new life in Brooklyn.

The people of Israel learned this lesson from John as he was teaching and baptizing along the Jordan River. The people who came to John in the wilderness were sort of risking their lives because bathing in the sea was not an ordinary experience and people did not know how to swim in those days (ibid). These people wanted to leave their old lives behind. They wanted a new life. They wanted to step into something new. 

Being baptized by immersion, which is when you let the person dip your whole body into the water, well, this was an act of real faith, don’t you think? You had to trust that the person baptizing you had the strength to hold you and lift you back up out of the water.  

For Ellis Lacey, there were many hands involved in her baptism that she had to trust. She was fearful at first, but over time she learned to trust. She trusted the woman who ran the boardinghouse where she lived and the other women who lived there. She learned to trust the supervisor at her store, and Tony, who became her boyfriend. She trusted her dying sister, who did not tell Ellis she was dying, so that Ellis would not get stuck caring for their mother. Ellis must choose to embrace the arms that wanted to help her, the arms of her baptism.  

Christians have several ideas about what happens when we get baptized. John said that baptism cleanses us from our sin. It seems like everything will be fine with us once we are baptized and washed clean, but of course, we know as Christians that life after baptism is not a bed of roses. We will still encounter hardships. 

In some Christian traditions the one who is baptized is wrapped in holiness, with water on the head, oil on the heart and white linen cloths wrapped around and around the one who is baptized as a symbol of holiness.

In other traditions baptism is a symbolic death and resurrection. The baptized one is tied to a future beyond this world.

Being baptized means that we balance ourselves in the waters of life in this world; which includes both death and holy blessing.

Even Jesus had to be baptized. You might think that he was too perfect. Why would he need to die to an old life and be raised up into a new life? But Jesus came to John and presented himself for baptism. When he was baptized, so the story goes, the heavens opened up, and the Holy Spirit came down in the form of a dove. A voice was heard that said: “You are my Son, the beloved; with you I am well pleased.” This was God claiming Jesus as God’s own child. This was a Holy Spirit baptism.

We get a Holy Spirit baptism too. Many of us were baptized as infants. We don’t even remember the event, but that does not make it any less important. On the day I was baptized, both sets of grandparents traveled from Texas to our home in Kansas to celebrate. Because you see, when a baby is baptized, we claim the Holy Spirit with that child, forever more. This child has not been around long enough to truly sin, so the child does not need to be cleansed of any wrong doing. But the child is claimed by God, just as Jesus was: “This is my beloved child, with you I am well pleased.”

When you were baptized, God said these words to you: “This is my beloved child, with you I am well pleased.”  Whether or not you were immersed in the water or sprinkled with a few drops or had water poured over your head, it does not matter. The water is a sign. You left behind a life without God and stepped into a new life with God. Just like Ellis Lacey left behind her life in Ireland and stepped into a new life in Brooklyn. She was taking a risk and God is taking a risk on us.

So what does it mean to live as a baptized person? First, we put our trust in God’s promises. We live as people who expect the best out of one another. We treat one another as a child of God. You see, if I believe I am a child of God, then I also have to treat you like a child of God, precious and beloved.

How would this world be a different place if each one of us treated everyone else as a precious and beloved child of God? What if all the people who claim to be Christian would do that? Treat others as precious and beloved children of God? We would have a revolution of kindness.

What if we all believed in ourselves? You see, when we are baptized, we are marked forever as God’s own children. God makes people who have gifts and who have something to contribute to the world. God does not make losers. So what if rather than being so hard on ourselves, we decided to believe in ourselves and live out our dreams? The world would be filled with people empowered to live the calling that God put them on this earth to live out. How wonderful that would be.

What else does it mean to live as a baptized person? It means we live with compassion. We don’t just think of ourselves and our own families. We care about other people. We want to serve God by serving others. We feed the hungry, give comfort to the sick, we show compassion to those who grieve. 

Living as a baptized person also means we are generous. We don’t worry about not having enough. We recognize that God will provide for our needs, and so we give generously to help others. When we have an abundance, we share. We give thanks for God’s blessings in our lives, and rather than hoarding, we share what we have with others who are in need.

I read a prayer this week in Joyce Rupp’s book Fragments of Your Ancient Name that said,

“Jesus…I understand you are more than a name.
To know you is to allow your teachings
To reach into the core of my daily life,
To have your vision be the vital substance
Of what truly guides and rules how I live.”

(Source: Fragments of Your Ancient Name, Joyce Rupp, reading for January 7.)

You see, once we are baptized, we invite Jesus’ teachings into the core of our daily lives. We have his vision guide and rule how we live. This is because the Holy Spirit is living in us and we are paying attention to that Holy Spirit.

It’s like this: once we are claimed by God, we are marked as members of God’s family. We are marked by the water of baptism. Nothing we do can un-do that baptism. We might become terrible people, commit crimes, never go to church, do everything we can to turn away from God, but God never turns away from us. God is always there waiting for us to come back, because we are baptized, and filled with the Holy Spirit.

That spark of the Holy Spirit always lives in us. It may be deep inside. The fire may be a tiny flicker, but the Holy Spirit is always in us. This Spirit is what connects us to God. When we feel a sense that God is pulling or pushing us in a certain direction, that is the Holy Spirit in us. When we feel a sense that God is leading us down a path, that is the Holy Spirit at work.

You see, just as the young Ellis Lacey was immersed in her experience of Brooklyn, and was forever changed by it, we are immersed in the waters of baptism and forever changed. The Holy Spirit takes up residence in our hearts and will never move out.

Today in worship, we gave people an opportunity to remember their baptism. We had a bowl of water. It symbolized the waters of baptism. We were invited to come to the water and touch it, remembering that we are blessed by the Holy Spirit. You were claimed in your baptism as God’s beloved child and you are still that beloved child today.  You can do this at home today too.  There is no magic to the water we used.  Pour yourself some.  Then come to the water, touch the water, and remember that you are blessed.   You are God’s beloved child, with whom God is well pleased.  Amen.

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